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Castro gets an art walk
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Kings are Wild
The
Since 1971, the newspaper of record for the San Francisco Bay Area LGBTQ community
Vol. 47 • No. 35 • August 31 - September 6, 2017 Gooch
www.ebar.com
A sea of people marched down Market Street August 26 during a day of protesting hate.
San Francisco shuts down right-wing protesters
Gooch
by David-Elijah Nahmod
A
t first Marc Huestis, a longtime gay activist and entertainment promoter in San Francisco, wasn’t sure he could support the demonstrations against the white nationalists and Donald Trump supporters. Huestis, best known for his classic film screenings at the Castro Theatre, felt that the
LGBT community was giving the far-right advocates attention they do not deserve. Originally, the Patriot Prayer group received a permit to hold a “free speech” rally at Crissy Field Saturday, August 26. But organizer Joey Gibson, who has held similar rallies in the Pacific Northwest, abruptly canceled the event last Friday, sending counterprotesters and police scrambling as he shifted his plans, saying
he would instead hold a “press conference” at Alamo Square Park. In the end, thousands of LGBTQ people and allies flooded the streets of San Francisco in peaceful protest against Gibson, neo-Nazis, and other fringe white supremacist elements that sparked violence in Charlottesville, Virginia earlier this month. Gibson eventually went to Crissy Field to briefly speak to
reporters after he held a media availability at a Pacifica apartment. But he never held the right-wing rally that sparked sustained criticism from city and community leaders. “I have to admit I went to the march begrudgingly,” Huestis told the Bay Area Reporter as a huge crowd marched from the Castro down to Civic Center Plaza. “I think See page 14 >>
New school year, more anti-LGBT issues by Seth Hemmelgarn
T David Brog
LGBT Jews plan protest of Christian speaker by Heather Cassell
S
ome LGBT Jewish activists are opposed to an upcoming Christian speaker at a San Francisco synagogue, saying he has a close association with far-right pastors and opposes a Palestinian state. David Brog, a proponent of evangelical Christian Zionism, is scheduled to speak at Congregation Emanu-El September 7. Brog will deliver an address titled, “Christian Zionists – Why Evangelicals Support Israel,” at San Francisco’s historic Jewish temple in the Inner Richmond, which has a notably liberal congregation. Senior Rabbi Jonathan Singer at Congregation See page 2 >>
he new school year is just underway, and already, several school districts across the state find themselves immersed in anti-LGBT controversies. Perhaps nowhere is that more evident than in the Central Valley, where turmoil continues to surround the Fresno Unified School District’s anti-LGBT board president. Among other developments, a gay Fresno pastor and several other clergymen are asking the school board to take action against Brooke Ashjian, who recently compared his critics to the murderers responsible for the Armenian genocide of 1915. The strife started with an August Fresno Bee article that quoted Ashjian dismissively talking about LGBT curriculum. “My biggest fear in teaching this – which we’re going to do it because it’s the law – but you have kids who are extremely moldable at this stage, and if you start telling them that LGBT is OK and that it’s a way of life, well maybe you just swayed the kid to go that way. ... It’s so important for parents to teach these Judeo-Christian philosophies,” he said, according to the paper. Many have called on Ashjian to resign since he made the comments, which were an apparent reference to laws such as the California Healthy Students Act, an LGBT-inclusive sex education measure that Governor Jerry Brown signed into law in 2015.
Fresno school board President Brooke Ashjian
In a statement he read at the August 23 school board meeting, Ashjian said, “1.5 million Armenians were murdered because they dared to disagree with the powers [that] be. The intolerance shown by the Ottomans toward my people was insufferable. These leaders of the LGBT movement are much like them.”
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He added that his critics are guilty of “pure fascism,” and that he won’t resign. “I will not be silenced by bullies ...,” said Ashjian, who hasn’t responded to the Bay Area Reporter’s interview requests. In an August 28 letter, the Reverend Bill Knezovich, the gay pastor of Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church in Fresno, and 12 other faith leaders called Ashjian’s genocide remarks “reprehensible” and asked the school board to remove or at least censure Ashjian at its September 13 meeting. “It is clear from his remarks that he has nothing but contempt for the LGBTQ community – especially the most vulnerable, some who happen to be LGBTQ children,” said the clergymen, who added that some of their faith community members are LGBTQ Armenians. “We as faith leaders demand that at the MINIMUM the board publicly censure Mr. Ashjian and PREFERABLY remove him from the presidency of the board. Your inactions or actions will either condone his comments, sending a chilling message to the students of the district that it is OK to hate or they will affirm the diversity and beauty of all our children regardless of their ancestry or sexual orientation,” stated Knezovich and the others. Tonya Stokes, 45, has a 15-year-old transgender son who goes to a Fresno Unified school, and she said the Healthy Students Act “will help save lives.” See page 14 >>