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: MICHELE on 6/25/2008 3:13PM
THIS IS ONE OF THE MOST INFORMATIVE WELL-WRITTEN ARTICLES I HAVE EVER READ. I HAVE ONE GAY COUSIN THAT I KNOW OF, FLAMBOUYANT IS NOT THE WORD TO DESCRIBE HIS PERSONALITY. I DON'T KNOW HIM WELL (WE LIVE IN DIFFERENT STATES) BUT I CLAIM HIM JUST AS I WOULD ANY OTHER RELATIVE. IN MY MIND THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING WRON WITH BEING GAY. YOUR STILL A HUMAN BEING WITH FEELINGS, A HEART AND A MIND. I LOVE THE GAY FRIENDS THAT I KNOW AND WOULDN'T CHANGE A THING ABOUT THEM, BUT ME THEY WOULD PROBABLY CHANGE A LOT. I HAVE A SON, I LIKE MEN CLOTHES, I WEAR THEM OCCASSIONALLY, DOES THAT MAKE ME A FUTURE MURDER VICTIM BECAUSE OF IT. HOMOPHOBIA IS A PROBLEM WITHIN, A PROBLEM WE COULD DO WITHOUT. GAYS, LESBIANS, TRANSSEXUALS ARE PEOPLE JUST LIKE YOU OR I LOVE THEM, SHOW YOUR APPRECIATION FOR THEM, BUT LET THEM LIVE IN PEACE. (NO DISRESPECT BY SAY THEM, MAYBE A BETTER WORD SHOULD HAVE BEEN US) MUCH LOVE TO EVERYONE.
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By: danna on 6/26/2008 2:28AM
THIS IS SO DEEP, BUT THE ARTICLE JUST MAKES YOU SIT BACK AND THINK.... OH HOW SAD.
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By: Cliff on 6/26/2008 6:02AM
yawn....
how does differ from the kid that killed outside of his house yesterday after he begged for his life?
People die everyday in this world where life is cheap.
A girl who wants to wear men's clothing and is out in the street in the wee hours of the morning when she should have been in the house... why should I really care other than this was someone else who got killed? And why is this woman trying to make this girl into a martyr? This girl was no martyr... she was just another person that got killed after she said something stupid to a stupid person...
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By: MaylynnChakell on 6/26/2008 8:58AM
I had always been the female to feel that I would never be gay. They i could never understand how a women would want to be with another one. I didnt understand until I found myself attracted to another women. I am not attracted to her because she is a women that thought never really crossed my mind. It would be just the same as if I was to date a white man. A relationship that would not approval by my family but yet that would not change the fact that I want to be with that person.
Yes I was hurt by my first love and no my birth father was not in my life but these facts as others would say excuse or reason are not what made me have feelings for another women. I was not born bisexual but I am comfortable in saying that I am a bisexual female although this does not label who I am.
I told my mother that I have an attraction to a female and she told me I was going to burn in hell. That God was going to punish me. In turn into a heated discussion which ended very quickly when I responsed to her. I asked her when she was reading the bible and saw that it was a a sin for same sex relationships did she also read the part where no sin is greater than the other and did you also read in the bible that judgement is a sin. She told yes she read these things. I then told her if I am sinning then you are sinning as well and if I am going to hell for being with someone that makes me happy then you are going to hell right along with me. As I explain to my mother and may other people who may not like my choice. Its not for you to like, and its fine that you dont like it but what will you do if I am the one found dead because of my choice of who i want to love. Its just the same a racism......
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By: Melmel on 6/27/2008 2:18AM
Let me make a quick comment:
Most of you black people are straight up sick!!! This was a child!!!! A child, you idiots!!!!!
The ARAB men who destroyed the World Trade Center believed that they were doing GOD'S WORK!!!! They said ALLAH! ALLAH! ALLAH!
You people can justify that grown ass man killing that child because she is not heterosexual? Wow. You are sicker than the whites who hung and raped you!
Then you quote your backwards as$ interpretation of Christianity that does not even have ANYTHING TO DO WITH SOMEONE'S SEXUAL ORIENTATION!!! The Bible? Paul was a HOMOSEXUAL!!!
Fundamentalism, regardless, if it's from CHRISTIANS or ARABS, is EVIL!!!! You people suffer from a sickness called FUNDAMENTALISM. That's why you don't see this was a child that was killed.
You can be heterosexual all you want. Get in my face with that anti gay sh!t and I'm gonna knock your as$ down!!! That's how I handle the bigots of the world!!!
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By: Tweet Deez on 6/27/2008 4:56PM
I am a 24 year old lesbian and have been open about my sexuality for almost 10 years now. I, myself, have experienced the bashing and ingorant responses from individuals towards the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender community. I believe that the majority of those people who have a problem with our sexual orientation are generally insecure within themselves. If I am able to accept a heterosexual and still be comfortable with who I am as an individual, why can't others? I have come to the conclusion that who I am attracted to is such a small percentage of who I am as a person. I am a singer, songwriter, artist, barber, speaker, and student. However, those characteristics are all over looked when the fact that I am a lesbian comes into play.
Not only have I had problems with the community, but I have had problems with some of the closest people to me. My mother and I didn't talk for years when she came to the conclusion that I wasn't just going through "a phaze." I was abandoned by the very people that I assumed loved me for who I was and not who I was attracted to. Although my mother has come to understand me alot more now and is almost like an ally for gays and lesbians, I don't know if people understand the toll that it takes on us when our family and friends are unable to accept something that we typically have no control over.
I hope that Sakia's story, as well as the many other testimonies that I've read today, will be a wake up call for the uneducated.
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By: Kristin on 6/28/2008 11:43AM
I don't know... who cares how someone else dresses?
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By: Pamela on 6/29/2008 12:04PM
In a general response and to D. Davis's response: Every woman should be able to dress in the style that they choose; not to conform to societies standards and expectations. When you think about it: there is a double standard regarding women garb. Clothes that are "too revealing" labels a woman as a tramp. [If a woman lives up to that label,or they are at least as "active" as men, they get the attention of men. Men just won't take these women home to "Mama". Men get what they want and only women get a negative stigma.] Clothes that are too "masculine", but in fact, cover up, automatically label a woman as a "lesbian", even if she is not. [And a woman looking "like that" make men uncomfortable. They shift in their chairs, they cling to their girlfriends, they feel threatened. etc.] To me, it sounds like this double standard for the comfort, convenience and pleasure of men. It is amazing to me that people are quick and eager to support, refer and even quote the "standard", [Which D. Davis did not do; D. Davis did not quote anything.] However, they are not as quick to actually question where it comes from, why it has been created, and who actually benefits from it. Oh, and Shirley Chisholm was a lesbian, as you may already know. She was not openly "out" but she was a lesbian. Is she any less of a leader because of her sexuality ? Or was she more acceptable because she was not open with her sexuality ? What double standard does this support and who benefits - Be a leader, but closeted, for the straight people who are afraid of the societal backlash of being associated with a homosexual ? Be "out" and understand that some people, no matter how correct you are with your cause and fight, will never support you because of the gender of your lover. Would she have been acceptable if she actively had three children by four "baby daddies" and lived off of welfare with no inclination of supporting herself ? (But that IS acceptable in our society; children are being born because many, but not all, couples are taking risks, males are not taking responsiblity and women stuck and sometimes,letting guys get away with it. ALL of us are paying for this but society says it is a headache,this is okay.) And that happens far more than a pretty woman who is "thugged out".
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