statement originators:
The Audre Lorde Project
The LGBT Program, American Friends Service Committee
'Before the War' is a collection of articles published on Temenos before the War in Iraq began. These pieces are being re-published to remember where we have been and reflect on where we're going.
For more info, please email Joo-Hyun Kang/ALP, or Kay Whitlock/AFSC
"Within each one of us there is some piece of humanness that
knows we are not being served by the machine which orchestrates
crisis after crisis and is grinding all our futures into dust."
-Audre Lorde (1934-1992) - Black, lesbian, poet, activist,
mother
As
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Two Spirit, and Transgender (LGBTST)
organizations and individuals of conscience in the U.S., we stand in
opposition to the strategies, policies and practices of the U.S.
government's "War on Terrorism". While the U.S. government prepares
for an escalated, public and pre-emptive war against Iraq -- and
declares the doctrine of pre-emptive military strikes central to the
national security strategy of the U.S. -- we call on LGBTST
communities to join with other peace-seeking communities in opposing
war, and struggling for peace with justice. As residents in this
country, we recognize our special responsibility to speak and act
out against unjust and immoral U.S. government action (both within
and outside the borders of this country).
This "War on Terrorism" will not create safety or security for
people within the U.S. or elsewhere. It is an umbrella term that
encompasses many unjust and dangerous strategies intended to silence
dissent, while entrenching U.S. power throughout the world. The "War
on Terrorism" is in reality a permanent strategy for flexible war,
where: 1) targets outside and within the US change; 2) the US acts
as a global police chief, judge, jury, and executioner -- operating
unilaterally whenever international consensus can not be arranged,
and seeking to entrench its position as the only global superpower;
3) communities and individuals that are most marginalized within
this country are faced with accelerated and deepened economic,
social and political attacks; and 4) legitimate grief for those
whose lives were lost on 9/11/01 is transmuted by the war machine
into a permanent climate of fear, suspicion, and hatred.
WHY THIS IS AN LGBTST ISSUE
As Audre Lorde and others have said, we believe that "there is no
such thing as a single-issue struggle because we do not live
single-issue lives". Members of our communities and our loved ones
have experienced the following since the launch of the "War on
Terrorism" more than a year ago:
- Increased violence. The strategy and rhetoric of the "War on
Terrorism" creates and relies on a culture of hate, resulting in
increased violence against communities of color, immigrants,
women, LGBTST people and others. Over the past year, this violence
has included domestic violence and hate violence.
- Re-institutionalization of racial profiling. Racial profiling
has been re-affirmed as policy and practice - in spite of a
growing national consensus against it just before 9/11/01.
- De-prioritization of human needs and social programs (incl.
HIV/AIDS, education, housing, welfare and other health & human
services), to support increased military and so-called "security"
spending. Conservative estimates of war with Iraq project costs at
between $60 billion and $100 billion.
- Increasing militarization of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS). This has resulted in massive abuses
of human and due process rights, including: disappearances, secret
detentions on the basis of no evidence, deportations, and chilling
new "special" registration procedures that are justified by, and
further institutionalize racial, religious, and cultural
stereotyping. These measures all serve to support expansion of a
profit-making prison-industrial complex.
- Political surveillance and attacks on human/civil rights
through mechanisms enabled by federal and local so-called
"anti-terrorist" legislation (e.g. USA Patriot Act and Homeland
Security Act). This has included re-building dangerous public and
now-legal surveillance strategies that echo the disgraceful
COINTELPRO policies and abuses of an earlier era.
We continue to mourn the lives lost on 9/11/01. We also mourn the
lives lost to U.S. military action and economic sanctions in
countries including Afghanistan and Iraq -- and that certainly will
be lost elsewhere as the doctrine of pre-emption is implemented. We
seek to prevent the loss of thousands of more lives in unjust,
immoral wars that will only widen the spiral of retaliatory
violence.
Politicians will try to sell these wars as U.S. missions of
"liberation." But we know that militarism and war rely on and
promote many forms of oppression -- including homophobia,
transphobia, sexism, and racism. As LGBTST people, we know what it
means to be targets of hate and violence. We understand what it
means to be scapegoated. We believe that the ever-changing targets
of the U.S. government's "War on Terrorism" simply provide a
permanent and unending list of scapegoats - distracting all of us
from the challenging and necessary task of building communities and
a world based on principles of peace, justice, self-determination
and human dignity.
With care and respect, we call on LGBTST organizations and
communities to join national and local coalitions to struggle for
peace with justice -- and actively and creatively oppose U.S.
policies and actions of military/economic/political aggression and
war.
STATEMENT ORIGINATORS
The Audre Lorde Project (ALP). ALP is a Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, Two Spirit and Transgender People of Color center for
community organizing, focusing on the New York City area. Through
mobilization, education and capacity-building, we work for community
wellness and progressive social and economic justice. Committed to
struggling across differences, we seek to responsibly reflect,
represent and serve our various communities.
LGBT Program, Community Relations Unit, American Friends
Service Committee. The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
is a Quaker organization that includes people of various faiths who
are committed to social justice, peace, and humanitarian service.
Its work is based on the Religious Society of Friends (Quaker)
belief in the worth of every person and faith in the power of love
to overcome violence and injustice.
ENDORSERS
(The following list is in formation as of 1-26-03.
Groups/Individuals without locations listed are based in New York
State, where this statement originated. To endorse this statement,
please email: alpinfo@alp.org)
Organizational Endorsers (as of 1/26/03)
- African Ancestral Lesbians United for Societal Change (AALUSC)
- AFSC GLBTQ Youth Program [Seattle, Washington]
- AFSC Hawai'i Gay Liberation Program [Honolulu, Hawai'i]
- AFSC LGBT Issues Program/Faith Action Network [Ann Arbor,
Michigan]
- Al-Fatiha Foundation for LGBTIQ Muslims [Washington, DC]
- Astraea Lesbian Action Foundation
- Brazilian Rainbow Group (BRG)
- Colombian Lesbian & Gay Association (COLEGA)
- Community United Against Violence (CUAV) [San Francisco, CA]
- Gay Asian & Pacific Islander Men of New York (GAPIMNY)
- Incite! Women of Color Against Violence
- Latino Gay Men of New York
- Mano a Mano
- National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP)
- National Youth Advocacy Coalition (NYAC) [Washington, DC]
- NYC AIDS Housing Network
- Pride At Work, AFL-CIO [Washington, DC]
- Queer Economic Justice Project
- South Asian Lesbian & Gay Association (SALGA)
- Southerners On New Ground (SONG) [Durham, North Carolina]
- Triangle Foundation [Detxroit, Michigan]
Individual Endorsers (as of 1/26/03)
- David Fuentes Jr.
- Richard Haymes
- Jeffrey Montgomery [Detroit, Michigan]
More LGBT Anti-War resources can be found here.