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On Parade
Conservatives Decry Homosexual
'Hijacking' of Civil Rights Movement
By Steve Brown
CNSNews.com Staff
Writer
August 25, 2003
(CNSNews.com) - The
invitation to homosexual activists to participate in ceremonies
marking the 40th anniversary of Martin Luther King Junior's "I Have
a Dream" speech, drew sharp criticism from black conservatives who
said the struggle against racial discrimination should not be
compared to the fight for homosexual acceptance.
This year's
events, held in Washington, D.C., where King delivered his famous
speech in 1963, marked the first time in which the African American
group sponsors invited homosexual organizations such as the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Force (NGLTF) to participate.
However,
conservatives charged that homosexual advocates were trying to
hijack the civil rights movement led by King.
"It doesn't
surprise me that they're trying to 'glom on' to Dr. King's civil
rights movement," Council Nedd, advisory board member of Project 21
- an initiative of the National Center for Public Policy Research to
promote the views of African Americans - told CNSNews.com.
"They've been doing this progressively more and more for the last 30
years."
In King's speech, he referred to his dream of all
people one day being "judged not by the color of their skin but by
the content of their character." However, according to Nedd, while a
person cannot escape the color of their skin, a person can escape
the nature of their sexuality.
"Say for instance if you're a
white homosexual, if things get rough, you can always escape into
the protective camouflage of your whiteness. I, as a black person,
can't do that. I can't hide from my color. They can hide from their
homosexuality easier. To equate the two, as an African American
male, I have a problem with that."
While refusing to comment
to CNSNews.com, a spokesman for the NGLTF stated his group's
enthusiasm over being included in the ceremonies commemorating
King's speech.
"We are extremely honored to have been invited
to be a co-convener of this historic event where we will begin, in
unity with the larger civil rights community, the long process of
renewing, repairing and restoring the vision of full equality for
all," Matt Foreman, NGLTF communications director, stated in the
release.
"The hard-won progress the nation has achieved in
the 40 years since Dr. King's historic speech is in mortal danger.
That progress is being undermined every day as our civil rights are
being eroded and our gains in racial, social and economic justice
are being dismantled," said
Mandy Carter, executive director
of Southerners on New Ground, added her own perspective in the same
statement.
"As a black woman and a lesbian, I think it's
important to not only emphasize equal civil rights for lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender people as a whole, but specifically for
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people of color as well,"
Speaking at an NGLTF conference in November 2000, Martin
Luther King, Jr.'s widow, Coretta Scott King, said she was sure her
late husband would have welcomed homosexuals into the civil rights
movement.
"We are all tied together in a single garment of
destiny...an inescapable network of mutuality... I can never be what
I ought to be until you are allowed to be what you ought to be,"
Mrs. King said. "Therefore, I appeal to everyone who believes in
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s dream to make room at the table of
brotherhood and sisterhood for lesbian and gay people."
Yet
some questioned Mrs. King's motives and sincerity.
"The only
blacks who are big gay activists are the elites, and they are way
out of touch with the rank and file African American. You don't see
the average black person relishing the idea of their comparison with
homosexuals as a racial minority," Peter LaBarbera, senior policy
analyst with Concerned Women for America's Culture and Family
Institute, told CNSNews.com. "Shame on Coretta Scott King and
the liberal black leadership for helping the gay lobby make these
ridiculous comparisons."
In 1997, Alveda Celeste King, Martin
Luther King, Jr.'s niece, was quoted by the Associated Press from a
speech she had given at a rally on the U.S. Capitol steps - warning
that the equation of homosexuality to race was a "death sentence"
for the civil rights movement.
"No one is enslaving
homosexuals... or making them sit in the back of the bus," Alveda
King reportedly said. "Don't expect us or our children to approve
of, promote or elevate sexual preference to civil rights
status...What's next, civil rights on the basis of prostitution and
pedophilia?"
Peter Sprigg, director of marriage and family
studies for the Family Research Council, cited a July 28 USA
Today/Gallup poll he said reveals "the African American
community does not support the homosexual agenda." Their support
fell from 58 percent in May to 36 percent in July, according to the
poll.
"We think it's outrageous the way that pro-homosexual
groups have tried to hijack the civil rights movement for their own
purposes," Sprigg told CNSNews.com.
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