The Socialist 16 February 2006
Troops out of Iraq
ID cards: 'Creeping compulsion' and grovelling MPs
The real cost of BP mega-profits
Universities and the arms trade
Haitian poor rebel at suspected poll-rigging
Building an alternative to the profit system
New Labour attacks the sick and disabled
Keep fighting New Labour's Education Bill
Labour's pro-business policies are punished
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender History Month
Striking postal workers build support
Marching for jobs and services
PO Box 1398, Enfield EN1 9GT
020 8988 8777
Link to this page: https://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/427/5014
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Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender History Month
FEBRUARY
IS Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) History Month. The idea
comes from Black History Month as a way to redress the lack of
acknowledgement of the history of LGBT people in society, schools,
colleges and education as a whole. School’s Out! the LGBT education
campaigning group, started things off in 1994 – at that stage, as a
grassroots campaign.
By Marc Vallée, Socialist Party LGBT Group convenor
Today, LGBT History Month is backed by the Metropolitan Police, CPS, Department of Health, TUC, Amnesty International and even Transport for London. The main aim is to "break down the legacy of silence" that surrounds the history and struggle of LGBT people.
It is important to know the true history of the fight for LGBT liberation as a way to better defend ourselves in the future. This was sharply marked by the homophobic attack by the fascist British National Party (BNP) on LGBT History Month on its website. The BNP calls on parents to protest against "unwholesome 'alternative life-style' propaganda" and "unhealthy and unwanted social-engineering indoctrination exercises". The BNP goes on to say that it is time to return to the teaching of "traditional and time proven Christian standards of morality".
The fight for LGBT liberation and for a socialist future has a long and proud history. There is not room to cover all that history in this article, but a look at the impact of the Bolshevik revolution in Russian of 1917 and the German revolution of 1918 on the movements for homosexual liberation show that history.
"Protest
in 2005 outside the Iranian Embassy in London about the brutal public
execution of two gay teenagers for the so-called 'crime' of
homosexuality."
Photo: Alex Christie.
In Bolshevik Russia all penal restrictions on homosexual activities were removed. For a period in the 1920s, the Soviet moral code was seen as an enlightened model for the rest of the world. The rights of homosexuals were, to a degree, affirmed and protected. The Bolshevik Gregorii Batkis described the attitudes of the new, socialist society in 1923:
"The present sexual legislation in the Soviet Union is the work of the October revolution. This revolution is important not only as a political phenomenon which secures the political role of the working class, but also for the revolutions which evolving from it reach out into all areas of life... [Soviet legislation] declares the absolute non-involvement of state and society in sexual relations, provided they harm no one and infringe upon no one's interests... Homosexuality, sodomy and various other forms of sexual gratification set forth in European legislation as offences against public morality are treated by Soviet legislation exactly as is so called 'natural' intercourse."
With the counter revolution under the leadership of Stalin, in March 1934, homosexuality once again became a criminal offence and the Communist (Stalinist) movements of the rest of the world soon followed suit in labeling homosexuality "unsocialist". Stalin denounced homosexuality as the product of the "decadence in the bourgeois sector of society", and even a "fascist perversion"!
In 1918, the German Communist Party taking its lead from the successful revolution in Russia in 1917, argued for complete equality for lesbians and gays. The famous gay rights campaigner, Hirschfeld, recognised the radicalising effect of the revolution: "The events of the year 1918 have doubtless had a certain effect on the liberation struggle of homosexuals... For beyond the groups of humane and just scientists, homosexual organisations have arisen... and have taken up the struggle for their fellows."
After the defeat of the Germen revolution, which had given Hirschfeld and others the chance to put gay rights on the political map, the growing gay movement moved back, basing itself on the belief that, "The liberation of homosexuals can only be the work of homosexuals themselves" within a capitalist framework – like so many LGBT rights groups today.
Hirschfeld was a courageous person who suffered for his outspoken views. He was badly beaten up in 1920, attacked and left for dead with a fractured skull in 1921, and shot at during a lecture in 1923. He died in 1935. Yet, in all his years of campaigning, he never achieved his goal of law reform, let alone wider liberation for gay people.
The defeat of the German revolution tragically left the gay movement unable to defend itself against the fascist nightmare years later, which ended with tens of thousands of gays being murdered in concentration camps alongside Jews, socialists and communists.
Prejudice is an intrinsic part of the capitalist system. Capitalist ideology is advanced to justify the privileged existence of an elite at the expense of the majority and thrives on the inequalities in society which it creates.
In contrast, a socialist society, with democratic working-class control and management of industry and society's resources, would promote unity and co-operation. Under these conditions, prejudice would begin to evaporate and personal relationships would be freed from the restrictions imposed by capitalism.
A strategy to achieve lasting LGBT liberation depends on linking the day-to-day battles against anti-gay and anti-transgender discrimination to the struggle to rebuild a mass movement for socialism and achieve a socialist society.
We need to take the arguments for LGBT liberation and the fight against capitalism into the trade unions, workplaces, schools, colleges and youth clubs, into communities and voluntary organisations to rally support behind the call for genuine equality that could stop homophobia.
Knowing our history is a start. The point is to doing something with that knowledge and that is to fight for a socialist society which is the only way we can achieve real and lasting LGBT liberation.
The Socialist Party LGBT Group and Socialist Students will be holding a number of meetings on LGBT History.
Contact us for more info at [email protected], or visit our website: www.socialistparty.org.uk/liberation/index.html
In this issue
ID cards: 'Creeping compulsion' and grovelling MPs
The real cost of BP mega-profits
Universities and the arms trade
Haitian poor rebel at suspected poll-rigging
Building an alternative to the profit system
New Labour attacks the sick and disabled
Keep fighting New Labour's Education Bill
Labour's pro-business policies are punished
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender History Month
Striking postal workers build support
Marching for jobs and services
Home | The Socialist 16 February 2006 | Join the Socialist Party
Related links:
Pride flag is about unity in struggle
Socialist Party LGBT+ members' meeting: Perspectives and tasks
Stonewall riots' legacy shows need for socialist struggle to win LGBT+ liberation
30 years on from Section 28: the legacy of fighting LGBT+ attacks must continue
Support for Socialist Party campaigns at biggest ever Leeds Pride
Lessons from the Russian revolution for LGBT+ struggle today
Socialist Party national meeting: Perspectives for socialism after the elections
National Education Union needs a socialist, fighting deputy general secretary
Leeds Socialist Party: The May elections - and the need for a new mass workers' party
1920s-30s Britain: A working-class movement fighting unemployment and capitalism
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