Wow time really flies, I remember when she was killed and as always, she was black so there really wasn't a lot of media coverage. Who wants to hear about the murder of a young black girl, a gay young black girl at that.
Sakia Gunn: When Intolerance Breeds Murder
Posted May 31st 2008 6:00AM by Angela Bronner
Filed under: BlackSpin, Lifestyle, Love
By Krystal Freeman,
I learned to sag my jeans just right by watching the men around me.
I studied the way they rocked tilted fitted caps over crisp tapers and
deep waves, eyeing my father most intently. He was so precise about
matching his kicks with neatly creased jeans and "throwback" jerseys.
By fifteen I'd nearly stolen his style and his swagger.
It never occurred to me that having such insider knowledge was enough to get me killed, until I read about the brutal murder of Sakia Gunn.
Five
years ago, Sakia, a 15-year old girl who "dressed like a boy," was
attacked while waiting for a Newark, New Jersey bus after a night out
with friends. The girls were approached by two men in a car who made
uninvited sexual advances. When the girls declined, stating that they
were lesbians, 30-year old Richard McCullough fatally stabbed Sakia
while shouting homophobic slurs. She bled out at the intersection of
Broad and Market during the wee hours of Mother's Day morning.
This May is the fifth anniversary of the murder of Sakia Gunn. She would have just celebrated her 20th birthday.
Too few of us know Sakia's name, but we all know girls like
her -- young women like me who are often mistaken for teenage boys
because we have the courage to dress the way we feel inside. We are
your daughters, sisters and nieces. We are also young black lesbians
who, in having the courage to live authentically, make our communities
uncomfortable.
Sadly, the lives of many black youth have been taken because of
intolerance and that very courage. Their names are also unknown.
There's Ronnie Antonio Paris, dead at 3 from brain injuries inflicted
by his dad who boxed with him so he wouldn't become gay. And openly gay
Rashawn Brazell, 19, who's dismembered body parts were found in garbage
bags strewn throughout Brooklyn. Simmie Williams, 17. Nireah Johnson,
17. Stephanie Thomas, 18. Ukea Davis,19. And many more. Each and every
one of them belonged to someone.
My family doesn't understand why I'm more comfortable in button-ups
instead of blouses or why I'd choose a pair of "dunks" over stilettos.
Nor are they comfortable with my attraction to women, but I belong to
them too. In his bigoted sexual aggression, McCullough never stopped to
think that Sakia belonged to someone. She was someone's family member
and, more importantly, someone's child.
We may conclude that McCullough was motivated by his own homophobia.
But we must also acknowledge that he was implicitly encouraged by our
community's typical stance on issues of sexuality. Homophobic beliefs
are somehow justified by people like my family and yours, who claim
their gay relatives selectively, and stand silent in the company of
bigoted conversation that endangers the very gay children they love.
My mother has always bragged to her friends about my academic
achievements. My dad loved to tease his friends about how his daughter
could "school" their sons on the basketball court. But there were no
words of support when it became clear that I was a lesbian.
It was okay that I wasn't crazy about boys, if it meant I focused on
school. And my perceived masculinity was tolerable, if it made me a
solid competitor on the court. The catch: I wasn't supposed to tell
anyone about my attraction to girls.
The silence was crippling.
My family was tight-lipped about same-sex attraction, but what they
did say was damaging. As a result, I learned to be resilient in the
presence of loved ones who thought being gay was a "white thing" or
that I was going through a phase. I still shuffle with unease whenever
relatives say things like "I wouldn't mind so much if they didn't put
it in our faces." I know that "they" alludes to those "effeminate" men
and "mannish" lesbians walking in gay pride parades. I also know that
the "they" my family despises includes some part of me.
Almost every time a person is murdered for being gay, they are met
with hateful language I've heard my family use - these same family
members would be devastated if my life were taken. They advise me to be
careful, suggesting that I spare myself by dressing more like a girl.
They don't see the harm in refusing to affirm me as I am.
Their position contributes to the climate that allowed for the
senseless murder of Sakia and so many others. Their silence endangers
me also.
To my family and to my community, I need you to love and claim all
of me, even when others speak out against me. You can help prevent
another murder like Sakia's. Your voice and your courage can make our
communities safer for young people like Sakia, young people like me.
A
native New Yorker now based in Los Angeles, Krystal Freeman is a Media
Fellow for Communities of African Descent at the Gay & Lesbian
Alliance Against Defamation. She holds a B.A. in Urban &
Environmental Policy with a minor in Critical Theory & Social
Justice from Occidental College.
For More on how to help keep Sakia's legacy alive go to http://www.sakiagunnfilmproject.com
Edited by hennypenny - 31 May 2008 at 10:50pm