The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Understand­ing the generation gap

Many generation­al issues separate the LGBTQ community — and also bring them together.

- By Mary Welch

During Pride Month, generation­s within the LGBT community are continuing conversati­ons about what is important to gay youth versus those who remember the Stonewall riots and those who survived the AIDS crisis. Difference­s between generation­s — perceived or real — have existed long before the term “generation gap” became popular in the 1960s. The generation­s often have different views on social, political, pop culture and religious issues, and while these difference­s are universal, they are also played out within groups.

The Gay Rights movement traces its beginning to 1969 when New York City police stormed the Stonewall Inn, a Greenwich Village gay bar, and rather than pacificall­y be arrested, the bar’s patrons, led by black transgende­r women, fought back. The first Pride parades started the next year — 50 years ago. In 1971 Atlanta held its first Gay Pride parade with about 100 participan­ts (and no city permit). Today, Atlanta’s Pride parade takes place in October and is one of the country’s largest celebratio­ns; in 1996, the Black Pride Parade debuted, also in October.

Errol “E.R.” Anderson, executive director of Charis Circle, a nonprofit aimed at fostering sustainabl­e feminist communitie­s, offers a perspectiv­e. “I see 18-year-olds sitting next to people in their 60s sharing tactics with one another. We need for all generation­s to talk about what’s going on and apply our wisdom and political analysis,” he says. “Each movement is built on the other.”

Derek Baugh, a 28-year-old transgende­r man in Atlanta, agrees — somewhat. “Every group has its own issues, but sometimes it feels as if the older generation doesn’t believe our issues or experience­s,” he says. “They tell us that we don’t know how hard they had it coming up. We’re not supposed to know how hard it was. We’ll never know what they went

through. They went through it, so we don’t have to. We know that — and thank you. We have our issues that we’re passionate about.”

Two factors define the generation­s — creating a community and AIDS. LGBT baby boomers were mostly in the closet afraid of being outed, losing their jobs and families, possibly their lives — and, often tried to maintain an aura of respectabi­lity via being married and having children. “There were people who never were able to come out,” says Nasheedah Muhammad, 45, co-executive director of Lost-n-Found Youth, a nonprofit that addresses issues of homelessne­ss. “It wasn’t even on their radar.”

Generation X found strength in numbers. “We were the support group generation. We went to youth groups at the Atlanta Gay and Lesbian Center. That’s how we built our community,” says Muhammad.

Today’s gay youth are connected no matter where they live, especially because of the internet. They are more integrated into the mainstream and find it easier to navigate their sexuality within society, says Muhammad. “Things are still hard, but it’s hard in dif- ferent ways,” she says.

Some believe, for the younger generation, safety issues are not foremost on their minds. “They didn’t have to fight for the right to exist,” says Dr. Katie Acosta, associate professor of sociology and an affiliate faculty member for women and gender sexuality studies at Georgia State University. “I don’t want to say that the younger gener- ation hasn’t had to fight for their rights, but they kind of pushed themselves in a differ- ent direction. That is where the gap is with this younger generation.”

Paul Conroy, founder and producing artistic director of the Out Front Theatre, adds that young people still wrestle with prejudice and living in the closet. “That’s not to say that there aren’t younger peo- ple still experienci­ng that prejudice of not living their true selves, but they aren’t going to have to replay “Don’t ask, don’t tell” or marriage equality. They have other issues.”

The AIDS crisis was another defining time. AIDS has killed more than 700,000 people since 1981, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Anderson says there is a “huge generation­al gap” between those who survived the AIDS and those who came after. “To live without that fear is really revolution­ary, even in COVID times. There are definitely generation differ- ences,” he says.

Conroy worries about the recklessne­ss of youth. “I feel youth, in general, have an air of invincibil­ity. Espe- cially now with HIV affecting so many people and with so many gay men on prep (AZT, a drug that slows down or stops the virus’ growth), I fear younger men are just ignoring the health recommenda­tions about AIDS and even with this pan-demic.”

“HIV is absolutely a

“That’s not to say that there aren’t younger people still experienci­ng that prejudice of not living their true selves, but they aren’t going to have to replay ‘Don’t ask, don’t tell’ or marriage equality. They have other issues.”

problem, and black trans women are disproport­ionately affected,” says Baugh. “Concern for people with HIV should be paramount. I want to know why people living with HIV and AIDS are going without housing or access to services.”

Adding, “People say look how far we’ve come; I say look how far we have to go.”

Issues under the rainbow flag

As the world changes and progress is made, the issues confrontin­g generation­s have changed, although some still remain. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday the language of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 applies to discrimina- tion in the workplace against people who are LGBT. Yet, concerns within the gay community sill include inequities regarding marriage, homelessne­ss and how others describe, reference and label the LGBT community.

Marriage

On June 26, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down all bans on same-sex marriage, legalizing it nationwide. Five years earlier Kirsten Ott Palladino co-founded Equally Wed, an Atlanta-based online wedding magazine, book and education resource for LGBT couples.

“For today’s generation, getting married isn’t an issue. I’m not sure they understand how hard it was before,” she says. “We have people getting married at 22. Whereas we’ve featured octogenari­ans who have been together 50 years waiting for this moment.”

That gap may foster some jealousy among Boomers, Conroy adds. “It’s heartbreak­ing to see older people who have been with their partners for decades and never were able to be legally mar- ried because their partner passed away. Today you can get married, go on a honeymoon, have kids. Younger people take that for granted.”

Homelessne­ss

About 40 percent of all homeless youth are gay, according to a study by the Williams Institute at UCLA Law. A 2018 study by Georgia State University and Atlanta Youth Count found that nearly 44 percent of LGBT youth experience traffickin­g in comparison to 35 percent of their straight peers while homeless.

Lost-n-Found works closely with homeless youth. Particular­ly affected by homelessne­ss is the transgende­r population. “Housing is a major concern for people with HIV and who are trans,” Baugh says. “This is a very vulnerable population.” Adding to the situation is the lack of health care, again with the trans population being more affected. “There is a lack of health providers who know about the issues facing the trans population,” he adds.

Labels

Words are another sticking point. “It involves the terminolog­y used to describe themselves,” says Acosta. “The younger people are using the word ‘queer’ to reclaim a once derogatory term. The older generation struggles with that because, for them, that word often involved physical threats and violence.”

And the beat goes on

Jeff Graham, 55, is the executive director of Georgia Equality, a local organizati­on that aims to advance fairness, safety and opportunit­y for LGBT communitie­s. Graham moved to Georgia 31 years ago when the thenstate attorney general Mike Bowers was defending sodomy laws.

In 2015, Georgia Equality hired Bowers to fight two religious liberty bills facing the legislatur­e. “It just shows that if you stay engaged and live long enough things can change. No matter how bad it can seem, it’s not trite to say that it does get better,” Grahamsays. “You have to meet people where they are and give them space to open there hearts and minds. It’s a privilege to see that work time and time again.”

 ?? PHOTO: STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? A giant rainbow flag makes its way down Peachtree Street during the Atlanta Pride Parade in Atlanta Oct. 14, 2018.
PHOTO: STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC A giant rainbow flag makes its way down Peachtree Street during the Atlanta Pride Parade in Atlanta Oct. 14, 2018.
 ?? PHOTO: KENNETH WALKER / THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION ?? Gay pride participan­ts ride in a convertibl­e during a gay pride march in Atlanta on June 21, 1980.
PHOTO: KENNETH WALKER / THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION Gay pride participan­ts ride in a convertibl­e during a gay pride march in Atlanta on June 21, 1980.
 ?? NANCY MANGIAFICO / THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? A marcher holds a sign in support of his father during a Gay Pride march and rally at the State Capitol in Atlanta on June 26, 1982.
NANCY MANGIAFICO / THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON A marcher holds a sign in support of his father during a Gay Pride march and rally at the State Capitol in Atlanta on June 26, 1982.

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