For the Daniels
On election day, Minnesotans will be voting on an amendment that,
if passed, dictates that marriage is only legal between one man and one woman.
Something is amiss in America when we use constitutional powers
to restrict freedoms rather than guarantee civil rights.
It's time to speak up.
For the Daniels
The
most remarkable museum exhibit I have ever seen was an interactive installation
called “Daniel’s Story.” If memory serves me right, I took my children to see
it at the Field Museum in Chicago years ago, back when we were almost poor.
Walking
through the exhibit, we entered the life and environs of Daniel, a Jewish child
living in Europe during the Holocaust. First we came into his home, listened to
music of the time, saw the books he read. And then we heard the radio and the chilling
messages of hate issuing forth. Soon we traveled through a tunnel, walled on
both sides by lifelike murals of Nazis carrying rifles and of their angry dogs.
We could hear shouts from these oversized uniformed men and menacing barks, and
the effect was terrifying. We then moved into the ghetto where Daniel lived briefly
amid lice and filth before he was shipped by cattle car (another terrifying
simulation) on to the concentration camp where he presumably died. Upon leaving that
portion of the exhibit, we entered rooms where children were invited to create
tiles that captured their emotions. The tiles were added to a wall, and the
display was monumental.
But
what stays with me to this day was a set of simple hinged panels in a row,
intended to be read left to right. Together, the panels depicted the slippery progression
of bias to discrimination to ethnic cleansing and, ultimately, to genocide.
Atop each panel were words reflecting increasingly stronger sentiments that one
might hear to degrade and debase some group of “others.” Children lifted the
panel to find words they could use to speak up for the targeted group. The
final panel said, “All (fill in the blank) should die. Underneath that panel
was the phrase: “Too late. You should have spoken up sooner.”
It’s
this exhibit that motivates me to speak up today.
In
my very ordinary brain, the sexual orientation of my children, my nieces, their
friends, or anyone’s seems as much a matter of fact as their shoe size or eye color. It just is what it is, same
as the rest of the cards in the deck that life has dealt them. (I know how glib
this sounds, but hear me out.)
Would
I disown a child because he wears a size 12 not a size 9 sneaker. Would I lose
one minute of sleep about it? Would I evict my daughter because she has hazel irises
and I have brown ones? Would I shed a single tear of sorrow if she announced
she would marry another person with hazel eyes? No, of course not. The very
idea is so nutty it leaves me almost speechless. Almost. Because to not speak
up when any form of discrimination is at play is rather dangerous, isn't it? So,
though I normally flee from conflict like a fly from a swatter, I am entering
the fray because conscience won’t let me stay silent any longer.
I'm
not as clueless or insensitive as this may sounds. OK, I can be insensitive.
There was the time when my hetero-then-bisexual-then-legally-married-to-a-transgender-man-whom-she-dated-when-he-was-a-woman
friend chided me for not having a rainbow sticker on my office door to indicate
that I was GLBT-friendly and I just wanted to smack her. But I only smack flies and mosquitoes,
so I put the sticker up. My friend was correct, I conceded, but it just seemed
silly to advertise that I was OK with people who partner with people of their
own gender, as unnecessary as advertising that I’m good with people who
"wear size 12 shoes" or who "have hazel eyes. (It was and still
is necessary, but it maddens me that it is.) I know I still sound glib and I
know how serious the human-rights implications are, but still, hear me out.
What
I don’t grok but clearly see happening is that gender-orientation stirs the
kind controversy that makes people propose constitutional amendments that
codify discrimination, except that I know that fearfulness will always be among
us, and there is some aspect about this matter of fact that taps some serious
fear buttons to the point of serious hostility.
I can’t help but wonder if, perhaps, some amendment supporters are so conflicted about
their own sexual orientation and leanings, even to the point of self
hatred, that they must enshrine heterosexual unions in our sacred legal code to
prevent themselves from exploring their own identity. Stranger things have
happened.
Of
the positions I have heard, the two most salient in my opinion are (1) concern
about procreation and (2) erosion of virtue.
1. Procreation
I fully concur that human intimacy is
a divine gift, not to be messed with lightly, and that the privilege of
bringing children into this world pings our most ancient strings of DNA code,
as it should if our species is to survive. But, dear God, what does it really
matter what gender one is oriented to legally share one’s life with? As a
species, we’re in no obvious danger of turning off the spigot of procreation on
this planet, that’s for certain. Like frantic gerbils, humans just keep adding
offspring to it! (Have you ever seen too many gerbils in a cage? Not
recommended.)
2. Virtue
If we’re worried about people turning away from the Word of God,
the dogma upon which so many of us congregate and use to guide our actions, we
best look at what we’re doing for and with young people in our everyday lives,
and in particular, I suspect our sparse churches, temples, mosques, and meeting
houses ought to be ramping up environments that young people find divine,
rather than embedding in our constitution matters of marriage.
For
the love of all that is good in humankind, why is marriage even an issue?
And,
further, why are beautiful young souls evicted from their families, tossed to
the streets to be preyed upon by unscrupulous people, and battered, often
destroyed by cruelty? I do not take lightly hate crimes against people whose
sexual orientation is deemed out of the norm by certain groups. And like the
panels in Daniel’s Story shows us, there is a dangerous progression from legalizing
any kind of prohibition that denies
the rights of any group of people, and we must speak up before it’s too late.
So
enough already. ENOUGH! As pollyannaish as it sounds, I just want this brouhaha
about gender orientation and marriage to be over. It is wrong. It is
unnecessary. And it distracts our attention from the other things that divide
and harm us--like poverty and cooking the life off our planet and horrific,
preventable diseases that disfigure, blind, and impoverish people in equatorial
countries, and warfare.
Thinking
of you Daniel, and voting no,
Kathleen
Kimball-Baker
Comments
Although in agreement on constitutional amendment, probably both amendments, I'm sure it doesn't surprise you that I do believe marriage is between a man and woman, but I won't be imposing my faith on others. I would rather encourage people to read God's Word.
Last night's, Nightline piece on KKK and resurgence, and especially leader interviewed,that was really scary!!!
So yes, let's get working on jobs (not just tv commercials) and affordable health care!