Harvey Milk's Legacy
Michael Streich October 25, 2011
Shortly before he was
assassinated on November 27, 1978, San Francisco City Supervisor Harvey Milk
stated that, “If a bullet should enter my brain, let that bullet destroy every
closet door.” Harvey Milk was the first openly gay political candidate to win an
election at a time homosexuality was misunderstood by the general public and
fear still kept many gays and lesbians in the closet. Writing in Time magazine over a decade later, John
Cloud observed that, “…he had to adjust to a new reality he embodied: that a
gay person could live an honest life and succeed.”
Harvey Milk’s Early Life and
Influence
There was no “don’t ask,
don’t tell” policy when Milk served in the navy. Being gay in the 1950’s simply
meant that you didn’t tell. In high school, Harvey Milk was on the junior
varsity basketball team. He worked as a Math and history teacher and campaigned
for Senator Barry Goldwater. But Milk didn’t hide from being gay, championing
gay rights as he became politically involved after moving to
Harvey Milk built a political
club that enabled his election victory but also demonstrated that the gay vote
was important. After his death, politicians took a more proactive stance in
courting this voting group. Normalization in terms of heterosexual perceptions
years after Milk’s assassination played a large part in the legalization of
same-sex marriages and the general acceptance of so-called civil unions. Milk’s
election as an openly-gay man and his subsequent murder forced observers to react,
and in doing so brought issues into the public sphere that had never been
openly discussed.
After his death, San
Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein observed that, “The fact of his homosexuality
gave Harvey an insight into the scars which all oppressed people wear…He
believed that no sacrifice was too great a price to pay for the cause of human
rights.” (Quoted in New York Times,
December 3, 1978) Over three decades after Milk and Mayor George Moscone were
shot by Dan White, same-sex marriages are allowed in several states and
homosexuality is no longer viewed as a mental disorder or perversion.
The Fight for Civil Rights
Although there were many
heroes within the gay community in the latter decades of the twentieth-century,
especially during the first years of the AIDS crisis, Harvey Milk established a
precedent and became a political role model. In his biographical account, The Mayor of Castro Street, Randy Shilts
observes that Harvey Milk “…remains frozen in time, a symbol of what gays can
accomplish and the dangers they face in doing so.”
During his brief tenure as a
Supervisor, Milk shepherded a Gay Rights ordinance toward passage that
protected gays from being fired from their jobs because of sexual orientation.
Had his life not ended prematurely, Milk might have brought the leadership and
energy needed in the early years of the AIDS epidemic to confront the disease
much sooner than it was, saving lives and promoting awareness. Milk fought for
civil rights for all groups, including senior citizens.
Harvey Milk’s Battle
Continues
Harvey Milk has been referred
to as an “unlikely populist.” KQED/PBS correctly assessed that, “…If a gay
man can win, it proves that there is hope for all minorities who are willing to
fight.” Thirty years after Milk was gunned down in his office, homosexuality is
still a moral issue and part of political debate. GOP candidate Herman Cain
believes that homosexuality is a sin (Jonathan Capehart, Washington Post, October 20, 2011). Michele Bachmann, during a Meet the Press interview with David
Gregory (August 14, 2011) dodged any direct questions put to her about
homosexuality, although her husband runs a clinic that “cures” gays.
Harvey Milk directed critics
to see gays as people that deserve full equality with every other American. Keeping
differences a secret, as Shilts notes in his biography of Milk, was learned
early in life as a survival mechanism. Harvey Milk, however, soon determined
that the fullness of acknowledging one’s humanity is determined by
self-honesty. For Milk, that meant embracing who he was.
References:
John Cloud, “The Pioneer
John M. Crewdson, “Harvey
Milk, Led Coast Homosexual-Rights Fight,” New
York Times, November 28, 1978
Larry Kramer, “Gay ‘Power’
Here,” New York Times, December 3,
1978
Randy Shilts, And The Band Played On: Politics, People,
And The AIDS Epidemic (
*Copyright owned by Michael Streich. Republishing in any form requires written permission from author.
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