Popular Culture Review Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer 2005 | Page 112

108 Popular Culture Review Commonwealth Award. In his address to the gathering in Richmond, Mr. Bond reaffirmed that “gay rights” are indeed “civil rights.” From his speech: African Americans. . . were the only Americans who were enslaved for two centuries, but we were far from the only Americans suffering discrimination then and now .. . . Sexual disposition parallels race. I was bom this way. I have no choice. I wouldn’t change it if I could. Sexuality is unchangeable---Many gays, many lesbians, worked side by side with me in the civil rights movement. Am I supposed to tell them now thanks for risking their lives and their limbs to help me win my rights but that they are excluded because of the circumstances of their birth? Not a chance, (www.naacp.org) Nevertheless, following their September 2004 “Summit to Protect Marriage”—co-sponsored by the Louis Sheldon’s Traditional Values Coalition—^the African-American clerics held a press conference and demanded to meet with the Congressional Black Caucus. They were denied, but their inflammatory, stereotyped rhetoric caused consternation within the Caucus, two members of which did eventually confront the group. One of them was Congresswoman Carolyn Kilpatrick from Michigan. She was blunt: “I am opposed to a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage clearly because I do not support opening up the Constitution for such an amendment at this time or for any other thing at this time.” Later in the month the same group of African-American “bishops, pastors, ministers, evangelists and leaders” sent a letter to the Black Caucus. A photo of the group and the text of their letter are currently available and downloadable from TVC’s web site. In their letter, the black clerics seemed to blame homosexuals for all the ills in the African American community. From the breakdown of black families to the high rate of HTV infection, stereotyped homosexuals seemed to be responsible. It’s difficult to understand why some in a minority community that has had to fight so hard and so long for equal civil rights are so willing to use stereotypes and myths, selective biblical readings and ad hoc religious dogma—all of vriiich were used against them in the early days of their own civil rights struggle—^to advocate denying another minority equal civil rights. Although the breakdown of the black family and the “disproportionate number of HIV-AIDS cases” in the African-American community cannot be disputed—a report from the Twelfth Annual Retrovirus Conference held in Boston, March 2005, documented HTV infection has doubled among blacks in the United States over a decade while holding steady among whites—^the