|

Tryon Garner and John
Lawrence
Rallies and celebrations follow landmark sodomy ruling
ADVOCATE
In cities from Florida to Alaska, gay men and lesbians poured into the streets
on Thursday to celebrate the Supreme Court decision striking down the country's
sodomy laws. Rallies and parties marked the end of an era of oppression,
many said, as they praised the U.S. Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling to strike
down a same-sex sodomy law in Texas, effectively eliminating the remaining
sodomy laws in 12 other states. At a rally in West Hollywood, Calif., Mayor
Jeffrey Prang called it "a landmark" that "essentially said what we have
believed all along--that the consensual relations between people in privacy
is not the business of the government," reports the Los Angeles Times. "It
is monumental," agreed Jon Davidson, an attorney for Lambda Legal Defense
and Education Fund, a gay rights advocacy group that represented plaintiffs
John Lawrence and Tyron Garner in the case. "There were tears running down
my face as I was reading the decision."
In New York City hundreds of people chanting "It's a great day to be gay"
celebrated the high court's decision at a rally in the Manhattan neighborhood
where gays fought back against a police raid at the Stonewall Inn 34 years
ago. "I'm ecstatic. I'm thrilled," said Charley Beal, 45. "It's the first
time that the Supreme Court has ever positively voted in favor of gays."
Beal, who said he was waving a gay pride flag Thursday for the first time
in nine years, said the ruling would help further the move toward legalizing
same-sex marriage and would make it easier for gays to adopt children. Lawrence
Saltzman, 49, who was wearing a shirt that read "Homo sex is not a crime,"
said, "What it means today for us is, children growing up today, adolescents
and other people in our society, won't be told that people who are not
heterosexuals are criminals. It allows gays to look at themselves without
criminality."
John Lawrence, left, and Tryon Garner,
right, are shown arriving at the state courthouse in Houston to face charges
of homosexual conduct under Texas' sodomy law, in this Nov. 20, 1998 file
photo. The Supreme Court struck down a ban on gay sex Thursday, June 26,
2003, ruling that the law was an unconstitutional violation of privacy. The
6-3 ruling reverses course from a ruling 17 years ago that states could punish
homosexuals for what such laws historically called deviant sex. (AP Photo/David
J. Phillip)
In San Francisco gay leaders took down the huge rainbow flag that permanently
graces the corner of Market and Castro streets and hoisted the Stars and
Stripes. Armistead Maupin, who withstood bomb threats and lawsuits when his
1970s Tales of the City novels about San Francisco life aired as a TV movie
in 1990, described the moment as "genuinely joyous." As word of the Supreme
Court ruling spread, about 300 people jammed the corner of Market and Castro
streets to celebrate, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. They listened
to a lineup of speakers and marked the occasion with a kiss-in on the corner.
Some brought their babies, many walked arm-in-arm, and a few carried signs
with such messages as "We won." "We've been together for 13 years--it's about
time," said Joe Vassallo, 40, a high-tech worker in San Francisco.
In Chicago ecstatic revelers waved signs and hugged, the Chicago Tribune
reports. More than 100 people gathered in a North Halsted Street intersection
to celebrate the court's decision. Many called it a turning point for gay
civil rights. Illinois has not had a sodomy law since 1962, but many said
Thursday's ruling was an affirmation that affected them personally anyway.
"This is music to my ears," said Michael Rudd, a Chicago arts promoter. "
I've been a voice for 20 years, and all I've ever wanted was to be heard.
My voice is being heard right now."
In Washington, D.C., several hundred revelers gathered at Dupont Circle to
celebrate, The Washington Post reports. "At last this is the end of a battle
that has gone on for almost half a century," said Frank Kameny, 78, acknowledged
by many as the father of the gay rights movement. Kameny sued the federal
government--and lost--after he was fired from his job as an astronomer at
the Army Map Service in 1957 for being gay. It seemed that almost everyone
at the gathering knew Kameny, whose blue suit became increasingly wrinkled
as he was enveloped in one hug after another.

In Salt Lake City a boisterous crowd of 200 cheered, hugged, and applauded
speakers while gathered on the sunny steps of the state capitol as rainbow
flags flew, reports The Salt Lake Tribune. "It's a major political event,"
said Ernie Hale, standing next to his partner. "I don't normally come to
something like this, but it's a big deal. It's a long time coming." Waving
a large rainbow flag, Kathy Worthington of Taylorsville said she has followed
the sodomy law debate for years. "This is historic. It's really historic,"
she said. Worthington--who is planning a trip to Canada next week to marry
her partner of 11 years--said the high court's decision will have an immediate
effect on the issue of gay clubs in Utah schools. "We won't have legislators
saying, 'It's illegal activity,'" she added.
Other rallies included one at City Hall in Houston, where the men at the
heart of the case, Lawrence and his partner, Garner, greeted well-wishers
and responded to a ruling that stemmed from their arrest for having consensual
sex in the privacy of their own home. "We never chose to be public figures
or to take on the spotlight," Lawrence said. "We also never thought we could
be arrested this way. We are glad this ruling not only lets us get on with
our lives but opens the door for all gay people to be treated equally."
Back to Main |