San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Civil rights hero also a champion of LGBTQ rights

- By Tamar Hallerman The Associated Press contribute­d to this report. Tamar Hallerman is an Atlanta JournalCon­stitution writer.

ATLANTA — The fight for racial equality made John Lewis an icon in the 1960s, but the Democratic congressma­n also stood at the forefront of another civil rights movement decades later.

Lewis supported samesex marriage in the early 2000s, years before many fellow African Americans and Democrats embraced the issue, and more than a decade prior to the U.S. Supreme Court legalizing the unions.

Lewis compared the struggle for the equal treatment of LGBTQ people to his work on the front lines of the civil rights movement in an October 2003 Boston Globe editorial.

“I’ve heard the reasons for opposing civil marriage for samesex couples. Cut through the distractio­ns, and they stink of the same fear, hatred, and intoleranc­e I have known in racism and in bigotry,” he wrote.

“I have fought too hard and too long against discrimina­tion based on race and color not to stand up against discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n.”

A few weeks later, after a state Supreme Court ruling, Massachuse­tts became the first state to recognize gay marriages.

Lewis was an ally of the gay rights movement long before that, said Cathy Woolard, a former Atlanta City Council president. She became the first openly gay elected official in Georgia when she was elected in 1997.

In the early and mid1990s, Woolard lobbied for the

LGBTQ advocacy group the Human Rights Campaign. It was the era of the military's “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, when the gay community had few allies in Washington, even among Democrats. But Lewis, she said, was different.

“We could always count on him to be there without having to ask,” she said. “He said things that needed to be said at a time when no one wanted to say them. And he said it with a compassion and an eloquence that made people listen, even if they didn't want to.”

Lewis, a civil rights legend and the last of the Big Six civil rights activists led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., died Friday at age 80.

The condolence­s for Lewis were bipartisan. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Lewis was “a pioneering civil rights leader who put his life on the line to fight racism, promote equal rights, and bring our nation into greater alignment with its founding principles.”

Former President Barack Obama celebrated his legacy.

“He loved this country so much that he risked his life and its blood so that it might live up to its promise,” Obama said. “Early on, he embraced the principles of nonviolent resistance and civil disobedien­ce as the means to bring about real change in this country.”

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said Saturday that the city will lower flags to halfstaff indefinite­ly to honor Lewis, who represente­d the city for more than 30 years in Congress before his death. Bottoms made the announceme­nt in a statement that said words can’t describe the loss of Lewis.

In his 1998 memoir “Walking with the Wind,” Lewis said his connection with the gay community sprang from his experience of being treated unequally as a Black “simply because you are different from the longentren­ched white AngloSaxon Protestant standard that defined and controlled our society for its first two hundred years.”

Lewis’ endorsemen­t of gay marriage came at a time when the public and most religious and elected officials were not supportive or were openly opposed.

In 1996, President Bill Clinton signed a bill defining marriage as a union between one man and one woman, after it sailed through both chambers of Congress with the support of Republican­s and most Democrats. All Georgia lawmakers but two, Lewis and Democrat Cynthia McKinney, voted in favor.

In 2004, more than 76 percent of Georgians voted to adopt a state constituti­onal amendment that banned gay marriage.

The issue divided Lewis from some of his civil rights peers. Lewis had equated the two movements, and leaders such as Coretta Scott King and NAACP Chairman Julian Bond had voiced support for LGBTQ rights. Others said that the struggle for gay rights was not the same as the fight for racial equality.

A month after Georgians adopted the constituti­onal amendment, the late Bishop Eddie Long, senior pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, led thousands of Atlantans on a march in opposition to gay rights. Walking arminarm with Long was the Rev. Bernice King, the youngest child of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

King himself never openly spoke about gay rights in the 1950s and 1960s, but Lewis cited his mentor’s stance on interracia­l marriage — “Races don't fall in love and get married. Individual­s fall in love and get married” — as his principle for supporting samesex marriage.

After the U.S. Supreme Court’s gay marriage decision in 2015, Bernice King, who had been appointed the CEO of the King Center, issued a statement wishing for the ruling to encourage “the global community to respect and embrace all LGBT global citizens with dignity and love.”

Lewis’ support meant a lot to members of the gay community in the 1990s and 2000s, especially when it was hard to find support even among one’s own relatives, said Anthony Antoine, an HIV activist.

“Having such a prominent activist leader so supportive of not just my gay life but my Black gay life ... mattered so much,” said Antoine, who organized several LGBTQ marches in the early 2000s, including one protesting the LongKing march.

Lewis’ early support and continuing presence at some LBGTQ events, including the annual October parade Atlanta Pride, gave the movement confidence that it could accomplish the difficult tasks ahead, Antoine said.

It felt like, “what can't we change?” he said. “Why wouldn’t we be able to have some impact? Because John Lewis was right off to the side ... showing us support.”

 ?? Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press 2011 ?? President Barack Obama presents the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom to Rep. John Lewis, DGa., during a 2011 ceremony at the White House. Lewis died Friday at age 80.
Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press 2011 President Barack Obama presents the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom to Rep. John Lewis, DGa., during a 2011 ceremony at the White House. Lewis died Friday at age 80.

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