Gay Music Director Files Discrimination Complaint Against Illinois Catholic Church – VIDEO

Gay Music Director Files Discrimination Complaint Against Illinois Catholic Church – VIDEO

Colin Collette

Colin Collette, a music director who served at the Holy Family Catholic Community church in Inverness, Illinois for 17 years, has filed a federal discrimination complaint after he was fired by pastor Terry Keehan in July for posting photos on Facebook of his proposal to his partner Will Nifong, reports the Chicago Tribune.

At the time, Keehan told Collette that his relationship violated the tenets of the Roman Catholic Church.

6a00d8341c730253ef01a73df9750e970d-800wiIn August, hundreds of people attended a meeting at which most people voiced support for Collette and a church cantor announced his resignation because of his dismissal.

Collette filed the complaint against Keehan and the parish’s manager on Thursday alleging discrimination on the basis of sex, sexual orientation and marital status.

At a press conference, Collette said:

“It is with deep regret that I have had to pursue this course of action. I have chosen to enter into a marriage, as is my right under Illinois law, and perhaps I can open the door to other men and women who the church has chosen to exclude from the community.”

In a written statement, Susan Burritt, a spokeswoman for the Archdiocese of Chicago, said:

“The Archdiocese of Chicago has not seen the complaints that Mr. Collette has filed with the civil authorities and so we are unable to comment on them. We will respond to the complaints in the forums in which they are filed at the appropriate time.”

A successful claim of discrimination will likely turn on the “ministerial exception” to anti-discrimination law. In 2012, the Supreme Court issued a ruling that religious institutions have broad latitude in hiring and firing people whose jobs include religious roles.

Collette’s lawyer, Kerry Lavelle said her client has reached out to Chicago’s new archbishop Blase Cupich but has received no response:

“The archbishop will not take his calls. [Collette] wants his job back. That’s what this is about.”

Same-sex marriage became legal in Illinois on June 1.

Check out a Chicago NBC 5 report on Collette’s September meeting with Cardinal Francis George, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/gay-music-director-files-discrimination-complaint-against-illinois-catholic-church-video.html

Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton Unloads On 'Hate Mongering' Against Transgender Students

Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton Unloads On 'Hate Mongering' Against Transgender Students
Gov. Mark Dayton (D) slammed opponents of the Minnesota State High School League’s vote this week to allow transgender students to play on girls’ sports teams, according to The Uptake.

The Minnesota Child Protection League had taken out newspaper ads that claimed the sports association’s policy change would lead to the end of all girls’ sports. A commentary in the Minneapolis Star Tribune had conjured up the image of an “adolescent counterpart” to Green Bay Packers linebacker Clay Matthews getting on a girls’ team by declaring, “My long hair is evidence of my sincerity and my feminine self-expression.”

But Dayton, speaking on Thursday, was having none of it. He denounced the opposition as “hate mongering,” “despicable” and “absurd.”

The full transcript of the governor’s remarks, via The Uptake:

Dayton: I don’t know the details of the policy, but I applaud the [High School] League for taking this on in a very serious, careful-minded way. From what I understand of it, if this is correct, it’s inclusive in a responsible way that they should be … again I would applaud them for doing so.

I think some of the hate-mongering that was going on was just despicable. I mean the idea that Clay Matthews is going to change gender status to go trample young girls on a basketball court, I mean, it’s just so … it’s ludicrous. But it’s not funny because it’s so hurtful to kids out there struggling with their own identities and parents who are struggling with those challenges, and I think anyone who would think they would wish this on themselves or their kids is just, just absolutely … The embellishment it would take for that far-fetched, absurd, not even hypothetical possibility and [to] turn that into an attack on trying to help some kids who need a chance to be like every other kid in terms of their school activities — it’s just … I can’t comprehend how people … how some people in this state can want to spend their time on something that’s that destructive to other people’s lives and misstate it in such a way that is really appalling.

The High School League oversees high school athletics in Minnesota. Its new transgender policy passed by an overwhelming margin, with 18 of the 20 board members voting yes. The measure, which will take effect in the next school year, makes Minnesota the 33rd state to adopt a formal transgender student policy, according to the Star Tribune.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/06/mark-dayton-transgender_n_6281232.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Gay Iconography: Feel The Funk For Chaka Khan

Gay Iconography: Feel The Funk For Chaka Khan

Chaka

Chaka Khan, a worldwide singing superstar who has sold an estimated 70 million records across the globe, may be the Queen of Funk, but she’s also a queen in the LGBT community.

A singer, actress and activist, Khan has won 10 Grammy Awards (including two as the lead singer of Rufus), but, like many other icons, she’s also had her share of struggle. Wrestling with addiction throughout her life, she declared herself sober in 2005. Through it all, she’s remembered the importance of her gay fanbase. In an interview with ChicagoPride.com, she said:

“It goes way back. I find my gay and lesbian followers to be the most un-fickle of all my followers. I tell you, when times got a little rough, when I had any rough spots, I could always do some track dates at some gay clubs. I don’t know exactly what my appeal is, maybe it’s the butch in me, I don’t know. I know I’m kind of butchy. That’s cool. I love it. I truly embrace that part of myself.”

The gay community has been known to embrace her right back. In additon to being invited to perform at Pride events, she’s a drag queen favorite, beloved for her style, voice and attitude.

See the Queen in action with some of our favorite clips, AFTER THE JUMP

 

Chaka Khan’s first big hit with Rufus was the classic “Tell Me Something Good,” written by Stevie Wonder. The song peaked at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 and won a Grammy Award, the first for the group.

 

In 1978, Chaka released her first solo album, including her hit, “I’m Every Woman.” Despite singing one of the most empowering songs of all time, she admits to sometimes lacking confidence herself. “I’m quite insecure,” she told The Guardian. “I’m really weak and strong at the same time. I used to go to great lengths to prove my humanity, to self-medicate and party, just to show people that I can do the same things and see the same things as they do. I don’t feel the need to do that or be that any more.”

 

Khan’s final hit with Rufus was “Ain’t Nobody” in 1983. The track reached number one on the Hot R&B chart and the top ten in the U.K.

 

For those who were still unfamiliar with Chaka in 1984, Grandmaster Melle Mel made it hard to forget her name in his opening to “I Feel For You.” The Prince-penned track begins with a verse by Mel “Chaka, Chaka, Chaka, Chaka Khan, Chaka Khan, Chaka Khan, Chaka Khan, Chaka Khan, Let me rock you, Let me rock you, Chaka Khan.”

On screen, you may have caught Chaka in a small cameo as the choir soloist in The Blues Brothers, but she’s also appeared on the stage. In London, she portrayed Sister Carrie in Mama, I Want To Sing. After turning down the role of Shug Avery in the film adaptation of The Color Purple, she took the role of Ms. Sofia opposite Fantasia Barrino on Broadway.

What’s your favorite Chaka Khan track?


Bobby Hankinson

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/gay-iconography-feel-the-funk-for-chaka-khan.html