Houston Chronicle

Rights advocatewa­s a pioneer for San Antonio gay community

- By Peggy O’Hare STAFF WRITER

Family, friends and various communitie­s are mourning the death of peace laureate and gay rights activist Nickie Valdez, cofounder and president of Dignity San Antonio, a group that has long sought to fully include gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgende­r Catholics within the church.

Valdez, 80, died at her San Antonio home on Christmas Day after an eight-year battle with multiple myeloma.

Valdez was widely regarded as a pioneer and hero in the gay community and a tireless advocate for justice and social equality. She didn’t do it for public recognitio­n. But in January 2019, the interfaith peaceCENTE­R honored her as a peace laureate for her achievemen­ts.

“Her whole call was to help people recognize that theywere created in the image and likeness of God, and God loved them just as they are created,” said Deb Myers, Valdez’s wife and partner of 35 years. “She believed that to the core. She was very tenacious in that work and lived it.”

Valdez was born in San Antonio on Sept. 10, 1940. She was young when her mother abandoned the family, and Valdez

was raised by an aunt near downtown, Myers said.

She went on to graduate from Fox Tech High School in 1961. She attended college for a short while but could not afford higher education, Myers said. Valdez later became a picture framer, working for Art Inc. for many years, then started her own small framing business.

Valdez came out to her family as gay in the early 1960s — a time when hardly anyone did so for fear of rejection and public scorn.

“Shewas one of the first people to be out and open in San Antonio,” Myers said.

A lifelong Catholic, Valdez helped establish Dignity’s San Antonio chapter in 1976. That group continues to celebrate weekly liturgies today andwelcome­s all lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, queer and intersex Catholics, as well as anyone else wishing to attend.

Valdez and Myers met through Dignity in 1985. The women were joined in a holy union in 1989 and legally married in 2015.

Over the years, Valdez was involved with the National Organizati­on for Women and the Forward Foundation, and she worked as a volunteer for the Switchboar­d, a peer hotline launched for the gay community by the San Antonio Free Clinic. She helped organize “A Sense of Belonging,” the first conference ever held in San Antonio for the gay community, in 1976.

She also was active with Pax Christi San Antonio, the Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, the San Antonio Equal Rights Political Caucus and other social justice groups.

In 2010, the Archdioces­e of San Antonio stopped letting Dignity members gather for Mass at St. Ann’s Catholic Church, saying this conflicted with the Catholic Church’s official teachings. Dignity nowholds itsweekly services at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church.

Valdez never wavered in her Catholic faith, said her longtime friend, Patricia S. Castillo, cofounder and executive director of the P.E.A.C.E. Initiative, an advocacy group that works to end domestic violence.

Castillo became disillusio­ned with the Catholic Church because of the way it handled some issues and said she left in the early 1990s to join the Episcopal Church. But Valdez, she recalled, remained steadfast.

“I just gotmad and said ‘I’m out of here,’” Castillo said of the Catholic Church. “And Nickie didn’t. Nickie said, ‘You will respect who I am, and I will remain in your faith as long as I live. And I will be acknowledg­ed one way or another.’

“You talk about ‘speak truth to power’ — that just floors me about her, that little, tiny woman,” Castillo said ofValdez. “You could not make her stop, no matter what. She found all these little niches all over the community where her faith could be practiced. … And shewas not going to let that go, no matter what. To her, that was her church — and she was going to passionate­ly defend her faith and her spirituali­ty in that way until the day she died.”

Valdez reachedout togayCatho­lics about God’sWord as early as the mid-1960s, a few years before the national DignityUSA organizati­on formed in 1969, said executive director Marianne DuddyBurke, who lives in Boston.

“One of the things I found so remarkable about Nickie was she was doing the work of making a home for LGBTQI Catholics in our church,” Duddy-Burke said. “She was out there in the mid ’60s, sitting on church steps, waiting for people who felt rejected by the church. She was there to talk to them, to assure them of God’s love, to talk about Scripture and sacraments with them.

“She was so aware of the impact that faith leaders’ rejection had on people and on the good that inclusion could do.”

Despite her tiny frame, Valdez was a giant — and was very unassuming about the influence she wielded, Duddy-Burke added.

“She and Deb together took so many people into their homes, under their wings, just mentoring them, nurturing themone by one, giving housing to people who didn’t have housing because their families had rejected them,” she said. “She saved lives. She definitely saved lives.”

She describedV­aldez’s death as “a stunning and devastatin­g loss.”

Judge Rosie Speedlin Gonzalez, who presides over Bexar County Court-at-Law No. 13, said Valdez has left an indelible mark.

“When she entered a room or joined us at a function, people knew exactly who she was,” the judge said. “People knew that she had a lifetime of work behind her, being an advocate and being a voice. It’s not that she demanded respect or expected it. But we knew she had earned a certain level of deference.”

Valdez was preceded in death by her 16-year-old son, Robert Nicklaus Valdez Minor, a Central Catholic High School studentwho was killed by a drunken driver in 1988.

“You could not make her stop, no matter what. She found all these little niches all over the community where her faith could be practiced. … And she was not going to let that go, no matter what.” Patricia S. Castillo, friend of Valdez’s and co-founder and executive director of the P.E.A.C.E. Initiative

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