Imagine going through grammar and high school not learning one thing about the history of your people. Not learning about the scientists, artists, astronauts, politicians, sports legends and so many others who were just like you.
That happens even in 2012, even in places as progressive as Chicago. For the LGBT community, history is a hit-or-miss educational adventure. Sure, we see gay culture splashed across the small screen on a daily basis now. What used to be freak shows on the talk shows has turned into a Modern Family smorgasbord of LGBT lives. While not very diverse (usually they are very white and middle-class), they still represent a major step forward from the recent dark ages of public culture.
But because most LGBT individuals grow up in families that are not like us, we don't get the Gay 101 basics we need to more fully understand where we come from, and what our place in the world can be. Television provides the window dressing, but without historical context, one could get the impression we were all cut from the same clothreality show bimbos, talk-show hosts, and gays jumping to enter the suburban-married-two-parent ideal for some Americans.
We are so much more. The LGBT community is about as diverse as you could imagine. And because we are not learning about the accomplishments of LGBTs in the classroom, at least on any significant scale, the self-esteem of our youth is left damaged.
Thankfully, California has made a big step forward on this topic, adding LGBT issues into the curriculum. Because they are such a large public school system, they can help influence the educational process across the country. But it is going to take a major 50-state effort to make sure no child is left behind when it comes to inclusion of the vast diversity of our lives.
Teaching about these issues has been controversial ever since people started to come out in large numbers in the United States. Teachers have been targeted for witch hunts and still many of them fear for their jobs if they even talk about their own relationshipsin the same way a heterosexual teacher might mention a spouse. Even more difficult is their ability to integrate LGBT issues naturally into their courseworkfor fear of parents protesting.
Teaching about this history is important for youth who often have very little support at home. But it would actually be presenting a more accurate history. Right now, by not talking about the full lives of our historical figures, they are actually participating in a lie.
In Chicago Oct. 11, The Legacy Project (TLP) is taking one giant step forward to help educate all people, including LGBT youth, about the pioneers who came before them. Some were out in life, some were only discussed as LGBT posthumously. TLP has created The Legacy Walk, a public display of plaques on the North Halsted Street rainbow pylons. In its first dedication, they are presenting 18 plaques honoring a diverse array of national and international people who should be found in any history books. And the fact is, most of them are in the history booksbut not as their complete selves.
The brainchild and passion of gay activist Victor Salvo, his Legacy Project dream has taken years to fulfill. He has met with hundreds of academics, historians, politicians, business groups and others to create a project that will be the first of its kind in the world. Chicago is used to firsts on LGBT issues: Henry Gerber started the first known U.S. gay organization in 1920s Chicagoand was promptly fired from his job.
The plaques dedicated on Oct. 11 will be just a start. There are many more people TLP expects to honor over the years. But here are just a few you can see unveiled next week:
James Baldwin: An award-winning gay author
Harvey Milk: Among the first openly gay elected officials in the United States
Jane Addams: Lesbian Nobel Prize-winning social justice pioneer
Barbara Jordan: Lesbian, first African-American woman elected to Congress from a Southern state
Christine Jorgensen: First widely known transgender person
Barbara Gittings: Lesbian activist who spearheaded the drive to overturn the classification of homosexuality as a mental illness in the 1970s
Bayard Rustin: Civil-rights pioneer who was Dr. Martin Luther King's mentor and architect of the 1963 March on Washington
Dr. Margaret Chung: Lesbian, first U.S.-born Chinese woman to become a physician
Others include: Artist Frida Kahlo, Dr. Alfred Kinsey, Alan Turing, Alvin Ailey, Keith Haring, Sgt. Leonard Matlovich, Reinaldo Arenas and Dr. Antonia Pantoja.
There are, of course, thousands of other pioneers who could be so honored, and plaques are just one way to make sure our histories are not forgotten. But this is one important step forward to recognizing the complete personhood of these historical figures.
Details: The Legacy Walk Inaugural Dedication is Thursday, Oct. 11National Coming Out Day. There is a VIP reception at 2 p.m. at Sidetrack bar, followed by a tented outdoor ceremony 3-4:15 p.m., the dedication reveal at 4 p.m. and a reception at 4:30 p.m. See www.legacyprojectchicago.org .