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Samantha Wehbi - Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism: The World Through Rainbow-Colored Glasses

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Examine how community organizing can help eliminate sexual oppression!
This book presents insights from activists working in dramatically diverse cultures toward a common goalthe eradication of sexual oppression. Contributors share their experiences in organizing for sexual emancipation in many parts of the world, documenting progress in transforming oppressive sexual attitudes, policies, and practices, while acknowledging the long road to sexual democracy that remains to be traveled. Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism: The World Through Rainbow-Colored Glasses highlights the importance of building alliances with social service providers and community organizers, of physical space as an element of identity-building, of understanding the tension between members of sexual minority communities and their other communities of belonging, and the transformation of individual efforts into movements necessary to affect long-term social change.
Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism presents chapters that focus on community organizing against homophobia and heterosexism, bringing to light the history and contemporary face of resistance in global contexts. The book highlights practical actions to liberate sexual and gender expressions, including:

  • the challenge of organizing within a Two-Spirit (LGBT people of Aboriginal descent) community in Montreal
  • the organization of Tongzhi (LGBT and their supporters) rights in Hong Kong
  • the work of Yoesuf, a Muslim association that works on battling homophobia and xenophobia in communities in the Netherlands
  • the foundation of GALF, a Peruvian feminist group dedicated to organizing against lesbophobia and heterosexism
  • the development of GALZ, the gay liberation movement in Zimbabwe

Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism: The World Through Rainbow-Colored Glasses is an essential resource for social service professionals, community activists, and anyone else working to eliminate sexual oppression in all forms.

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Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism: The World Through Rainbow-Colored Glasses
Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism: The World Through Rainbow-Colored Glasses has been co-published simultaneously as Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services, Volume 16, Number 1 2004.
First published by
Harrington Park Press, 10 Alice Street, Binghamton, NY 13904-1580 USA
Harrington Park Press is an imprint of The Haworth Press, Inc., 10 Alice Street, Binghamton, NY 13904-1580 USA.
This edition published 2012 by Routledge
RoutledgeRoutledge
Taylor & Francis GroupTaylor & Francis Group
711 Third Avenue2 Park Square, Milton Park
New York, NY 10017Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism: The World Through Rainbow-Colored Glasses has been co-published simultaneously as Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services, Volume 16, Number 1 2004.
2004 by The Haworth Press, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, microfilm and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
The development, preparation, and publication of this work has been undertaken with great care. However, the publisher, employees, editors, and agents of The Haworth Press and all imprints of The Haworth Press, Inc., including The Haworth Medical Press and Pharmaceutical Products Pres, are not responsible for any errors contained herein or for consequences that may ensue from use of materials or information contained in this work. Opinions expressed by the author(s) are not necessarily those of The Haworth Press, Inc. With regard to case studies, identities and circumstances of individuals discussed herein have been changed to protect confidentiality. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Cover photograph, International Demonstration at the WCAR (World Conference Against Racism), by Fiona Meyer-Cook
Cover design by Jennifer M. Gaska
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Community organizing against homophobia and heterosexism : the world through rainbow-colored glasses / [ed. by] Samantha Wehbi.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 1-56023-268-4 (alk. paper) ISBN 1-56023-269-2 (soft : alk. paper)
1. HomophobiaPrevention. 2. HeterosexismPrevention. 3. Community organization. 4. Political participation. I. Wehbi, Samantha.
HQ76.4.C66 2003
306.766dc21
2003001805
Community Organizing Against Homophobia and Heterosexism: The World Through Rainbow-Colored Glasses
CONTENTS
Ben Carniol
Samantha Wehbi with the collaboration of Michle Roy
Nelly Jitsuya
Rebeca Sevilla
Fiona Meyer-Cook
Diane Labelle
Omar Nahas
Chung To
Keith Goddard
ABOUT THE EDITOR
Samantha Wehbi, PhD, is Assistant Professor in the School of Social Work at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. She has an extensive background in activism on a wide range of social justice and human rights issues, including organizing against homophobia and heterosexism. Dr. Wehbi has worked as an Outreach Programcoordinator in a women's shelter, as the coordinator of a rape crisis center, and as a program officer in a human rights program. Her teaching, research, and community involvement interests include social justice, principles of community development/social action, and international and anti-oppression social work.
Keith Goddard, MA, is a musician and composer. He is the Development Director for KUNZWANA Trust (since 1990), a cultural organisation dedicated to the promotion and dissemination of the work of Zimbabwean musicians and instrument makers. He has been active in LGBT politics since 1992. Keith has been Programmes Manager for GALZ since 1997.
Nelly Jitsuya was born in Peru of Japanese descent. She first became involved in the Peruvian feminist movement in 1980 through her activism in the socialist feminist group Mujeres en Lucha (Women in Struggle) and the magazine Mujery Sociedad (Women and Society). She was co-founder of the women's coffee shop La Otra Cara de la Luna in 1983 and of Grupo de Autoconciencia de Lesbianas FeministasGALFin 1984. In the past two years, Nelly has worked as co-editor of the online publications Boletin Beijng +5 and DESafos: Boletn de los Derechos Econmicos y Sociales de las Mujeres de la Regin Andina (Challenges: Bulletin on the Economic and Social Rights of Women of the Andean Region) and has collaborated in the bilingual ALAI Information Bulletin towards the World Conference Against Racism.
Diane Labelle is a Two-Spirited woman of Mohawk heritage living in the Montreal area. She completed graduate level courses in political science at McGill University, and holds a graduate diploma in education. She presently works as an elementary school teacher and an educational consultant. She is an active member of the Lesbian Mothers' Association of Quebec, and is working on dealing with homophobia in the schools. She and her partner of twelve years are parents to two children: a son aged five and a daughter aged three.
Fiona Meyer-Cook is a Two-Spirited woman of African-Ojibwe (Anishinaabe) and Scottish descent. She supervises students for Project Interaction: the gay, lesbian, bisexual and Two-Spirited resource of the McGill School of Social Work; is a consultant for the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal; and is preparing a document for Concordia University (Montreal, Canada) on Urban Aboriginal Women and Community Economic Development. In August 2001, she represented EGALE (Equality for Gays and Lesbians Everywhere) at the U.N. World Conference Against Racism in Durban.
Omar Nahas is a researcher at the Yoesuf foundation, was born in Damascus-Syria in 1964 and has lived since 1989 in the Netherlands. He studied languages and cultures of the Middle East at the Catholic University of Nijmegen and gay and lesbian studies at the University of Amsterdam. Nahas has written a book and several articles on Islam and homosexuality in Arabic and in Dutch.
Michle Roy is a community organizer who has been involved in women's activism for several decades. She has worked as the Coordinator of the Quebec Coalition of Women's Health Centres and as the Outreach Worker for the Women's Federation of Quebec. In addition, she has developed and delivered several specialized training programs in feminist intervention at the Universit du Qubec Montreal. More recently, she has worked with women's groups as a consultant in Gender and Development for the Canadian Centre for International Cooperation in Guinea Conakry. She is currently the Outreach Worker for the Quebec Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres.
Rebeca Sevilla, born in Peru, is an activist for lesbian and gay rights. She has been involved in diverse organizations, such as leftist parties and the Latin American Solidarity Committee. Rebeca was co-founder of the Grupo de Autoconciencia de Lesbianas FeministasGALFin 1984, a member of the Movimiento Homosexual de Lima (MHOL, 198695) and its publicly lesbian Director (19881992), and co-Secretary General of the International Lesbian and Gay AssociationILGA (199295). She has played an active role in several regional and global networking initiatives. She participated in the United Nations World Conference on Human Rights (1993) and on Women (1995) and coordinated the Foundation Get Organized (19962000). Rebeca has published a number of articles on these topics. She has lived in Amsterdam and Vienna since 1996.
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