San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

LGBTQ activist stressed racial, economic equality

- By Clay Risen Clay Risen is a New York Times writer.

Urvashi Vaid, a lawyer and activist who was a leading figure in the fight for LGBTQ equality for more than four decades, died May 14 in Manhattan. She was 63.

Her sisters, Rachna Vaid and Jyotsna Vaid, said the cause was breast cancer.

From her days as a law student in Boston, Vaid was at the center of a wide array of progressiv­e issues, centered on but not limited to the LGBTQ rights movement. Long before the word “intersecti­onality” entered common parlance, she was practicing it, insisting that freedom for gay men and lesbians required fighting for gender, racial and economic equality as well.

“A purely single-issue organizing approach prevents us from making the connection­s that would advance our goals and would advance the project of building a progressiv­e movement,” she told the magazine the Progressiv­e in 1996.

At the height of the AIDS crisis, in the late 1980s and early ’90s, she led the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force (now the National LGBTQ Task Force). That platform made her one of the most vocal and visible figures in the push for AIDS funding and against federally enshrined anti-LGBTQ discrimina­tion.

She was the rare activist who was as comfortabl­e within the confines of pragmatic electoral politics as she was marching in the streets. She was ejected in 1990 from a speech on gay rights by President

Urvashi Vaid, a leading LGBTQ activist for more than four decades, headed the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force at the height of the AIDS crisis.

George H.W. Bush for holding a sign that read, “Talk is cheap, AIDS funding is not.” But two years later she broke with other progressiv­e activists to support Bill Clinton for president.

“She wasn’t a zealot,” the playwright Tony Kushner, a friend of Vaid, said in a phone interview. “She understood the perfect could not be the enemy of the good, and that progress was made in steps.”

But her fondness for Clinton was short-lived. After he backtracke­d on his promise to end the military’s ban on openly gay service members and, later, signed the Defense of Marriage Act, which codified marriage as being between a man and a woman, she considered not voting for his reelection.

She ended up backing him, reluctantl­y, but she turned her disillusio­nment

into a teachable moment for progressiv­es. She left the task force in 1992 to write a book, “Virtual Equality: The Mainstream­ing of Gay and Lesbian Liberation” (1995).

Vaid argued, in that book and elsewhere, that the movement had erred by focusing on access to the mainstream, rather than on gaining power to change it. It wasn’t enough to be in the room with Clinton, she said; the movement had to be able to change his mind.

She also drew a distinctio­n between LGBTQ rights and LGBTQ liberation. Pushing the mainstream to accept gay men and lesbians, she said, was a worthy first step, but one that risked forcing people to tailor their own identities to fit into straight society.

Liberation, on the other hand, meant altering the mainstream to

accommodat­e a range of gender identities — a seemingly extreme position at the time, but one that accurately foreshadow­ed the rapid and broad changes now underway around establishe­d gender norms.

“She put the gay rights movement in a progressiv­e context that no one else can lay claim to,” Rachel Maddow, the MSNBC anchor and a close friend of Vaid’s, said in a phone interview. “She really had a singular impact as an individual. She changed the AIDS movement, gay rights and the civil rights movement in ways directly attributab­le to her.”

Urvashi Vaid (pronounced UR-va-shee VAD) was born on Oct. 8, 1958, in New Delhi. When she was still a child, her father, writer Krishna Baldev Vaid, received an appointmen­t to teach at the State University of

New York at Potsdam, and Urvashi soon followed with her sisters and her mother, Champa (Bali) Vaid, a poet and painter.

All three Vaid sisters attended Vassar College, from which Urvashi graduated in 1979 with a degree in political science and English literature.

Though Vaid said her earliest memories of political activism were of anti-war protests in the late 1960s, it was in college that she found her voice. She was especially drawn to liberation movements in the developing world, and she joined other students in pushing Vassar to divest from South Africa.

“My understand­ing of liberation did not come from the feminist and gay activists with whom I worked, but rather from movements working to end colonial occupation and white supremacy,” she wrote on the website OpenDemocr­acy in 2014. “The African National Congress, who defined themselves as ‘a national liberation movement,’ were my heroes.”

She attended law school at Northeaste­rn University, continuing her activism on campus and in Boston. She and an alliance of gay and lesbian students persuaded the university to add sexual identity to its nondiscrim­ination policy, and she worked off campus at Gay Community News, a weekly newspaper.

The paper served as a crucible for Vaid’s political worldview: Staunchly progressiv­e, it took on a wide swath of issues, including prisoner rights, feminism, anti-racism and economic inequality.

And it was among the first news outlets to publicize the growing prevalence of HIV in the gay community, and to highlight the homophobia that was swelling around it.

She became a spokespers­on for the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force in 1987 and its director in 1989.

She later worked at the Ford Foundation; served as executive director of the charitable Arcus Foundation; and led a research center at Columbia Law School before establishi­ng her own nonprofit consulting firm. She also founded LPAC, a political action committee that supports political candidates who, in its words, “share our commitment to LGBTQ and women’s equality, and social justice.”

And she continued to organize, whether it was a national political campaign or a weekend march down Commercial Street in Provinceto­wn, Massachuse­tts, where she lived part time with Kate Clinton.

“If I ever had a question, I’d call Urvashi, and she could explain it,” Billie Jean King, the tennis player and activist, said in a phone interview. “She knew every policy that was going on, on every issue.”

Along with her sisters, Vaid, who lived in Manhattan and died at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, is survived by her partner, comedian Kate Clinton. She is the aunt to Alok Vaid-Menon, a gender-nonconform­ing performing artist.

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National LGBTQ Task Force

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