Detroit Free Press

Conservati­ves ask Dearborn for new law limiting pride, other flags

- Niraj Warikoo

Some conservati­ves are trying to convince Dearborn to pass a new flag law similar to what Hamtramck enacted last month that would ban all LGBTQ+, religious and political flags.

At a City Council meeting earlier this week, some residents asked the Dearborn City Council to consider a resolution recommende­d by Hassan Aoun, a conservati­ve activist in Dearborn, that reads in part: “Dearborn shall only allow the American flag, Prisoner of War flag, the state of Michigan flag and the city of Dearborn flag to be flown or placed on the city of Dearborn properties including buildings, grounds, and assets.” Echoing the new Hamtramck law, the proposal says Dearborn should be neutral toward its residents and not favor any particular group.

But after a heated discussion at the Tuesday night meeting, their attempts didn’t go far for now. No council members took up the suggestion and didn’t place it on the council’s agenda. Aoun got into a heated verbal exchange with Council President Mike Sareini, who then had police remove the activist from the council’s chambers after he ignored Sareini’s warnings not to interrupt him. During the public comments section, a few supporters of Aoun spoke in favor of his proposal while one resident, Jackson Wagner, spoke out against homophobia and bigotry.

Aoun said his proposal is not aimed at any one group and would also ban flags that may be popular in parts of Dearborn’s Arab American and Muslim communitie­s.

“Don’t bring it down my throat,” Aoun said before the meeting, explaining his opposition to LGBTQ+ flags potentiall­y being flown on city properties. “I’m not telling you to put the Lebanese flag. I’m not telling you to put the Ramadan flag.”

The situation in Dearborn is a bit different from Hamtramck, in that no one is believed to have raised the LGBTQ+ flag on city property or attempted to do so. Conservati­ves say they want the resolution passed to block any potential attempts in the future. In Hamtramck, the flag was flown a couple of times, outside

City Hall and later on a city flagpole, before the Hamtramck City Council voted unanimousl­y in June to ban them on city properties. Livonia’s City Council also passed a law last year restrictin­g LGBTQ+ and other flags after Mayor Maureen Miller Brosnan flew it last year at City Hall, leading to objections from city councilmen and some conservati­ves. There have been a growing number of similar bans across the country, LGBTQ+ advocacy groups said.

Sareini told the Free Press afterward that the issue of what flags to raise in Dearborn hasn’t come up yet and so they aren’t considerin­g any resolution for now. But he added that under current city law, allowing one type of flag could open the doors for other groups to raise their flags.

He said the city’s current law is vague on the issue of what flags are allowed on city property. The flags of the United States and the state of Michigan currently fly outside Dearborn’s City Hall building, known as the Dearborn Administra­tive Center.

In speaking with Dearborn’s city attorney, Sareini said his understand­ing is that “since we don’t have any policy on it, and there’s no issue, that we don’t have to act on it.”

But if later, “we turned around and allowed any group (to raise a flag), then we have to allow all groups, as a speech issue.”

Aoun has been outspoken over the past year in Dearborn and Hamtramck. In October, he was one of the leading protesters who shut down a Dearborn Public Schools board meeting in opposition to certain LGBTQ+ books in schools that they said were too explicit. He also spoke at the Hamtramck council meeting when the flag resolution was passed.

At the Tuesday meeting in Dearborn, Aoun addressed the council after handing out copies of his proposal.

“I’m asking you to adopt this recommenda­tion” and put it on the council’s agenda, he said. After getting no response, he asked the council to suspend the rules and take a roll call to get the response from each individual councilper­son.

After Sareini started to speak, Aoun interrupte­d him. “You’re going to let me speak,” Sareini told him. If not, “we’re going to have you removed. That’s your warning.”

A few minutes later, after Aoun kept interrupti­ng, three officers approached him at the lectern and escorted him out of the building.

Aoun told the Free Press later that he will continue to bring up the proposal at future meetings.

Some residents spoke out in support of Aoun.

“I think it would be a great proposal,” Hassan Beydoun told the council. “It won’t favor certain groups or ideologies over the whole of us . ... It will stop a lot of the division we have.”

Beydoun said that having only the American and Michigan flags would promote unity.

Wagner, who was booed last year when he spoke at a Dearborn Public Schools board meeting in support of the LGBTQ+ community, said at the meeting that queer men like himself have been persecuted over the years, including by the Nazis, who put them in concentrat­ion camps. Gay people are not just “mere ideologies,” but actual human beings, Wagner said. He also spoke about how the city needs to overcome the bigoted legacy of Orville Hubbard, a former mayor of Dearborn who had racist views of Black people and others.

State Rep. Erin Byrnes, D-Dearborn, whose district includes west Dearborn and Dearborn Heights, attended the meeting to speak about state funds Dearborn has received in the new state budget. Speaking later to the Free Press, Byrnes said that Dearborn should be a welcoming city for all, including the LGBTQ+ community. In 2019, Byrnes introduced a Dearborn City Council resolution when she was a councilper­son supporting LGBTQ+ people that proclaimed June as Pride Month. It was passed unanimousl­y, she said.

The resolution said City Council members should work to “ensure that we are an inclusive community that welcomes and protects people of diverse sexual orientatio­n and gender identity . ... We encourage our residents to reflect on the ongoing struggle for equality of the LGBTQ community.”

Byrnes said she hopes that Dearborn will be seen as a place that is welcoming to all: “I have always been a vocal advocate for the LGBTQ+ community and remain steadfast in my commitment to equality.”

Over the past year, Dearborn has received national attention for anti-LGBTQ+ protests. But it does have longtime LGBTQ+ residents and, for years before the pandemic, was the location of the annual Michigan LGBT ComedyFest without any problems.

Sareini said, as the headquarte­rs for Ford Motor Co., Dearborn should not be biased against anyone. “We don’t want to discrimina­te against any people or any person,” he said.

 ?? SARAHBETH MANEY/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Hassan Aoun speaks at a meeting before a vote about banning the LGBTQ+ pride flag on government buildings and city property, as well as other flags representi­ng racial and political issues, at Hamtramck City Hall on June 13. Aoun spoke this week at a Dearborn City Council meeting on the same issue.
SARAHBETH MANEY/DETROIT FREE PRESS Hassan Aoun speaks at a meeting before a vote about banning the LGBTQ+ pride flag on government buildings and city property, as well as other flags representi­ng racial and political issues, at Hamtramck City Hall on June 13. Aoun spoke this week at a Dearborn City Council meeting on the same issue.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States