By Krystal Freeman, Special to BlackVoices.com
I learned to sag my jeans just right by watching the men around me. I studied the way they rocked tilted fitted caps over crisp tapers and deep waves, eyeing my father most intently. He was so precise about matching his kicks with neatly creased jeans and "throwback" jerseys. By fifteen I'd nearly stolen his style and his swagger.
It never occurred to me that having such insider knowledge was enough to get me killed, until I read about the brutal murder of Sakia Gunn.
Five years ago, Sakia, a 15-year old girl who "dressed like a boy," was attacked while waiting for a Newark, New Jersey bus after a night out with friends. The girls were approached by two men in a car who made uninvited sexual advances. When the girls declined, stating that they were lesbians, 30-year old Richard McCullough fatally stabbed Sakia while shouting homophobic slurs. She bled out at the intersection of Broad and Market during the wee hours of Mother's Day morning.
This May is the fifth anniversary of the murder of Sakia Gunn. She would have just celebrated her 20th birthday.
Too few of us know Sakia's name, but we all know girls like her -- young women like me who are often mistaken for teenage boys because we have the courage to dress the way we feel inside. We are your daughters, sisters and nieces. We are also young black lesbians who, in having the courage to live authentically, make our communities uncomfortable.
Sadly, the lives of many black youth have been taken because of intolerance and that very courage. Their names are also unknown. There's Ronnie Antonio Paris, dead at 3 from brain injuries inflicted by his dad who boxed with him so he wouldn't become gay. And openly gay Rashawn Brazell, 19, who's dismembered body parts were found in garbage bags strewn throughout Brooklyn. Simmie Williams, 17. Nireah Johnson, 17. Stephanie Thomas, 18. Ukea Davis,19. And many more. Each and every one of them belonged to someone.
My family doesn't understand why I'm more comfortable in button-ups instead of blouses or why I'd choose a pair of "dunks" over stilettos. Nor are they comfortable with my attraction to women, but I belong to them too. In his bigoted sexual aggression, McCullough never stopped to think that Sakia belonged to someone. She was someone's family member and, more importantly, someone's child.
Pictures of the Week
A local man throws rocks at South African police in the Reiger Park informal settlement outside Johannesburg Monday May 19, 2008. Mobs rampaged through poor suburbs of Johannesburg in a frenzy of anti-foreigner violence over the weekend, killing at least 12 people, injuring dozens and forcing hundreds to seek refuge at police stations. The attacks capped a week of mounting violence that started in the sprawling township of Alexandra. Angry residents there accused foreigners, many of them Zimbabweans who fled their own country's economic collapse, of taking scarce jobs and housing. . (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
An unidentified woman looks through the shattered rear window of the car after it was hit by bricks outside a church in Johannesburg, South Africa, Sunday May 18, 2008. Mobs killed at least five people and injured 50 in anti-foreigner violence Sunday that has spread through poor suburbs of Johannesburg, police said. Foreigners, mainly Zimbabweans, were targeted, police spokeswoman Cheryl Engelbrecht said. More than 300 had sought refuge at the local police station, she said. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
Women from the Pro-independence Polisario Front rebel soldiers are seen during a military parade in the Western Sahara village of Tifariti, Tuesday May 19, 2008 to celebrate the 35th anniversary of the Polisario Army. After Spanish colonizers left Western Sahara in 1975, Morocco and Mauritania went to war over it. By 1979, Mauritania had pulled out and Morocco had taken over. But fighting continued between 15,000 Saharaui's Polisario guerrillas and Morocco's U.S. equipped army. A U.N. negotiated truce in 1991 called for a referendum on the region's future, but that vote never happened. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
An unidentified man buys cooking oil on the streets of Highfileds in Harare, Zimbabwe Tuesday, May, 20, 2008. The cooking oil is made affordable by repackaging into smaller bottles and containers. A third of the population has fled Zimbabwe in recent years as the country confronts chronic shortages of food, medicine, fuel and cash precipitated by the government's seizure of white-owned farms that once produced enough to feed the country and export to neighbors. The government this month introduced a half-billion Zimbabwe dollar note in efforts to deal with runaway inflation that unofficial estimates put at 700,000 percent a year. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)
Sen. Barack Takes a break on the campaign trail before giving a speech. (AP)
Actor Shia LaBeouf and a fan take a self portrait at the premiere of his new movie "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull",Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)
GRESHAM, OR - MAY 18: Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) is hugged by his wife Michelle Obama before he speaks during a campaign event at the Huntington Terrace Senior Center May 18, 2008 in Gresham, Oregon. Obama is campaigning through Oregon and Kentucky ahead of Tuesday's primaries. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan holds the ball near the start of the Game 7 of the NBA Western Conference semifinal basketball series against the New Orleans Hornets, Monday, May 19, 2008, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
We may conclude that McCullough was motivated by his own homophobia. But we must also acknowledge that he was implicitly encouraged by our community's typical stance on issues of sexuality. Homophobic beliefs are somehow justified by people like my family and yours, who claim their gay relatives selectively, and stand silent in the company of bigoted conversation that endangers the very gay children they love.
My mother has always bragged to her friends about my academic achievements. My dad loved to tease his friends about how his daughter could "school" their sons on the basketball court. But there were no words of support when it became clear that I was a lesbian.
It was okay that I wasn't crazy about boys, if it meant I focused on school. And my perceived masculinity was tolerable, if it made me a solid competitor on the court. The catch: I wasn't supposed to tell anyone about my attraction to girls.
The silence was crippling.
My family was tight-lipped about same-sex attraction, but what they did say was damaging. As a result, I learned to be resilient in the presence of loved ones who thought being gay was a "white thing" or that I was going through a phase. I still shuffle with unease whenever relatives say things like "I wouldn't mind so much if they didn't put it in our faces." I know that "they" alludes to those "effeminate" men and "mannish" lesbians walking in gay pride parades. I also know that the "they" my family despises includes some part of me.
Almost every time a person is murdered for being gay, they are met with hateful language I've heard my family use - these same family members would be devastated if my life were taken. They advise me to be careful, suggesting that I spare myself by dressing more like a girl. They don't see the harm in refusing to affirm me as I am.
Their position contributes to the climate that allowed for the senseless murder of Sakia and so many others. Their silence endangers me also.
To my family and to my community, I need you to love and claim all of me, even when others speak out against me. You can help prevent another murder like Sakia's. Your voice and your courage can make our communities safer for young people like Sakia, young people like me.
A native New Yorker now based in Los Angeles, Krystal Freeman is a Media Fellow for Communities of African Descent at the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. She holds a B.A. in Urban & Environmental Policy with a minor in Critical Theory & Social Justice from Occidental College.
For More on how to help keep Sakia's legacy alive go to http://www.sakiagunnfilmproject.com


Comments: (238)
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By: QueerBlackCinema.org on 6/03/2008 2:50AM
Congrats to Krystal on a well written article. I also would like to acknowledge, Katrina Parker and her crew from the African American Communities at Glaad and Black Voices for being open to publishing a great well needed article.
Remember this moment when you are in a circle of friends and someone say a homophobic slur jokingly. It's not funny anymore people!
Remember this moment when you see a *gay person being bashed and don't report it even if it's anonymous.
Your voice regardless if you are straight or gay is needed.
Remember this moment when your religious leader speak out against *gays. No more silence!
We must stop being afraid to speak out. There are ways you can be discrete if you are not out or afraid. Write, write, write!
Being silent will continue a cycle of hate, hurt and sometimes death.
Remember this moment when you celebrate Dr Martin Luther King birthday.Remember it was a Black Gay Man who organized the march on Washington (Baron Rustin)
Remember this moment when you are marching for another young NON-gay brother or sister unjust death.
We must remember and break the silence otherwise, we are just making ourselves more and more invisible regardless of your sexual orientation, gender, or religion.
We must all take an active role regardless if it's through writing literature, films, songs, marching, public speaking or creating a film series that's social conscious. Whatever you do, remember this moment and that you are keeping many gay and lesbians of color memory alive. Tolerance starts with you!
Peace & Love,
Angel
QueerBlackCinema.org
New York Only Black LGBTQ monthly micro-cinema & Annual Film Festival
** Gays meaning Gay, lesbian, bisexuals, transgenders and queer people
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By: Ifalade TaShia Asanti on 6/03/2008 3:40AM
Blessings Sister Krystal!
Thank you for a powerful peace chronicling the dangers of intolerance, hate and misunderstanding within our own Black community. Your words and Sakia's story are an important lesson in our history as African Americans and as human beings. May our dear sweet ancestor, Sakia, feel our love for her and may her death not be in vain. Ase!
Ifalade Ta'Shia Asanti, Executive Director
World Pride & Power Organization
www.officialworldprideandpower.com
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By: Delores F on 6/03/2008 10:05AM
I am married and I dint even own a pair of heels. I wear gym shoes and sweats all day everyday who has the right to judge me? I cannot stand living in a world where we are judged by the color of our skin or our sexual preference or what we wear. There are so many more things we could be putting that energy towards. Why should we care if you are Gay, lesbian, Black, White, Fat, Skinny, Short,or tall? That has nothing to do with the fact that we have children that are being killed everyday by a stry bullet lets go outside and put some of that negative ennegy into beating the shit out of these young punks killing our babies. Lets rally together and do something about the high gas prices. I find that people rally together for things that really dont even matter and the things that do matter get left behind. I am a mother of three
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By: Wanda on 6/03/2008 12:06PM
I do not agree with homosexuality, but because I do not agree with it does not mean that I want anyone killed because of their beliefs. I don't condone it and don't feel that I have to accept it. It should not be confused with people's civil rights as it is a personal matter and not something that was caused by another person, as in the case of slavery and racial intolerance. It is a choice that people make. However, anyone taking the life of another person for his/her sexual preference is not the way to deal with the situation. This is something that in the end will be dealt with by God and him alone. He has given everyone free will to chose the life they want even when they know the outcome of that choice.
Please stop the violence because God has not asked us to deal with issues of this nature this way. HE will take care of anythings that he deems wrong Himself when he returns. He is coming back and people need to remember that.
God bless everyone and hopefully we will be able to stand before Him when he returns with the choices we all have made whether for good or bad.
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By: rm on 6/04/2008 6:38AM
^^^^ agree.
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By: Mike on 6/04/2008 8:48AM
All of this homophobia within the black community has got to stop! When did black people become the modern day lynch mobs!?!! Surely, not that much time has passed that we forget it when it was open season on black people (the black man in particular). The protest signs today might read, "Die Faggot"...but not long ago those same signs read, "Die Nigger".
It takes alot of audacity to forget where you came from and adopt an attitude of judgement, indifference and hatred.
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By: StlDel on 6/04/2008 8:51AM
The article was well written, and I empathize with the families of all murder victims. However, I do believe we should have to accept a lifestyle that we do not agree with. There are just as many heterosexual people murdered as there are homosexual people. Although they may have been killed for different reasons, it was all due to hatred. We should stand against hatred, but that does not mean we have to stand for homosexuality.
I am not a judge of anyone, for I have no hell or heaven to place anyone in. I do, however, have the right to agree with what I want to agree with, as well as this writer's family. I will continue to stand against senseless violence, no matter who the victim, but I will never be an advocate for homosexuality.
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By: StlDel on 6/04/2008 8:54AM
I made an error in my last comment. It should have read, "However, I do not believe we should have to accept a lifestlye aht we do not agree with."
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By: Majesticc on 6/04/2008 8:57AM
I wish people would stop bringing God into homosexuality. My niece is a lesbian and me and my family love her to death. My grandmother, who attends church religiously, loves her more than the rest of us. God made her different for a reason. Don't try to make it seem like its anyone's choice to be gay. You are born that way. My niece says she knew she liked girls when she was 4 years old. Was she "weird" then? Holy Rollers, stop acting like you're better than everyone with your religious beliefs. My family believes in The Bible and we've had many blessings. Do you think we deserved to be punished because my niece is a lesbian? Get it together!! And Wanda, whether you want to believe it or not, someone close to you might be gay, too.
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By: missmeme on 6/04/2008 9:12AM
u r so right @#15
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