AsylumConnect: Two Seniors' Quest to Create Lifesaving Online Informational Resources for LGBTQ Asylum Seekers

AsylumConnect: Two Seniors' Quest to Create Lifesaving Online Informational Resources for LGBTQ Asylum Seekers
“Where are you?” I stared expectantly at my dark phone screen, impatiently waiting for it to come to life. I knew that today only one person could understand my profound disappointment. Our vision had just been shattered, and for a moment, I seriously doubted our ability to piece it back together. It was over. We had lost. But could it really have been for nothing? In those minutes before my friend’s message lit up my phone, I knew I had a decision to make: fight or flight. I had chosen wrong before; I refused to make the same mistake. A buzz directed my eyes back to the now glowing screen. “Library. Coming?” I took a deep breath and reached for my phone. “Be there soon.”

When my friend, Sy Abdul, approached me to apply for the University of Pennsylvania’s inaugural President’s Engagement Prizes — a $100,000 grant awarded annually to Penn seniors to design and implement local, national, or global engagement projects during the first year after graduation — I hesitated. I doubted my ability to open up about something that I had gone to such lengths to conceal in the past. Luckily, the necessity of our project inspired me to be brave.

The initial concept for our project, AsylumConnect, was borne out of Sy’s personal experiences as an LGBTQ asylum seeker in the U.S. Our premise was simple: to support people seeking political asylum in the U.S. because of sexual orientation or gender expression. We would accomplish this by creating the first ever website and mobile app specifically designed for LGBTQ asylum seekers. These platforms would feature a centralized catalog of available LGBTQ-friendly services by location, themed educational webinars, and animated how-to videos.

As we combined our distinct experiences into a singular effort to advance AsylumConnect, the line separating us from our project faded. What I uncovered during my research — what I was hearing from existing organizations and LGBTQ asylum seekers — deeply affected me. It altered my worldview and rearranged my priorities.

The reality is sobering for anyone.

It is still illegal to be gay in 77 countries. LGBTQ people in these countries are imprisoned and subjected to “corrective” action, including rape by government officials, public humiliation and the death penalty. Upon arrival in the U.S., LGBTQ asylum seekers face abuse in detention centers. Many have nowhere to go, no social support, and end up homeless. They cannot legally work in the U.S., nor are they entitled to a government attorney without a work permit, which typically takes at least one year to obtain. An estimated 44 percent of LGBTQ refugees suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.

I became profoundly aware that I had failed to speak out for more than a decade in a country where I at least had that choice. And with this realization came painful memories. My mind travelled back to when I was 15 years old, sitting in mandatory religion class at my Catholic boarding school – my least favorite part of the day. I felt my palms sweat as I nervously glanced around the classroom. A monk stood at the blackboard, equating homosexuality to bestiality and necrophilia. His words, sharp as knives to me, were blunt instruments to the surrounding faces, used merely to convey the severity of the aforementioned “sins.” Shame washed over me. As I pretended to be fascinated by the chips in the wooden exterior of my desk, I silently marveled at how easily my peers seemed to accept our teacher’s words. Oblivious to my discomfort, they vigorously scribbled each homophobic thought into their notebooks to ensure an “A.” I vowed, once again, to never come out.

As my own story began to intersect with those I encountered for our project, the President’s Engagement Prizes became more than just a competition to me. It became a chance for self-redemption and a rare opportunity to improve the lives of the thousands of LGBTQ asylum seekers in the U.S. With this transformation, losing was no longer an option.

Even after the award recipients were announced and our names were not among them, I remained unable to accept this loss. I realized that our passion for this cause cannot be extinguished by the outcome of an application. It is rooted in our upbringings: both of us grew up in environments that rejected and even condemned homosexuality (albeit to differing degrees). Consequently, both of us know what it is like to deny who we are, and we are willing to fight to prevent others from undergoing similar experiences.

Although we lost the grant, I was accepted to several international conferences to represent AsylumConnect. Surrounded by young global change makers, I caught myself believing once more that I am capable of revolutionizing the movement that has in many ways become an extension of myself. As I drove away from my latest conference, the Global Engagement Summit, watching Northwestern University’s newly-green campus fade into the distance, I found strength in the words I had written in our grant application:

For too long I believed that I could not be feminine and gay. I clung to ‘normalcy’ – to the idea of a husband, a marriage legal in all 50 states, biological children with someone I love. But most of all, I clung to an existence uncomplicated by stereotypes. I was afraid of a word and its connotations. It took transferring to Penn for me to realize that ‘lesbian’ can mean whatever I need it to mean. This term must change for me, not vice versa. Being gay isn’t a choice or a sickness; it is not a punishable offense. Being gay is something you simply are. For the first time in my life, I’m going to be unapologetically me – feminine, gay, and finally proud of both.

We may not have won the grant, but I won this realization. This is not a loss. This is a beginning.

If you’re interested in more information on AsylumConnect, contact Katie at [email protected]. Look out for the AsylumConnect Facebook page and preliminary website coming soon.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/katie-sgarro/asylumconnect-two-seniors_b_7238224.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Presidential Hopeful Dodges Questions Regarding Extreme Stance Against Marriage Equality

Presidential Hopeful Dodges Questions Regarding Extreme Stance Against Marriage Equality

In an interview with CNBC last week, Republican presidential hopeful Ben Carson struggled to explain how same-sex marriage would allow for “other variations on traditional marriage.”
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/presidential-hopeful-dodges-questions-regarding-extreme-stance-against-marr?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

WATCH: Chris Salvatore Cruises Grindr With Octogenarian Gal Pal Norma

WATCH: Chris Salvatore Cruises Grindr With Octogenarian Gal Pal Norma

chris salvatore
Noted really, really, really ridiculously good-looking person Chris Salvatore had a kiki with his sassy senior citizen sister from another mister Norma — just sipping wine, talking about boys and eating pizza. It’s really good pizza. Norma knows good pizza and if mother says it’s good pizza— and she does. Among other amazing things.

norma 2norma 3norma 4That Norma has some good taste. Meanwhile, just when you thought this Salvatore fella couldn’t be any cuter, and here we are:

norma 1Ugh, they’re like a Gay Harold and Maude. Check out Chris and Norma’s Pizza Night(!) below:

Les Fabian Brathwaite — seriously considering writing Gay Harold and Maude, starring the ghost of Bea Arthur.

Les Fabian Brathwaite

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/m8NRvP4sJW0/watch-chris-salvatore-cruises-grindr-with-octogenarian-gal-pal-norma-20150511

Carly Fiorina Says Americans Should Accept SCOTUS Ruling on Marriage, Won't Oppose It: VIDEO

Carly Fiorina Says Americans Should Accept SCOTUS Ruling on Marriage, Won't Oppose It: VIDEO

Fiorina

Former Hewlett-Packard CEO and GOP presidential hopeful Carly Fiorina was asked about the upcoming SCOTUS marriage ruling in an interview over the weekend with the political blog Caffeinated Thoughts.

Separating herself from some of her rivals like Scott Walker, Fiorina said she does not support a federal marriage amendment.

Said Fiorina:

“I think the Supreme Court ruling will become the law of the land, and however much I may agree or disagree with it, I wouldn’t support an amendment to reverse it.”

Then she swiveled to the hot conservative topic of “religious liberty”.

“I very much hope that we would come to a place now in this nation where we can support their decision and at the same time support people to have, to hold religious views and to protect their right to exercise those views.I think this is a nation that should be able to accept that government shouldn’t discriminate on how it provides benefits and that people have a right to their religious views and those views need to be protected.  We need to protect religious liberty in this country.”

Watch the clip, AFTER THE JUMP

On the topic of whether she agrees or disagrees with SCOTUS ruling on the issue, it’s the former. Fiorina said in February that “the worst thing the Supreme Court can do” is rule on marriage.

(h/t right wing watch)


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/fiorinafma.html

Woman Confronts Church Members About Homophobic Sign

Woman Confronts Church Members About Homophobic Sign
Cate Dobbins wants a word with the head of the church that put up a homophobic sign in her neighborhood, but so far the pastor has ignored her request.

Dobbins started an online petition on Friday, calling on the First Conservative Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Florida, to remove a sign on its property that read, “Homosexuals Must Repent Or Go To Hell.”

The petition garnered nearly 200 signatures in two days, Dobbins said. She also reached out to the church and left a message with the pastor, but he had not returned her call as of Monday morning.

“NOWHERE in the bible does it mention gays and hell in the same sentence,” she wrote on the Change.org petition. “There is no place in Jacksonville for such an ignorant and hatred-filled sign.”

Dobbins, a travel agent originally from New York, said she was raised Catholic, and took issue with the sign’s misreading of Biblical teachings.

“I’m all for the First Amendment,” she told The Huffington Post on Monday, “but their sign was inaccurate. … For a church to be so un-Christian, that really put me over the edge.”

The church has not responded to a HuffPost request for comment. The pastor of the church refused to speak with press over the weekend but sent Action News a letter stating: “I was aware of the controversy from the sign, but this church feels it is needful to keep our citizens informed and be relevant through the word of God.”

Dobbins went to the church on Sunday to deliver her petition to the pastor but was stopped by congregants, as shown in the footage above.

“You obviously do not know your scripture, so you need to leave,” one churchgoer is heard saying off camera. “This is private property.”

The church’s secretary informed her that the sign is changed every Monday morning, Dobbins said, but she had not yet checked on it as of speaking with HuffPost. Whether the church puts up a new sign or not, Dobbins said, she hopes to engage the pastor in conversation and ask him why he allowed such an antagonistic sign to go up.

“I would like to speak with him and say, ‘You catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. If you’re really concerned that homosexuals are going to hell you should talk to them, not put up a sign that offends them so deeply.'”

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/11/florida-church-homophobic-sign_n_7257268.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Gay NYC Hotelier Who Hosted Ted Cruz Scraps The Apologies, Attacks “Gay Extremists” Instead

Gay NYC Hotelier Who Hosted Ted Cruz Scraps The Apologies, Attacks “Gay Extremists” Instead

01-ted-cruz-mati-weiderpass.w529.h352.2xAfter NYC hoteliers Ian Reisner and Mati Weiderpass hosted a ‘fireside chat’ with vehemently anti-gay Senator and Republican Presidential candidate clown car occupant Ted Cruz at thier Central Park penthouse last month, the out business partners have been met with backlash and boycotts from the gay community.

Reisner was quick to respond, first calling the dinner party a “terrible mistake.” He wanted everyone to know he wasn’t entirely aware of Cruz’s politics before agreeing to co-host, because his multimillion dollar penthouse is apparently located underneath a rock. “I’ve spent the past 24 hours reviewing videos of Cruz’ statements on gay marriage and I am shocked and angry,” he said.

Well now Weiderpass is speaking out with a decidedly different take.

In an op-ed in the Observer, he calls out the “gay extremists” who don’t understand the virtues of breaking bread with someone like Cruz who has proudly boasted about his “proven record of standing and fighting to protect traditional marriage between one man and one woman.” In the same week as the dinner, Cruz filed two bills to halt same-sex marriage.

So which is it? A “terrible mistake” or an intentional engagement with the opposition? Because it can’t be both.

“I hosted a United States Senator Presidential candidate and asked him how he would feel if his daughter were to tell him she was lesbian,” Weiderpass writes. “How often do you think he has been asked that?” 

We suppose we should be thanking you?

If anything, the meeting provided an opportunity for Cruz to get out and show how weighted his stance on gay issues is — presidential if you will. Some of his best friends are gay, he can’t possibly be a bigot.

After the story broke in the Times, Cruz said, “I know it’s been a long time since we’ve seen it, but this is what it means to truly be a ‘big tent Republican’ instead of a panderer.”

The duplicity and empty talk from Cruz, Reisner and Weiderpass make us think the three might actually be perfect for one another.

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/sFlGwfrJIfU/gay-nyc-hotelier-who-hosted-ted-cruz-scraps-the-apologies-attacks-gay-extremists-instead-20150511

Priests Bless Gay Couples in Symbolic Wedding as 1000+ LGBT People March Through Havana: VIDEO

Priests Bless Gay Couples in Symbolic Wedding as 1000+ LGBT People March Through Havana: VIDEO

Havana

More than 1,000 LGBT people marched through the streets of Havana, Cuba on Saturday in a procession organized by President Raul Castro’s daughter Mariela, a longtime activist for equality.

The march included a symbolic gay wedding, The Guardian reports:

The couples held hands or embraced as American and Canadian protestant clergy members blessed them. It was part of official ceremonies leading up to the Global Day against Homophobia on 17 May…

“Our family accepts us but society doesn’t,” said Raúl Orta, who “married” his partner of 13 years, Yaimel Medina. “If one us is no longer here tomorrow, the other one loses everything. That’s not right.”

The parade, with the beat of conga drums and the waving of rainbow-colored banners, gave gay Cubans and their supporters a rare opportunity to celebrate without fear.

Watch the BBC’s report, AFTER THE JUMP

RELATED: Want to Go to Cuba? 6 Tours Specifically for LGBT Travelers


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/bbccuba.html

Five Gay Men On HIV PrEP Explain Why They Are Taking The Pill

Five Gay Men On HIV PrEP Explain Why They Are Taking The Pill
So much of the conversation about pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has been reduced to labeling the people taking PrEP (“Truvada whore,” and more) instead of listening to them. Queerty wanted to get past those labels, so we spoke to five gay men on PrEP about why they chose to take a pill to prevent HIV infection — and their thoughts on the debate about it and the changes in their sexual lives that it inspired.

We came away with a broader, more human perspective on why this choice works for so many gay men.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/11/gay-men-explain-prep_n_7257200.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices