This piece was inspired in part by facts and sentiments from Another Mother Tongue by Judy Grahn (published 1984). Ritualized Homosexuality in Melanesia edited by Gilbert H. Herdt (published 1993) is also referenced. Many of the referenced facts are cited so many places it has become common knowledge. Christianne Gadd contributed significantly to this piece. This post originally appeared in The Advocate.
Dearest Queer Person,
Chances are you don't even know that you
are holy, or royal or magic, but you are. You are part of an adoptive
family going back through every generation of human existence.
Long
before you were born, our people were inventing incredible things.
Gifted minds like the inventor of the computer Alan Turing and aviation
pioneer Alberto Santos-Dumont live on in you. The imprint that bold and
brilliant individuals like Lynn Conway and Martine Rothblatt (both
transgender women alive today) made on modern technology is impossible
deny as present-day engineers carry their torch in the creation of
robots and microprocessors. More recently speaking, one of the
co-founders of Facebook publicly acknowledged his identity as a gay man,
as did the current CEO of Apple.
Hermaphrodite, the child of Hermes and Arphrodite |
We were so often gods and
goddesses over the centuries, like Hermaphrodite (the child of Hermes
and Aphrodite), and Athena and Zeus, both of whom had same-sex lovers.
In Japan it was said that the male couple Shinu No Hafuri and Ama No
Hafuri, "introduced" homosexuality to the world. The ability to change
one's gender or to claim an identity that encompasses two genders is
common amongst Hindu deities. The being said to have created the Dahomey
(a kingdom in the area now known as Benin) was reportedly formed when a
twin brother and sister (the sun and the moon) combined into one being
who might now identify as "intersex." Likewise, the aboriginal
Australian rainbow serpent-gods Ungud and Angamunggi possess many
characteristics that mirror present-day definitions of transgender
identity.
Our ability to transcend gender binaries and cross
gender boundaries was seen as a special gift. We were honored with
special cultural roles, often becoming shamans, healers and leaders in
societies around the globe. The Native Americans of the Santa Barbara
region called us "jewels." Our records from the Europeans who wrote of
their encounters with Two-Spirit people indicates that same-sex sexual
activity or non-gender binary identities were part of the culture of
eighty-eight different Native American tribes, including the Apache,
Aztec, Cheyenne, Crow, Maya and Navajo. Without written records we can't
know the rest, but we know we were a part of most if not all peoples in
the Americas.
Your ancestors were royalty like Queen Christina of
Sweden, who not only refused to marry a man (thereby giving up her
claim to the throne), but adopted a male name and set out on horseback
to explore Europe alone. Her tutor once said the queen was "not at all
like a female." Your heritage also includes the ruler Nzinga of the
Ndongo and Matamna Kingdoms (now known as Angola), who was perceived to
be biologically female but dressed as male, kept a harem of young men
dressed in traditionally-female attire and was addressed as "King."
Emperors like Elagalabus are part of your cultural lineage, too. He held
marriage ceremonies to both male-identified and female-identified
spouses, and was known to proposition men while he was heavily made-up
with cosmetics. Caliphs of Cordoba including Hisham II, Abd-ar-Rahman
III and Al-Hakam II kept male harems (sometimes in addition to female
harems, sometimes in place of them). Emperor Ai of Han Dynasty China was
the one whose life gives us the phrase "the passions of the cut
sleeve," because when he was asleep with his beloved, Dong Xian, and
awoke to leave, he cut off the sleeve of his robe rather than wake his
lover.
You are descended from individuals whose mark on the arts
is impossible to ignore. These influential creators include composers
like Tchaikovsky, painters like Leonardo da Vinci and actors like Greta
Garbo. Your forebears painted the Sistine Chapel, recorded the first
blues song and won countless Oscars. They were poets, and dancers and
photographers. Queer people have contributed so much to the arts that
there's an entire guided tour dedicated just to these artists at New
York's Museum of Modern Art.
You have the blood of great warriors,
like the Amazons, those female-bodied people who took on roles of
protection and had scarce time or interest between their brave acts to
cater to the needs of men. And your heart beats as bravely as the men of
the Sacred Band of Thebes, a group of 150 male-male couples who, in the
4th century B.C.E., were known to be especially powerful fighters
because each man fought as though he was fighting for the life of his
lover (which he was). But your heritage also includes peacemakers, like
Bayard Rustin, a non-violent gay architect of the Black civil rights
movement in the U.S.
We redefined words like bear, butch, otter,
queen and femme, and created new terms like drag queen, twink and
genderqueer. But just because the words like homosexual, bisexual,
transgender, intersex and asexual, have been created in the relatively
recent past doesn't mean they are anything new. Before we started using
today's terms, we were Winkte to the Ogala, A-go-kwe to the Chippewa,
Ko'thlama to the Zuni, Machi to the Mapuchi, Tsecats to the Manghabei,
Omasenge to the Ambo and Achnutschik to the Konyaga across the
continents. While none of these terms identically mirror their more
modern counterparts, all refer to some aspect of, or identity related
to, same-gender love, same-sex sex or crossing genders.
You are
normal. You are not a creation of the modern age. Your identity is not a
"trend" or a "fad." Almost every country has a recorded history of
people whose identities and behaviors bear close resemblance to what
we'd today call bisexuality, homosexuality, transgender identity,
intersexuality, asexuality and more. Remember: the way Western culture
today has constructed gender and sexuality is not the way it's always
been. Many cultures from Papua New Guinea to Peru accepted male-male sex
as a part of ritual or routine; some of these societies believed that
the transmission of semen from one man to another would make the
recipient stronger. In the past, we often didn't need certain words for
the same-sex attracted, those of non-binary gender and others who did
not conform to cultural expectations of their biological sex or
perceived gender because they were not as unusual as we might today
assume they were.
Being so unique and powerful has sometimes made
others afraid of us. They arrested and tortured and murdered us. We are
still executed by governments and individuals today in societies where
we were once accepted us as important and equal members of society. They
now tell us "homosexuality is un-African" and "there are no homosexuals
in Iran." You, and we, know that these defensive comments are not
true--but they still hurt. So, when others gave us names like queer and
dyke, we reclaimed them. When they said we were recruiting children, we
said "I'm here to recruit you!" When they put pink and black triangles
on our uniforms in the concentration camps, we made them pride symbols.
Those
who challenge our unapologetic presence in today's cultures, who try to
deprive us of our rights, who make us targets of violence, remain
ignorant of the fact that they, not us, are the historical anomaly. For
much of recorded history, persecuting individuals who transgressed their
culture's norms of gender and sexuality was frowned upon at worst and
unheard of at best. Today, the people who continue to harass us attempt
to justify their cruel campaigns by claiming that they are defending
"traditional" values. But nothing could be further from the truth.
But
now you know they are wrong. Just imagine the world without that first
computer or the Sistine Chapel's ceiling, or a huge part of the music
you've ever heard from classical Appalachian Spring to classic YMCA (I
mean, we've held titles from the "Mother of Blues" to the "King of Latin
Pop!"). How much less colorful would the world be without us? I'm
grateful that you're here to help carry on our traditions.
So, happy LGBT History Month! I hope to celebrate with you here at Quist. This list of LGBTQ history online resources is a good place to start in exploring more specifics about this heritage.
Lesbianamente*,
Sarah Prager
Sarah Prager
*Actually a term as a way someone signed a letter for a lesbian organization in Mexico decades ago!
Comments
Post a Comment