Activists Call for LGBT-Inclusive Immigration Bill
Members and allies of the LGBT community stood together in a nationwide push for comprehensive immigration reform last April 10. The A10: All in for Citizenship events, held across blue and red states alike, came at the heels of the exclusion of bi-national LGBT couples and their families in the Gang of 8’s Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act of 2013.
While the Gang of 8’s bipartisan Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act contained noteworthy victories such as a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrants, including DREAMers, and the repealing of the one year deadline for individuals seeking asylum in the United States from homophobic and trans-phobic countries, the exclusion of the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA) from the base bill rendered it incomplete and disappointing to countless LGBT families struggling with existing crippling legislation.
"I am a DREAM Act beneficiary and in a bi-national relationship. Last night, as pieces of the bill’s text began to surface online, I held my husband tightly --knowing that the Gang of 8 had excluded our family from the Comprehensive Immigration Reform bill," said Felipe Sousa-Rodriguez, co-director of GetEQUAL, a non-profit advocacy group that seeks LGBT political and social equality.
Sousa-Rodriguez said he knew exactly what 40,000 families felt when they saw that the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA) was not included in the bill, adding, "Our community has fought hard for full recognition under the law in this country and our struggle for equality has not ended, but only just begun."
Activists and members of the LGBT community are looking to Democrats Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy or Senator Dick Durbin to introduce LGBT-inclusive amendments to the bill. The inclusion of the UAFA would be a huge step towards reconceiving the definition of American families to include same-sex couples and their children.
Currently, the federal government does not recognize same-sex marriages or civil unions, therefore withholding rights from LGBT families from which their heterosexual counterparts benefit. Immigration law regards bi-national couples -- even those with children -- as legal strangers. For couples such as Kelly Costello and her wife, Fabiola Morales, the battle for immigration reform is a fight to keep their family from being torn apart. The couple, who is expecting twins, were married in Washington, D.C. shortly after marriage equality was passed.
In spite of possessing a student visa and maintaining a legal status in the country, Fabiola, who is undergoing medical treatment for multiple sclerosis only available in the U.S., faces the threat of deportation when her visa expires. Within the parameters of the current bill, Fabiola has no pathway to citizenship despite her marriage and her growing family. However, under the UAFA, U.S. citizens or permanent residents would be granted the right to sponsor their same-sex partners for immigration giving Fabiola the right to be petitioned by her wife, Kelly.
"Failing to include LGBT equality in the bill sends the dangerous message that it is acceptable to continue to discriminate against certain groups of people. Same-sex bi-national couples should not be forced to choose between their love for America and their love for each other," said Bend the Arc: A Jewish Partnership for Justice in support of LGBT-inclusive reform.
Congressman Jim Kolbe lent his voice in support of LGBT-inclusive immigration reform in his testimony to the Senate where he talked about his twelve month separation from his partner, Hector -- a Panamanian immigrant, teacher and Fulbright scholar -- due to his inability to petition Hector for a green card.
Kolbe also indicated that excluding LGBT families in immigration reform reverberates not only within the LGBT community, but also within the nation’s economy through the loss of employees who were forced to emigrate with their deported spouses, recruiting opportunity losses when a job candidate was unable to bring his or her spouse or partner to the US, and the loss of valuable workers to countries with more supportive immigration laws for LGBT couples.
"It isn’t just major corporations that lose out; small business owners are also suffering," said Kolbe. "In Columbia, South Carolina, a restaurant owner with 25 employees recently made the difficult decision to close his business in order to move so he could be with his partner. In Los Angeles, a young entrepreneur who employed 30 U.S. workers shut his doors after his Canadian partner’s visa expired and they were forced into exile."
In an economy that is still struggling to regain stability, job loss has become an issue that affects not only members of the LGBT community, but the wider public as well.
"Our country is changing and our laws must change with it in order to protect all American citizens and their families, and to strengthen our position in an increasingly competitive, global economy," stressed Kolbe.
LGBT members of the community and their allies stand unwavering in decrying an immigration system that has historically denied them of equal rights in favor of a system that will not impose geographical boundaries on families and children that deserve the protection, dignity and respect of the country they call home.
LGBTs of Color Encouraged To Break Silence on Mental Health Issues
On Mar. 22-23, the Hispanic Black Gay Coalition and TOD@S (Transforming Ourselves through Dialogue, Organization, and Services) came together in a safe environment to discuss and address the taboos and stigma related to mental health and illness that have persisted in Black and Latino communities.
"Sometimes when we talk about oppression we like to box what oppression is, but oftentimes we’re talking about the basis of a society that builds relationships on dominance, whether that dominance has to do with gender, sexuality, ethnicity or nationality. Watching how structural oppression of societies that build themselves based on relationships of power manifest," said Carmenleah Ascensio about the societal structures of oppression.
She continued by expounding on specific types of oppression she’s witnessed in her work with the community, "I work, for example, with poor undocumented Latina women who are queer. It’s a pretty marginalized population that is being oppressed by poor undocumented Latina women. So you really come up against how we really foster these relationships in society in all kinds of ways based on dominance and power. It challenges the way we view partner abuse in mainstream society and also creates more barriers for getting help."
Sexual abuse was one of the many topics that were discussed during the mental health weekend. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four women and one in six men are sexually abused before the age of 18. This means that at least 42 million adults in the country right now are survivors of sexual abuse, not including the many unreported cases of abuse.
Participants were encouraged to break the silence by sharing stories and building understanding concerning the intersecting identities of Latino and Black LGBTQ individuals -- especially race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality -- and the difficulty of accessing services and resources that address the personal, cultural and social issues that affect mental health in their communities.
The events kicked off on Friday with a screening of award-winning writer and director Stanley Bennett Clay’s film "You Are Not Alone." Members of the Black and Latino LGBT community gathered for a night of coffee, good food, and film at the Haley House Bakery Café in Roxbury. The Haley House is known for bringing people together through their community tables and soup kitchen events where members of the community, volunteers, and the hungry come together in a celebration of eating and an act of community building.
A large group of all ages came together to discuss the docudrama, which told the stories of Black gay men from the U.S., the Caribbean and Africa. Through insightful interviews and dramatic reenactments, Clay’s film shed light on the many struggles being dealt with by Black gay men on a daily basis from sexual abuse by a father, drug and alcohol abuse, suicide, HIV as well as the isolation, loneliness and pain that results from having no one to whom they can confide their troubles.
Clay also talked about the importance of media’s role in this discussion, saying, "The media has a great opportunity to educate in a way that other outlets cannot or cannot do as effectively. When we deal with things like domestic violence, we deal with mental illness, when we deal with all these subjects they sometimes become very academic and as they are discussed in academic terms, sometimes it puts some people to sleep."
"The media serves as a spoonful of sugar to help us swallow and absorb very important issues," he continued. "I love what the media is doing. Stories are being told. When we look at ’Brokeback Mountain,’ it helps people in and out of our community see and understand what gay love really is. The media is really important and is becoming more and more important as we go on."
The events continued the following afternoon at Fenway Health Center where a larger congregation gathered for a panel discussion exploring the effects of violence and trauma on the mental health of Black and Latino LGBTQ communities. Isa Woldeguiorguis, executive director of The Center for Hope and Healing (a sexual assault crisis intervention agency based in Lowell, MA) facilitated an interactive dialogue.
Panelists included Carmenleah Ascensio, TOD@S Project Coordinator and licensed clinician with Fenway Health’s Violence Recovery Program; Cornell University therapeutic crisis intervention trainer Nia Clark; acclaimed writer and media maker Stanley Bennett Clay; and Wilfred Labiosa, executive director of substance use disorder nonprofit CASPAR, Inc.
"The topic per se is taboo. For Carmenleah and me it’s not, we do it every day, but then when we have these individuals coming to talk about mental health in a preventive way, that’s totally taboo. You have to be at the extremes. There’s nothing in between and we are raised not to talk about it with some stranger," said Wilbur Labiosa of the stigma that surrounds seeking professional psychological help.
"We need to talk about it within the family and if this happens within the family how are you going to talk about it or to your close friends," he told EDGE. "Your cousin, your aunt, should be there, but maybe they are the perpetrators so you don’t feel comfortable talking about it because of the severity of it or the proximity of it and so we are taught as a culture, as a community not to talk about it in a preventive manner."
Panelists and audience members discussed the different facets of institutionalized oppression versus internalized oppression and how the two coincide. The church came up immediately as a primary source of institutionalized oppression for both Black and Latino LGBT communities. The church and faith lie at the center of both communities and is more than an institution; it represents family and friends and being shunned by this community for being who they are leaves many LGBT displaced and lost in a larger world where even the laws are not in their favor.
Nia Clark opened up about the struggles of the transgender community and how many are faced with the threat of job loss merely for their gender identity and how in losing their jobs they are sometimes forced to do things they would otherwise not choose for themselves, like staying in abusive relationships with partners who financially provide.
"I think of how our society in general is not as accepting of people who do not look a certain way, people who cannot get those jobs in the community," said Clark. "What are they resorting to? They’re resorting to sex work. It’s what pays the bills, pays for the hormones, it pays for an amalgam of things, but with that you generate more risks. Unfortunately as a trans person you are objectified and we are not really personalizing some of these women."
Clark also spoke up about the reality that most in the LGBT community are not aware of the services available to them or if they are aware, are held back by the stigma of asking for help.
"You go into the clubs and the bars," she said. "I also used to do outreach at some of these nightclubs and we used to pass out condoms and we’d pass out materials to the girls, but we really weren’t helping them to actually get jobs in the community."
Clark said that helping these girls get the resources they need to survive is really important, adding, "It’s also important that we are educating these girls. That’s what our responsibility is. Without education, and knowledge how can you move forward?"
Ascensio is a licensed clinician who specializes in working with Latinos who are victims of abuse. She discussed the stigma of seeking help that exists within the community she works with stating that most of her patients either believe that suffering is a natural thing that should be dealt with within the family, given that most families have been dealing with a cycle of abuse for generations, or that those that seek professional help are one step away from being institutionalized.
"So often I find with Latinos there is intergenerational trauma and the way that people have learned how to cope is just by holding on to it and sucking it up so when the younger generation comes along and is exposed to different things, what they learned when they were they were younger was that ’No, I went through that too’. The grandmother, father, mother have no empathy or no sympathy," said Ascensio. "You suck it up, you hold on to it, and if you complain you get beaten for that. It’s a continuous intergenerational trauma."
Panelists and participants also touched on the bar culture that shapes LGBT socialization into an environment where sex, drugs and alcohol become the center of gatherings. They stressed the importance of groups like HBGC and TOD@S that create a safe and healthy environment to bridge the gap between members of the LGBT community and become family for those who have none.
The weekend-long events were capped off with a career fair at the end of the panel discussion where participants could gain access to information for support groups like The Network La Red for themselves and their friends.
The Knife
This Swedish brother-and-sister duo release a ‘Silent Shout’ that echoes ear-gasm with audiophiles everywhere
Famed for their black “crow” masks and until 2006, their refusal to perform live concerts, The Knife’s genre-defying sound cut through the music scene like nobody’s business. The brain child of siblings Karin Dreijer Andersson and Olof Dreijer, The Knife was created to satiate a need to produce a sound that was a mesh of haunting fantasy, quirky peculiarity, and hypnotic inventiveness. Their self-titled debut album, released in 2001, marked the birth of their inimitable sound, which has since evolved into the distinct combination of ambient-electro-techno beats heard in their latest album ‘Silent Shout’.
The Knife’s fresh sound is a thumping mix of gothic nightmares, dark humor, and surrealism spawned from the recesses of an imagination that submits to no one. Owning their own record label, Rabid Records, allows the duo the creative license to create and distribute their music on their own terms, which for the public means human crows in the snow and gorillas at awards shows.
True deviants at heart, the duo has been absent from many of the awards shows they have been recognized at, choosing instead to send two of their friends in gorilla masks in their place. Karin and Olof maintain a belief that media focus should be brought back to the music instead of the people behind it. It was no surprise then that the siblings decided to pose dressed as crows--black-beaked masks, long coats, wigs and all--for their press photographs.
“We feel like that if we had been there with our plain faces, that would destroy the illusion of the music. So we tried to dress up as the music. Occult and dark but at the same time, funny,” explains Olof.
An eeriness and undercurrent of humour pervade their music videos as well. Sample the short film “When I Found the Knife”, videos for “We Share Our Mother’s Health”, “Silent Shout”, and “Marble House” whose mind numbing oddness will leave you perplexed, but wanting more.
Fans everywhere, however, will have to chew on The Knife’s last three albums (The Knife, Deep Cuts and Silent Shout) for the meantime because the siblings have gone on a hiatus; channelling their creative energy into individual music careers. Olof has gone spinning as DJ Coolof in nightclubs around Europe while Karin, under the alias Fever Ray, has released a solo album of the same name.
Fret not; The Knife is sure to be back with a sound that’s sharper than ever.