Stonewall anti-homophobic resistance, forty years later


This video from the USA says about itself:

Documentary on the impact of the City of Columbus, Ohio’s City Council vote in 1984 on adding the words “sexual orientation” to the existing job protection legislation. Posting Permission obtained by The Ohio Historical Society’s Gay Ohio History Initiative and Stonewall Columbus.

From Associated Press in the USA:

Jun 27, 9:46 AM EDT

Stonewall rebel reflects 40 years after NYC riots

By MARCUS FRANKLIN
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK — Raymond Castro was a regular at The Stonewall Inn in 1969, finding it a haven from a world where gay men and women could be arrested for kissing or holding hands in public. Inside the bar, where plywood covered the windows, warning lights served as a signal for couples to stop dancing.

When police raided the bar in the past for selling liquor without a license, patrons normally submitted to arrest or dispersed quietly. But on June 28, Castro recalled, people fought back.

As officers tried to throw him in a police wagon, Castro used the vehicle as a spring to push back, knocking them to the ground.

“They literally carried me into the … wagon and threw me in there,” recalled Castro, now 67. “It must’ve been the motivation of the crowd that inspired me to resist. Or maybe at that point enough was enough.”

The several days of disturbances that followed the uprising at the bar in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village became one of the defining moment of the gay rights movement. Thousands of people are converging on the city for gay pride events to mark the riots’ 40th anniversary, while a bill is pending in the Legislature to make New York the seventh state to legalize same-sex marriage.

Castro said the demonstrations became a catalyst for years of progress allowing gays and lesbians to live more open lives – although he didn’t see it at the time.

“I never thought 40 years ago that it would turn out to be much of anything,” he said in a phone interview. “I had no clue of history being made.”

Castro, who now lives in Madeira Beach, Fla., outside St. Petersburg, is far removed from Stonewall. But his name surfaced in newly released NYPD police reports documenting arrests during the riots. The reports had previously redacted names of some arrested on the first night, but were obtained in May under the Freedom of Information Law by OutHistory.Org, a Web site run by the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies at the City University of New York.

Another name that appears in police reports for the first time is that of Marilyn Fowler, confirming earlier accounts that a woman was one of the main instigators of initial resistance to police.

“There are many witnesses to the Stonewall riots who say a woman, a lesbian presumably, played an important role in intensifying the resistance when they tried to arrest her and put her in the wagon,” said Jonathan Ned Katz, the Web site’s director, who recently obtained the documents. “It’s a very important name to be discovered.”

And for Castro, the name refutes other long-held beliefs that the Stonewall demonstrators were all white gay men.

“It wasn’t just gays,” said Castro, who was born in Puerto Rico and left in 1945. “It wasn’t just white gays.”

“You had straight people sympathetic to gays. People of the arts. You had people who had had enough (of the police). You had Latinos, you had blacks, you had whites, Chinese, you had everything. It was a melting pot. Young, old. Fems, butches.”

Castro recalled being arrested with a woman on June 28 but didn’t remember her name. He was arrested on a harassment charge, according to the police report, that was later dismissed.

“Defendants … did shove and kick the officer …” reads the report, one of nine NYPD documents Katz posted on the Web site.

It was hot and humid the night police officers raided the inn for selling liquor without a license. Police estimated 200 patrons were thrown out of Stonewall, according to a June 29, 1969, New York Times article.

After the raid, the crowd outside the Stonewall swelled to about 400, according to the Times account, citing police estimates.

Police were “attempting to leave premises with prisoners” when “they were confronted by a large crowd who attempted to stop them from removing prisoners. The crowd became disorderly,” read a copy of the NYPD complaint.

Four police officers were injured, including one with a broken wrist, according to the Times, which described the scene as a “rampage” by hundreds of young men. Thirteen people were arrested that first night on charges including harassment, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest, the story says.

As the raid moved outside, with people hurling coins, stones, garbage and insults at the police, Castro was somehow pushed back inside the bar, where police held him and others. After a while, two police officers escorted him out of the bar in handcuffs, he said, before he pushed back as he was escorted into the wagon.

There are little reminders of Stonewall in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village today. The building was designated a national landmark in 1999, and currently houses a bar unaffiliated with the inn.

At the time, Castro says, patrons would usually knock to get into the Christopher Street inn, while someone inside peered through a peephole to size up the visitor.

“If you were one of us they’d let you in,” Castro said. “If you were straight or you looked like a cop they’d say ‘private club.'”

In 1972 Castro left New York City for suburban Long Island, where he met his partner of 30 years, Frank Sturniolo, in a disco. By 1989, the couple had settled in Florida, said Castro, who retired from his job as a decorator in an Entenmann’s bakery specialty shop.

Castro, who is battling stomach cancer, marveled at the progress for gay rights over the past four decades. In the 1970s, major psychiatric associations removed homosexuality from their lists of mental disorders. The country has more than 400 openly gay and lesbian elected officials, according to the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, a political action committee.

Still, Castro and other gay rights advocates say, there’s more work to be done. For example, the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” remains in place. So does a federal law allowing states to ban or refuse recognition of same-sex marriages.

To Castro’s disappointment, Florida voters passed a constitutional amendment last November banning same-sex marriage and civil unions, as did voters in other states, including California.

“I hope that I see it in Florida some day,” he said.

One may add, as context to this article, that the Stonewall resistance came in the same period as other gay resistance elsewhere, the African American civil rights movement, a new wave of feminism, resistance against wars like in Vietnam, etc. Labels used for the first time then like “gay liberation movement” and “women’s liberation” were inspired by organizations with “liberation” in their names like in Algeria or Vietnam.

See also here. And here.

Thousands of people joined Scotland’s biggest gay pride march in Edinburgh on Saturday including for the first time serving police officers in uniform: here.

Ireland: Gay community must be afforded full marriage rights – Ó Snodaigh: here.

SS get life terms for massacre in Italy


From AFP news agency:

Nine ex-SS given life terms for massacre in Italy

Agence France-Presse

June 27, 2009 6:17 AM

ROME – Nine ex-SS soldiers aged 84 to 90 have been sentenced to life imprisonment in their absence by a Rome military tribunal for the massacres of 350 civilians in Tuscany in 1944, the Italian news agency ANSA reported Saturday.

Eleven former Nazis were tried for the massacres, but one of them, Max Roithmeier, a former sergeant in the SS, died during the trial and a second, Walter Waage, was acquitted by the court.

The nine other defendants were given life sentences for their part in the “violence and murders” which resulted in the deaths of around 350 Italian civilians, many of them women, children and old people, and for “acting with cruelty and premeditation,” according to the court’s verdict, cited by ANSA.

Germany was also condemned as a civil party to the crimes and ordered to pay 1.25 million euros to the families of the victims.

“The sentence finally does justice to those who suffered directly the atrocities of Nazism,” Claudio Martini, regional president of Tuscany, said. “Even if 65 years have passed, we should not forget what happened.”

Around 350 people living in the villages or hamlets of Bardine di San Terezo, Tendola and Valla, in the Fivizzano district, were massacred between August 19 and 27 in 1944. Fifty three men were shot and their bodies put on show with a notice warning “This is what happens to those who help the partisans.”

The enquiry into the massacres was re-opened after the military records of 695 Nazis liable to be prosecuted for war crimes committed during the Nazi retreat from Tuscany and Emilia-Romagna were found languishing in a cupboard — dubbed “the cupboard of shame” — in 1994.

German World War II officer gets life for killing of civilians: here.

Former German soldiers accused of involvement in the massacre of Italian prisoners of war portrayed in “Captain Corelli’s Mandolin” could face prosecution after a diary was found in which it was alleged they boasted of the murders: here.

Magpie, apple, flowers, storks


Yesterday, a magpie trying to eat an apple near the bicycle track. However, it flew away as I passed.

This is a video of a magpie and a buzzard eating carrion togetherr.

Hawkweed flowering near the track.

At the white storks’ nest near the nature reserve, one adult on the nest with the two juveniles. One adult below on the meadow.

This morning, a great tit in the hawthorn just outside the window. A wood pigeon on the other side of the street.

Economic crisis


USA: Forty-six states face budget deficits, the majority of which must be resolved by Tuesday, the end of the current fiscal year. In response, Democratic and Republican state politicians are preparing major cuts: here.

This video from last year in the USA says about itself:

Los Angeles Parents in front of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger‘s downtown LA office. Schwarzenegger is proposing a 10% or $4.8 billion dollar cut in California state’s public schools. Please visit our website for more information, free membership to the LA Parents Union for those looking for change in public schools.

The $1.6 billion in cuts to the LA school budget will further devastate a school system already reeling from layoffs and program cuts: here.

Following this year’s federal election, the parties in the German grand coalition are all determined to unload the consequences of the world economic crisis and the country’s huge debt burden onto the backs of the electorate: here.

Australia: The federal and Northern Territory (NT) Labor governments last month unveiled a series of free-market measures that will deepen the poverty and suffering in indigenous communities: here.

Britain: The Brown Labour government is forcing a million disabled, sick and injured workers off social benefits: here.

Figures recently released by the Turkish Statistical Institute reveal that in the first quarter of 2009, as Turkey was being hit hard by the global financial crisis, not only real wages but also nominal wages in industry decreased substantially: here.

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