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Keep your frigging tolerance!

By Michelle E. Brown

Originally printed 4/7/2011 (Issue 1914 – Between The Lines News)

I love words. They can inspire, excite, and express the human emotions in so many ways yet take on a life of their own once they come out of your mouth.

Something as benign as the word mother can go from a term of endearment to a slap in the face, all depending on the context and tone of the speaker.

Case in point: when I was trying to get on my mother’s good side I might call her “Mother Dear” in hopes of a positive response, but call her “Mommy Dearest” in the wrong tone of voice and the results were more than likely just the opposite.

Lately I’ve been having mixed feelings about the words tolerant/tolerance. It seems to get bandied about quite a bit lately following horrific events like a bullying attack and harsh political rhetoric.

By most definitions, tolerance/tolerant/toleration are terms used to describe moderately respectful attitudes of groups and/or practices disapproved by those in the majority. Up until recently I have used the word tolerance although something deep inside me bristled each time I said it.

I tolerate my out of control, hyper nieces once a year during the holidays, although the rest of the year I avoid them like the plague. I tolerate high airline fares, but will not be nickel and dimed for every piece of luggage or amenity just to save a buck. I tolerate our messed up political system while working for change.

Bottom line is I put up with a lot of crap that, if I could have my druthers, would never have existed or vanish from the earth completely (well not the nieces). So you see when I hear someone talking about tolerating gay folk I bristle.

I had my AHA moment on this whole LGBTQ “tolerance” thing while sitting at a meeting planning an anti-bullying march. Now the irony was we were meeting outside the city where the rally was planned because some felt more comfortable, safe even at an undisclosed location. So we met somewhat covertly to discuss a march for anti-bullying legislation.

The final straw was when it was suggested the event be called “A Rally for Tolerance.” Something just snapped.

That same day I heard of a planned protest of a high school production of the “Laramie Project” by the Westboro Baptist Church. They never showed up to protest the play, but you know the group has protested outside of military funerals, thanking God for 9/11, calling soldiers “Fag Troops” and claiming the deaths as retribution for America’s sin. Of course we must tolerate the Phelps clan because they are just exercising their first amendment rights.

The evening before, I had spent time talking with a gay youth who had been brutally beaten while standing in line at a convenience store. His attacker could not tolerate having someone gay standing too close to him. This violation of his personal space apparently gave this gay-basher license to attack this young man, beating him senseless while others watched on.

It seems we have had to tolerate too much hatred, bigotry and intolerance to be asking for or accepting tolerance. Isn’t it time we get up off our knees and quit begging for tolerance and demand respect? I mean seriously.

Enough is enough. Our society has tolerated Irish, Italian, Catholic, Latino, Asian and other immigrants yet anti-immigrant biases and xenophobia still abound.

Our society tolerated women coming out of the kitchen, demanding equal rights, opportunities and wages, yet women still earn less than men in the workplace and our reproductive rights remain under attack.

Our society tolerated integration of the African American community, saying separate was not equal, yet still African Americans make up a disproportionate number of the impoverished living in urban wastelands and/or incarcerated in the nation’s prisons.

Tolerance is not equality. Tolerance is just a bandage society has put over one “problem population/group” until another takes it place.

Bias, bigotry and hatred just float to the next site and we forget all the pain and evil done to the past victims and start the cycle all over again. Enough!

So I’m putting everyone on notice. You can keep your frigging tolerance. Give me respect.

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Authors of Note: Michelle E. Brown, The Phenomenal Woman

Michelle E. Brown is a women’s/civil/gay rights activist who believes in helping the community. She’s a member of the Board of Directors of the National Black Justice Coalition (NBJC) a Washington, DC based civil rights organization dedicated to empowering Black LGBT people. She has received numerous accolades for work to help bring awareness and confront the problems of homelessness, affordable housing, and drug addiction. And she’s a champion for youth empowerment.  Her writings have appeared in several Michigan newspapers including Between The Lines and she has written a children’s book. In 2008 she published “Wild Fruit In Open Spaces,’ a collection of poetry.

PrideIndex sat down with our new friend and colleague from Motown to talk about her life’s work and what’s next.

PRIDEINDEX:Why did you become an activist and why do you feel it is so important to become involved in the community?

Michelle E. Brown: I was inspired to become an activist by my community elders. At a time in my youth when I was adrift, I was taken under the wings by some elder African Americans, most of whom had migrated to the north from the south. They were engaged in voter registration, starting a citizen’s district council and cleaning up their blighted neighborhood.  They challenged me to do more than sit on my butt, educating me on my history as an African American and basically telling me it was my responsibility to continue the work of those who had struggled, fought and died so I could enjoy the freedoms I was taking for granted.

PI: If you were not an activist what would you be?

MB: It is hard to imagine myself being anything other than an activist as it flows through all aspects of my life. Having said that, I guess I would be a modern day griot, writer and educator.

PI: I understand that you’re a published author, tell us more about your writings. And where can I pick up a copy of your books?

MB: I am a published author, columnist and essayist. My writing is an extension of my passion for social justice. I have written two books. A children’s book “Jack with the Curly Tail” the first in a series. Using the primary character of Jack, a small dog, I touch on the subjects of self-identity, homelessness, friendship and family in a story designed to foster conversation between parent/teacher and child. Today’s youth are faced with these problems but often do not get an explanation or information where they can think critically and make better decisions (i.e. seeing beyond the stigma of homelessness). I have many wonderful opportunities to read this in public schools and engage youth not just in discussion but in writing projects of their own. (A sequel is planned for launch during National Reading Month – March 2012).

The second book is a collection of prose and poetry titled “Wild Fruit Hidden in Open Spaces “is a reflection of the different  “wild fruit” that connects us to our humanity (a person, love, feeling, etc.) that are not secrets but hidden in open spaces all around us if we just look.

Both books are available through Amazon.com or at my website www.michelleelizabethbrown.com.

I am most known and have received awards for my Point of View columns mostly  published in “Between the Lines” Newspaper (Michigan’s only publication for the LGBT community) www.pridesource.com and CherryGrrl www.cherrygrrl.com, an online publication focusing o the intersections of social Justice and LGBT equality. I have also had columns in The Detroit News and Michigan Citizen (mainstream Newspapers).

PI: Any influences and/or mentors?

MB: Wow, so many where to start. I think I have been strongly influence by working with James (deceased) and Grace Lee Boggs (now 95)–political/movement activists whose influence has impacted social justice, civil rights and politics since the 1940’s. Through them I met the late actor Ossie Davis whose stories of perseverance were incredible. Donna Payne, Assistant Director of Diversity at the Human Rights Campaign, who really helped me develop as an LGBT activist. Professor Sharon Howell at Oakland University who encouraged me to write. And of course the strong women in my family my grandmother, mother, aunt and godmother who never gave up on me but never let me rest on my laurels.

PI: What was it like for you to come out to your friends and family?

MB: Coming out to my friends and community has been interesting. I have always lived my life out in the open – all my trials and tribulations, successes and failures. I have always tried to be real and authentic believing that I should be judged on the content of my character not my gender, race or sexual orientation. No apologies. Classic example – while debating for marriage equality in Michigan, an audience member stood up and said she didn’t know about “all that gay stuff” but I had been in her neighborhood cleaning up vacant lots making it better for her neighborhood so she didn’t need to understand but supported it as the right thing to do.

My mother was wonderful. She loved me and became a surrogate mom to many of my gay friends. My sister basically did a don’t ask don’t tell until she prepared for her second marriage. I was supposed to be in it and was bringing a girlfriend so she figured it was time to talk about it with her kids and fiancé, and for her to come out as an ally.

I have an adult son who in his words is very proud of my activism and leadership. He is my best friend.

Now time for the other shoe to drop. My father and I had a very rocky relationship, punctuated by attempts to kill me because I was not the daughter he wanted. However in the two years after my mother died, before his death, and after the last attempt at taking my life we were able to reconcile.

PI: What advice would you offer to a young lady considering coming out?

MB: Put your big girl pants on sister because it’s going to be a rough road but you can do it. Be strong and proud of yourself and surround yourself with people that will support you.  You be you. Don’t ask for acceptance or tolerance of being a lesbian. It’s you and if they don’t like it, it’s their loss.

PI: Last year you were involved in an LGBT Roundtable with Congressman Gary Peters of Michigan briefly tell us more about that event.

MB:  The LGBT community endorsed and supported Congressman Peters. Too often we support a candidate during the election but after they are elected we do not hold them accountable and we do not let them know we have their back when they stand up for our issues. Congressman Peters has been very open to continuing the dialogue but has also reminded the community that we have a stake in issues beyond, ENDA, marriage equality, DADT, etc. We are part of the community at large and we meet with him not just to talk gay but talk about community as well – ie Healthcare reform, support for the auto industry, jobs, education.

PI: Have you ever considered running for public office? Why or why not?

MB: I have thought about running for office but probably would not. Once you are in office one can be restricted by the limitations of the office and the political process. There are things you want to or say you will do but can’t because of the structure of our current political system. I’d rather be on the outside, a provocateur, an agent for change.

PI: If President Obama were to call you up tomorrow and say, “Ms. Brown I need your advice, what are 3 things I can do to make life a little easier for the African-American community,” what would you tell him?

MB: Education, Education, Education. Our community is not ready to be a part of the global community because we lack the skills and training. More importantly there has been a systematic, intergenerational dumbing down of the African American community. It is not uncommon in urban and rural areas to find multiple generations under one roof all functionally illiterate. We need community schooling so we raise not just the child but the village.

PI:  Hypothetically speaking 100 years from now a group of LGBT youth will be given a homework assignment to write a report on life’s work and accomplishments of the renowned gay and human rights activist Michelle E. Brown.  What would you want the classroom to take away from that report? 

MB: I would like them to take away from that report that Michelle E. Brown was a woman of purpose; who learned from and stood proudly on the shoulders of those who came before her; A person who did not succumb to adversity but overcame or learned from her challenges; Who believed, despite all the atrocities, in the promise of America and worked hard for full equality in this country and human rights around the world.

reprinted from Pride Index: http://www.prideindex.com/wpcms/?p=4068

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