Gay marriage up close and personal
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JOSEPH N. BELL
Last Sunday, my extended family convened -- as we have for each of
the 20 years I’ve had membership in this family -- to watch the
Academy Awards.
We ate some spaghetti and drank some wine and competed fiercely
for the movie passes that went to the person picking the most
winners. There was a remarkable variety of people representing a
remarkable variety of political and religious convictions. But for
this night, we were united by our love for movies and each other.
There was also a passel of both small and grown children, the
grown ones engaged in the award ceremonies, the small ones hovering
about the perimeter of the TV viewing room, raucous but happily
involved with one another. Two of these children -- delightful
sisters of 7 and 4 -- belong to a pair of dedicated, family-oriented
women now in the sights of the president of the United States, who
has pledged his support to a Constitutional amendment that would
prevent them from ever legalizing their relationship in marriage.
Jill and Lori have spent two decades protecting the rest of us in
frequently dangerous law enforcement work. They have been together
for 10 years in a stable, loving relationship that should serve as a
model for a successful family rather than a target for politicians
and religious fundamentalists who want to project their own fears and
rigidities over an entire society. Throughout these years, Jill and
Lori have demonstrated to associates and superiors that their
preference in a mate has nothing to do with the other stuff of life
-- skill and dedication in work, involvement in social and community
affairs, strong and loving parenting. Proving themselves has been a
continuing challenge, and I have watched them meet it with admiration
and a growing sense that the legal restrictions our society has put
on them are terribly unfair, unwarranted and probably illegal.
I found a quiet corner to talk with Jill and Lori about these
matters during our Oscar evening. They told me they had considered
joining the legions of gay people seeking to marry in San Francisco
during the last two weeks but decided against it.
“In our minds, we are married,” said Jill. “We already have that.
We’re proud and supportive of the people who are stepping forward and
paving the way for us in San Francisco, but we have two small kids
and can’t put them through what is happening there. And we have no
idea of the legality of it, whether that ceremony would end up
providing us any more rights than we have now.”
“Besides,” added Lori, “I don’t want to get married on CNN or at
City Hall. That’s not my style. I want to get married with a
minister, in a church. Why shouldn’t we be able to do that?”
Meanwhile, they are often forced to function on the edges of
society, required to explain themselves under circumstances that
require no explanation from heterosexual families. Like the day their
oldest child fell and suffered a deep cut on her chin. Jill took her
to an emergency room where Jill’s legitimacy was challenged because
she wasn’t the birth mother. As a result, treatment was refused until
Lori was called and came to the hospital. Or the need to travel
several hundred miles to find a hospital that would permit Jill to be
present when Lori delivered their first baby.
“We wouldn’t wish these problems on anyone,” said Jill. “That’s
why it outrages me so much when people say we had a choice. We
didn’t. But we did have the same creator as everyone else, so why
should we be denied the rights all other citizens enjoy?”
“We’re fighting for equal rights just like interracial couples not
very many years ago,” said Lori. “This isn’t easy to explain when our
kids ask us if we are married. We can only tell them that we’ll
always be together, and our hearts tell us that we are married, but
it’s not yet legal. I like to say to people who quote the Bible to us
that morality is our love for one another and legality is a matter
for the government, and we must not confuse the two. We will legalize
our relationship in our own way, whenever we know that is possible.”
The greatest puzzle to Jill and Lori -- as it is to me -- is how
the legalization of marriage for gay couples can threaten the people
who so strongly oppose it.
“I saw two women who had been together for 50 years standing in
line in the rain in San Francisco,” said Jill. “How could a marriage
between these two loving people possibly threaten anyone else’s
marriage?”
How indeed?
A few days before the Academy Awards, the Democratic presidential
candidates were asked in a debate where they stood on gay marriage.
The last two serious survivors -- John Kerry and John Edwards --
waffled the question, saying they approved civil unions but the
question of marriage should be left to the states. The other two
debaters -- Al Sharpton and Dennis Kucinich -- who didn’t have to
worry about political correctness, said flatly and forcibly that it
was not a dispute for individual states to decide but a national
matter of human rights. No consenting adults in this nation, they
said, should be denied a right other adults have, especially when it
damages no one else. This was in line with the U.S. Supreme Court
decision last year, in Lawrence vs. Texas, that recognized the
constitutional right of adults to choose how to conduct their sexual
lives, concluding that “the Court’s obligation is to define the
liberty of all, not to mandate its own moral code.”
That also goes for the portion of our society -- apparently
including our president -- whose religious views would deny such
rights to the gay community. They might be surprised to find a fair
number of mainstream Christian churches that would be pleased to host
Jill and Lori’s wedding.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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