LGBTQ activists protest exclusionary, Zionist policies
By Shelley Ettinger
February 21, 2013
New York — Nearly two years after the New York City Lesbian Gay
Bi Trans Community Center first barred the groups Siegebusters and Queers
Against Israeli Apartheid from meeting there, the lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender and queer community erupted in outrage in mid-February, when the
Center again denied a space request from QAIA, as it had continually done for
the last two years.
This time, the event the Center banned was to feature writer Sarah Schulman
reading from her new book, “Israel/Palestine and the Queer
International.” The book describes “her dawning consciousness of
the Palestine liberation struggle” and how she came to support the
boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement.
QAIA issued a statement that it was “appalled at the hijacking of our
NYC LGBT Community Center.” The group said the Center was explicitly
banning any discussion of “pinkwashing” and any support for
“the civil and human rights of Palestinian queers.”
“Pinkwashing” is a term coined by LGBTQ Palestine solidarity
activists to describe Israel’s public relations campaign to depict itself
as a haven for LGBTQ rights and deflect attention from its crimes against
Palestine. In a Nov. 22, 2011, opinion piece in the New York Times, Schulman
called it “a deliberate strategy to conceal the continuing violations of
Palestinians’ human rights behind an image of modernity signified by
Israeli gay life.”
Schulman, a Jewish lesbian, is the author of 17 books of fiction and
nonfiction, a distinguished professor of the Humanities at the City University
of New York, winner of many awards, as well as a longtime activist. She is a
well-known and respected figure in the community.
From Feb. 13 to 15, as word spread that the Center had banned Schulman,
shockwaves spread throughout the LGBTQ community. The fact that the
Center’s ban on Schulman’s talk came so soon after a gang of
Zionists and politicians tried — and failed — to force Brooklyn
College to cancel a similar event fed the fury.
Scores of people, including several of the original founders of the Center,
issued letters and statements deploring the ban and demanding it be lifted. An
online petition calling on the Center to “end censorship of Sarah
Schulman and open your doors to all queer people” quickly garnered more
than 1,000 signatures.
Individuals who make monthly donations to the Center announced that they
would no longer do so. Others who had arranged bequests said they would rewrite
their wills.
acist politicos weigh in
Under intensifying pressure in the face of this outcry, Executive Director
Glennda Testone and the Center’s board of directors issued a statement
late in the afternoon of Feb. 15. Claiming to have simply concluded two
years’ study of the issue, they announced that the ban on meetings by
“groups that organize on all sides of this conflict” —
maintaining the absurd illusion that the ban was neutral, not aimed
specifically at Palestine solidarity — would now be lifted. Sort of.
Testone et al. said the Center would allow all groups to meet there —
but only if they satisfy a range of requirements that appear to be devised to
re-ban Palestine activists. All groups applying for space will now be required
to sign a pledge that they do not discriminate on any basis, and that they will
not engage in hate speech. Given that the original ban on QAIA was pushed by a
thuggish coterie of reactionaries with friends in high places, and that its
enforcement was rationalized based on a tortuously worded ruling claiming that
the group’s presence was somehow threatening and might lead to violence,
it can be expected that these same forces will now mobilize to claim that any
pro-Palestine sentiments expressed at the Schulman or other meetings constitute
hate speech.
This is basically the old slander that solidarity with Palestine equates to
anti-Semitism. The facts that Schulman and many other organizers are Jewish,
and that more and more Jewish people reject the Israeli state’s claim to
represent all Jews, are ignored.
QAIA responded to the Center’s statement: “While we are pleased
to see the Center’s announcement, we in QAIA believe that the true test
of the Center’s new space usage policy will come when we request space at
the Center. … In spite of lifting the moratorium, the Center appears to
be positioning itself to police and shut down queer organizing in support of
Palestinian queers, and Palestinian civil and human rights. … We are
pleased that our two years of organizing is beginning to have positive results,
but the LGBT Center is not in the clear yet and our work is not yet
complete.”
Schulman wrote on her Facebook page on Feb. 17: “I am amazed, moved
and grateful that so many of us are working to make our Center a free speech
space. BUT, I still do not have a date for my reading and QAIA still does not
have a date for their meeting. What disturbs me is the ‘pledge’
that the Center wants all speakers to sign. I think it is
censorious.”
At precisely the same moment that the Center’s statement appeared on
its website on Feb. 15, another statement was issued, this one a belligerent
attack on the BDS and anti-pinkwashing movement. It came from New York City
Council Speaker Christine Quinn, state Assembly Member Deborah Glick, state
Sen. Brad Hoylman and City Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer. All are LGBT
elected officials — although, notably, not every New York City LGBT
elected official signed the statement.
Quinn is running for mayor, hoping to succeed her longtime ally, billionaire
Mayor Michael Bloomberg, in next fall’s election. The statement from her
and the other politicians briefly salutes the Center for its move. Then comes
the crux: a paragraphs-long screed excoriating Palestine supporters as enemies
of “the global cause of LGBT equality” and lauding Israel.
On its website, QAIA called the statement “racist [and]
repressive” and noted that it had been posted “about four
nanoseconds later” than the Center’s.
While this upheaval centers on the issue of Palestine, it is only the latest
in a series of offenses by the Center, especially against the most oppressed of
the LGBTQ communities, including Arabs, Muslims, trans people of color and poor
and working-class people. Many individuals and organizations have long since
stopped using the Center, seeing it as an unfriendly, elitist, exclusionary
space.
The conflict centering on Palestine solidarity should be seen in this
broader context. What once, decades ago at its founding, was to be a radical
organizing center that provided a welcoming space to all in the diverse LGBTQ
community has now devolved to a non-struggle-oriented entity allied with
moneyed corporate and establishment political interests.