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Equality Network wins Herald Society ‘Campaigner of the year’ award

In a ceremony at Glasgow’s Crowne Plaza Hotel last month,  Equality Network won the Herald Society Campaigner of the Year award for their Equal Marriage campaign. The Equality Network, a leading lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) equality charity in Scotland, competed in a strong field alongside fellow nominees Shelter Scotland and Oxfam Scotland, to win the accolade in recognition of their efforts to secure equal marriage rights for same-sex couples.

The Equal Marriage campaign has been working to bring about equal marriage rights for LGBT people in Scotland since 2007. By spring this year the Equality Network had secured a majority of MSPs in favour of same sex marriage and put the issue firmly on the political agenda.

Tim Hopkins, Director of the Equality Network, said:

“We are deeply grateful to the Herald Society judges for recognising the work of the Equal Marriage campaign. The efforts of partner organisations and volunteers in the campaign all over Scotland has helped bring us to the point where the Scottish Parliament will be able to vote on a bill for same-sex marriage in the next year. We hope and trust that MSPs will support equality and bring fairness to many thousands of families across Scotland.”

Tom French

Tom French, Policy Coordinator for the Equality Network, added:

“We are honoured that our Equal Marriage campaign has been recognised for the contribution it has made to Scottish Society.  While the Scottish Government’s decision to introduce same sex marriage is founded on principles of equality, I don’t think they would have been at the point of legislating without the momentum of the Equal Marriage campaign.”

Collecting the award on behalf of the Equality Network, Nathan Gale, Project Development Worker for the Equality Network, said:

“I was extremely proud to represent the Equality Network at today’s ceremony. The award is a great achievement, but we still have a long way to go to ensure the legislation is passed and that it represents true marriage equality for LGBT people.”

The Scottish Government will be publishing a consultation on the draft Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Bill later this month.

The B.Right.On Festival – February 2013

So here’s how it happened. I went into a cafe in Brighton where I used to clean the floors and asked to stage an art exhibition. The owner liked my work but said it was too political for his business. A friend knew someone who knew someone at the Jubilee Library – I got offered an exhibition there next February. I’m going to paint BANNED across the main window in dripping blood. In the foyer exhibition space there’ll be some of my visual poems, and giant speech bubbles from the OUT140 project, telling coming-out stories in 140 characters: ‘Mother said I’d rather you were a prostitute than a lesbian’ or I told my parents I was bisexual when I was 16. They said “go to your room.”

Then someone said do you want to see round the Town Hall – some lovely Old Police Cells, and a basement fitted with shelves, both ripe for exhibitions, performances, just saying – and I ended up saying “Yes!” to the Atrium, the perfect place to hang the Hankie Quilt, a memorial to those we’ve lost and those living with HIV. I’ll be representing the 482 HIV+ people who have died in Brighton since 1982 with drops of red blood, and the 1,895 people living with HIV in Brighton today with fresh lime leaves. Please update these figures if you know better.

A quarter of the people living with HIV don’t know it yet – early diagnosis = longer life.

So then I asked if anyone else wanted to help celebrate Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Trans History Month in Brighton next February. First, National Co-Chairs Sue Sanders and Tony Fenwick said yes, and then Gscene magazine said yes, and Brighton Council LGBT Worker’s Forum said yes, and the Jubilee Library said yes, and Bear Patrol said yes, and Emmaus said yes, and Lunch Positive said yes, and artists said yes, and poets said yes, and choirs sang yes, and Disability Arts Online said yes, and Barefoot Wine said yes, and I Am A Poem turned into we are The B.Right.On Festival – now with added Arts Council England support!

Thank you all for your enthusiasm! Needless to say, I’ve thanked the café owner for saying no.

Vince Laws

So far we’ve got two Launches, Adopt-A-Pansy, Trouser Wearing Characters, Make Them Eat Cake, a Queer Brighton Tour, a Human Library, choir concerts, The Small Frayed Knot, The ‘L’ Word, and How Gay is Your Pet? We could do with more wall space for art and photography. If you’ve got other stuff planned, let me know and we’ll put it in the programme and let as many people know as possible. Think what you can bring to the party, not what you can take.

I’m calling it a celebration of Queer History Month – I don’t care what your sexuality is, or your preferred gender – I just insist you’re not straight, white, and able-bodied. Only kidding. It’s a celebration for everyone who realises everyone is worth celebrating. As Oscar Wilde said, “You don’t have to bat for us to admire our balls!”

Get in touch if you want to get involved.

Vince Laws

I AM A POEM

St James’ Street residents have their say

Chris Gull chairs the public meeting at Dorset Gardens Methodist Church

Over 100 people packed into the Dorset Garden’s Methodist Church on Friday evening (November 30)  to attend the St.James’s area community meeting Reclaiming the Neighbourhood, called to discuss issues affecting the local community following a recent violent attack in the area.

Those attending included Katy Bourne (the new Police and Crime Commissioner for Sussex), Simon Kirby (MP for Kemptown & Peacehaven), Chief Inspector Bruce Mathews (Head of the Safe in the City delivery unit) and Peter Castleton manager of the council’s community safety team.

Politicians in attendance included Phelim MacCafferty (Deputy leader of the Green group), Gill Mitchell (Leader of the Labour group) and local ward Councillors Geoffrey Bowden and Stephanie Powell (Queens Park).

The event was independently chaired by local businessman Christopher Gull and facilitated and financed by the LGBT Community Safety Forum.

The main concerns voiced by local residents included drug dealing, drunkenness, concerns about cyclists cycling the wrong way down St James Street and general lawlessness and violence on the streets.

A large majority of the audience indicated they did not feel safe out on the streets after midnight.

There was unanimous support to create a new local action team (LAT)  for the St James’s area with immediate effect to take the decisions of the meeting forward which included exploring with the council the possibility of making St James’s Street a pedestrian priority area. A vote was taken to ask the deputy leader of the council Phelim McCafferty to take this view back to the council for discussion and for someone to report back to the new LAT. A proposal was suggested to make the area Pedestrian Priority every Saturday’s as a ‘pilot test scheme’ for an agreed period. The general concensus expressed was that the granting of Pedestrian Priority to the area was vital to the gentrification of the area which would ultimately result in a reduction in crime.’

Some residents raised concerns that the presence of  local politicians on the LAT resulted in these forums becoming toxic and political battlegrounds rather than a place for residents concerns to be debated.

Thirty volunteers came forward at the end of the meeting to sign up to a new politically free LAT working panel.  This panel will meet in the next two weeks to elect a committee and then start the process of putting into action the changes discussed.

Local activist Chris Cooke, is stepping down from his current role as Chair of the LGBT Community Safety Forum (although he will remain on the committee) to be the acting Chair of the new LAT during this transition period. Chris a former chair of the LAT is experienced in community activism and has resigned as a member of the Labour Party so he can be neutral during the process.

Chris commented:

“The new LAT will work closely with statutory authorities and other agencies to effect the changes the community has voiced “loud and clear” at the public meeting on Friday.  It’s a fresh start, and the action group will be independent, transparent and politically neutral. On Friday we witnessed residents take charge of their own community and I cannot wait to get process started with the new team”

Katy Bourne & Simon Kirby MP

Local MP for Kemptown & Peacehaven Simon Kirby agreed to write to the local supermarkets reminding them of their responsibilities to the local community.

Katy Bourne the new Police and Crime Commissioner confirmed her commitment to making local communities safe and gave a grant of £250 to help the LAT move forward with their plans.

She tweeted after the meeting:

“Well done for organising the meeting, the huge turnout showed people’s commitment to their community. Great to see residents re-starting the St James LAT with support from local businesses. Great start and congratulation.”

Chief Inspector Bruce Matthews Head of the Safe in the City delivery unit, tweeted:

“That was a very productive public meeting, chaired for the benefit of all. Happy for the local police to play our part.”

 

If you are interested in working to make St James Street and the surrounding area a safer place to be contact:

Chris Cooke can be contacted at: chrismartyncooke@yahoo.co.uk

A triumph from disaster?

Tuesday 20th November 2012 is a date which will go down as a fateful day in the history of Christianity in this country.

The media headlines were all about the Church of England voting against women being allowed to become bishops.  But actually the ramifications of the no vote go far wider.

I sat through the entire Synod debate in Church House, Westminster.  It was a sobering experience.  The whole day was given over to this one issue: should the proposed legislation to admit women to the episcopate by passed or rejected?

Well over 100 speeches were made.  The motion was generally expected to be approved but as the afternoon wore on I became less and less certain that it would be. Just before lunch the incoming new Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, had spoken powerfully and cogently in favour. And just after lunch the outgoing Archbishop, Rowan Williams, made a really moving and impassioned plea for Synod to support the legislation.

But gradually the weight of opposition against it began to become clear as speaker after speaker got up to condemn it.

Synod is divided into three ‘houses’ : bishops, clergy, and laity.

The House of Bishops were overwhelmingly for, but even there some argued against  the measure, including our own Bishop of Chichester, Martin Warner.  The House of Clergy was also predominantly in favour but here too some spoke passionately against it.  But in the House of Laity there seemed to be a surprisingly large number of people anxious to get to the podium to vent their fervent disapproval of the proposed change.

The motion needed a two thirds majority in each house in order to pass.  It got this easily in the House of Bishops, and by some margin in the House of Clergy.  But in the House of Laity it only achieved 64% support and so fell short, just.

How could this happen?

Basically it came about because of an unholy alliance between extremely conservative Anglo Catholics and extremely conservative Evangelicals.  This alliance is cynical and unholy because the two groups hold diametrically opposed views of almost everything else.  They only agree that women cannot be ordained, and they agree on this for totally different reasons.

The Anglo Catholics think that women cannot be priests (and therefore bishops) because Christ chose only males for his disciples.  This is not the place to go into the labyrinthine argumentation which this premise entails.  Suffice to say that the consequence is that it is for them impossible for a female to become a priest.  So putting a woman through an ordination ceremony is merely a charade: the magic can’t ‘work’, it just doesn’t ‘take’, you end up with a female in fancy dress.

The Conservative Evangelicals think that women should not be priests. They don’t believe in the catholic sacrament of ordination for men or women, but they do believe that women should never play leadership roles because of the God ordained ‘headship’ of males.  They think that in Genesis in the Old Testament, and in St Paul in the New Testament, God clearly sets men over women and so females should obey males and always be subject to male authority.  Letting women be priests and bishops therefore represents a grave act of disobedience to the (supposedly) clear teaching of the Bible.  It is abhorrent to God.

I imagine that some of you reading this might be open-mouthed at this point.  Even as I write this I shudder at how utterly alien all of this sounds to most modern ears.  But you need to know that significant numbers of your compatriots actually believe these things.  (Don’t forget this is also the position of the Roman Catholic Church and many non-Christian religions as well).

These arguments have been rehearsed again and again over the past two decades.  Until Tuesday the Church of England had arrived at a point where essentially the Anglo Catholic/Conservative Evangelical opposition had accepted that women bishops were an inevitability, and what they wanted was ‘proper provision’ for themselves to carry on with their anti-women’s ordination stance while remaining within the C of E.  The proposed legislation included provision for every diocese to set up a code of practice so that parishes which did not want to be subject to a woman bishop could request ‘alternative episcopal oversight’ i.e. be looked after by a male bishop.

And this is where we get a cruel twist. The unholy alliance did not think the provision in the proposed motion was sufficient.  But also, some supporters of women bishops felt it was far too generous, and if implemented would effectively relegate women to being second class bishops.  So some of them voted against it as well.

The rest is history as they say.  But the consequences are profound.  Suddenly vast numbers of ordinary people who have little or nothing to do with the church have become animated about this.  They have realised that we have a national church, and that this national church which is actually part of our national life is completely out of step with contemporary values and standards of human decency.

The consequences are far-reaching. The 26 seats in the House of Lords reserved for bishops are effectively reserved for males only, not now by tradition, but by deliberate vote. This is intolerable. Many ordinary people who thought nothing of it before are now scandalised by the idea of the ‘stained-glass ceiling’ which means only men can be promoted within the C of E hierarchy.  Questions have been asked in Parliament.  One wag said amusingly but correctly that our national ‘broad church’ had been destroyed by a few narrow minds.

And yet for those of us who are LGBT it may be good news.  Politicians are seriously reconsidering the exemptions given to the churches from equality legislation.  The driver will be gender equality but sexuality will be included with it.  The credibility of all our Christian enemies has been seriously weakened and they will find that in future when they spout their bile about the sinfulness of homosexuality nobody will listen to them.  Now that conservative Anglicans have overplayed their hand on the inferiority of women they have blown the cover of all conservative Christians.  The general public now see them now for what they are, and mostly they don’t like what they see. Nor I believe does the Carpenter of Nazareth.

Keith Sharpe is Chair of Changing Attitude Sussex

 

 

 

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