Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Monday, December 13, 2010

African Americans protest Bahati’s US tour to promote “kill the gays” in Uganda


Bishop Zachary Jones (L) Pastor Joseph Tolton(C) Frank Mugishi(R) Photo Credit: Ocean Morisset


By Nathan James


GBM News Correspondent



As Ugandan Member of Parliament David Bahati, the sponsor of a Draconian new bill making homosexuality a capital offense in his country, came to the United States this past week, seeking support for the legislation, an “Emergency Town Hall Meeting” was held Saturday, in New York City. Organized by the Black Faith Alliance for Global LGBT Justice, the event at Rehoboth Temple Christ Consciousness Church in Harlem featured a keynote address from Frank Mugishi, of Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG). At issue was the proposed Anti-Homosexuality Act, whose provisions include life imprisonment for anyone found guilty of homosexual relations, and execution for anyone having previous convictions for homosexuality, is HIV-positive, or has gay sexual relations with a person under 18. In addition, the bill also makes failure to report a “known homosexual” to the authorities a crime, punishable by
7 years in prison, and creates an extradition process for Ugandans who are caught having gay relationships anywhere in the world. This extraordinarily harsh legislation against gays also highlighted, according to the meeting’s organizers, the involvement of the Christian Right here in the United States in the bill’s development.



Citing the “continued efforts of the religious right in turning blacks and gays against each other”, Bishop Zachary Jones of the Unity Fellowship Church spoke of how the Christian right in the US was heavily engaged in California’s Proposition 8, which overturned gay marriage in that state, and on the use of Uganda as a “lab” in which the effects of anti-gay legislation could be observed. “The religious right,” Jones stated, “Is using Africans as pawns in a global chess game.” Jones was joined at the pulpit by Pastor Joseph Tolton, Rehoboth’s own presiding cleric, who read out the “call to action” on Uganda, imploring the United Nations and the US State Department to make decisive moves to address the plight of Uganda’s gays. Tolton cited a right-wing, Republican-based, American evangelical group, “The Family” with “exporting hatred to Africa, with a direct threat to the LGBT community in Uganda, by funding and sponsoring the Anti-Homosexuality Bill.” Tolton linked the situation in Uganda with American gays, saying, “We know that the freedom of our brothers and sisters in Uganda is clearly connected to our freedom here at home in the United States.” Pastor Tolton was followed by Frank Mugishi, who recounted in chilling detail the suffering of gays and lesbians in his home country.



Frank Mugishi, of Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG) Photo Credit: Ocean Morisset


Mugishi described forced hiding for gays and lesbians, “corrective rape” programs for lesbians, and the outright publication of the names and hometowns of gays and lesbians in local newspapers, creating a mob atmosphere in which gays feared being hunted down and beaten or killed. Mugishi stated that Uganda was “determined” to use all possible means to remove gays from its society, and the Anti-Homosexuality Act enjoyed broad public support. Mugishi and his organization have been operating underground in Uganda, and with the possible passage of Bahati’s bill, feared a catastrophic wave of anti-gay killings. GBM News asked Mugishi about the extradition clause in the Anti-Homosexuality Act. Mugishi confirmed that this would leave Uganda’s gays “little chance of escape”.



In a televised interview with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, MP Bahati cited “God’s Law” as justification for the proposed bill, and told viewers that “children were being recruited into homosexuality” by gay men in Uganda. When pressed to provide evidence of his claims, Bahati demurred, repeating only that “homosexuality is not of [Ugandan] culture.” While in Washington, Bahati stayed at a residence on C Street, also shared by numerous Republican members of Congress, and found receptive ears in several right-wing Christian organizations for his rhetoric. In Uganda, Bahati has gained the support of powerful allies such as Pastor Martin Ssempa, who showed scatological pornography as his “example” of gay sexual practices, and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who has said he will not oppose the bill if it passes Parliament. Bahati himself, in the documentary Missionaries of Hate, aired last summer on Current TV, stated that he would not hesitate to have his own daughter put to death under the law he authored, if she were found to be a lesbian.



In final statements at the Town Hall meeting, Pastor Tolton called upon all closeted gays and lesbians to “come out, wherever you are”, because “now is the time”. He urged gays of color to engage in a “sustained response” to homophobia, decrying the “spiritual colonialism” of the “religious right”. The approximately fifty attendees were brought to the pulpit as a show of unity, singing We Shall Overcome, recalling the civil-rights struggles of the 1960s. An appeal was made for donations to help Mugishi spread his message about the Ugandan situation, and to support Uganda’s imperiled gay population. Whatever lies ahead for Uganda’s gays in the coming months, it was clear that this critical, complex issue involving the efforts of a modern state government to exterminate a minority within its population, will continue to call to the hearts and minds of the LGBT community the world over.



The Global Justice Institute, GLAAD, GLO TV Network, GayByGod.net, The Fellowship, MCC New York & Rehoboth Temple join efforts to mobilize the community.


CALL TO ACTION


The Christian Right is Killing BLACK Gay People in Uganda


The Human Rights THREAT in Uganda effects ALL OF US





Rachel Maddow- -Kill the gays- bills U.S. supporters


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Arts.Advocacy+Wellness: "James Webb and his new play THE CONTRACT"









James Webb and his new play
The CONTRACT
(Premiering this Week!)






THE CONTRACT
Happy A.A+W Wednesday FUTURE FANS. In lieu of all that has transpired in the media with Bishop Eddie Long and the intersections of religion and sexuality, today's feature is very timely. I am humbly thankful for the opportunity of featuring an interview of James Webb and his new play The Contract. Enjoy!







Where are you from and where do you currently reside?

I was born and raised in a small town in Mississippi called Moss Point, which is about 30 miles from Biloxi. If you're driving down I-10 and you blink your eyes, you might miss it. Currently, I live in
New York City, the best place in the world, but I do try to go home to see the family at least twice a year.



What started you on your path in the arts?

Well, I've always had a passion for things artistic. In Moss Point, we were limited in that regard. But I took advantage of the things I could. I joined the choir at church and I played in the band at school. I think these things harnessed my appreciation for art. My first real exposure to theatre was when I went away to college in Tallahassee, Florida. I auditioned for a play at the community theatre and luckily got the part. During the rehearsals of that play, I knew that the theatre was where I belonged. So I decided to major in theatre at Florida A&M University.


You are currently a Ph.D Student at New York University. Can you share your concentration at NYU and your experience, thus far

Yep, I'm a doctoral candidate in the Educational Theatre program at NYU. Currently, I'm writing my dissertation. It focus primarily on the Black Church and how theatre can be used to bring about more open dialogue within the institution.

Most of training in school involved acting. So in many ways, I went back to get my Ph.D. so that I could strengthen my playwriting skills and learn how to produce my own plays. Plays that meant something to me. So having access to mentors and resources at NYU really helped me to accomplish that goal because right now that's exactly what I'm doing.



Playwriting, is a lot of work. Please share your process of writing and creating.

I write everyday. I wake up in the morning. Grab a glass of water. Drain the lizard. And I get to writing. That's the nuts and bolts of it. About two years ago, I realized that it's important to just "show up." If I show up at my writing table, the words will come. Of course, I also use my extensive training in theatre history, literature and criticism to help me dramaturgically. But showing up is the most important key. If I'm having writer's block, it probably means that there's some blockage somewhere else in my life. It could be a broken relationship or I need to tidy up the apartment. It's all intertwined.


Any tips for writers and aspiring writers?

Start journaling. By day, I'm a college professor at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, and that's what I tell my students who aspire to write. They need to journal. Every day. First thing in the morning. And when you're ready to write a play or any piece of literature, make sure it costs you something. I feel that if I'm asking people to come pay money to see my plays or read my book, then it should also cost me something. In other words, I should reveal something in this piece that endangers my ego and possibly hurts me to expose. Only then will my writing earn the attention of the audience.



Your play, The Contract, premieres October 5 - 19 at The Kraine Theater in NYC on the Lower East Side.

Well, we're really only doing about 11 performances for this run, because we consider this a workshop run of the piece. At the end of each performance, we will be soliciting feedback from the audience about the play. We want to know from them what seems to be working and what's not.

I wrote The Contract because I was compelled to write it. Ultimately, I believe that God is the sole Creator. And God works through us. So this play is really God's work, not mine. My job was to simply say "Yes" and to show up to the writing table. And so that's what I did.



Wow, that's a pretty long run, and you are the sole producer...KUDOS!!! We will talk more about self-producing next, but first, why such a strong desire to write and produce The Contract? Briefly tell us about the story The Contract.

In a nutshell, the play is about a southern preacher and his wife. Daryl and Deborah. Because of Daryl's sexual feelings for men, he has cheated on his wife three times. But rather than divorce him and expose him to the church, Deborah chooses a different route. She takes control of the situation and hires him a lover that he can have sexual relations with one weekend per month. In her mind, by doing this, she is able to limit the cheating, save her marriage, and continue their work in the church. Of course, this plan doesn't work.

So the audience gets a behind-the-scenes look at a contemporary pastor and his wife. We get to see them as man and woman rather than the demi-gods that we sometimes make them out to be.


Why should we care? What are your hopes for the work?

We should care because there is oppression within the Black Church. And it is high time that we have a conversation within the church that doesn't condemn a person for their sexuality but rather seeks to understand the complexities between the intersections of sexuality and spirituality.

Look, I personally know of three Black ministers who are preaching in pulpits and are also closeted homosexuals. Their love and passion for God is sincere and immense. If they had a choice, they would choose to be straight in a heartbeat. They've had counseling, prayed, and fasted, trying to be straight. But they can't destroy their true nature. Sometimes, they spew out homophobic rhetoric in the pulpit as a means to purge themselves. It's not right. I definitely don't agree with it. But I do understand the complexities behind their actions. They want desperately to love God and do what they believe the Bible is telling them to do, but they also can't help loving men. On the surface, these preachers come off as hypocritcal, but the issues go far deeper than that. Which makes this a major problem within the church. Because the heads of many of these Black churches are suffering immensely with this very issue. And if the head suffers, then so does the body.

My desire with my play is to help audiences come to a greater understanding of the complexities of the issue. When we get a deeper understanding, then maybe we can start looking at ways to really revive the church.




The Contract is very timely...any thoughts on the recent allegations and situation of Bishop Eddie Long of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church?

I just have one hope. That we see this as an opportunity. I hope Bishop Long sees this as an opportunity as well as all those who are directly or indirectly involved to have a conversation about an issue that's long overdue.



What are your views on homosexuality and the black church?

Spirituality and sexuality are both intimately intertwined. And the church needs to deal with it. Or else more scandals and allegations will surface. Because I can tell you this, Black gay folks are not hiding in shame like years past. What's that old expression, "What's done in the dark will come to the light."


As a playwright how much of your work is true and fictional, how much of your real story is in the story?

It's a little of both. I certainly write about what I know and have experienced. But in my writing, I do allow my characters to go beyond the ordinary. They get to say and do things that most folks would never say or do.



Name either one book, person, performance piece, movie or place...one thing that transformed how you saw the world and your place in it. Please describe what it was and how your transformation unfolded and carried you into this state of being affirming in your truth.

The book would be The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. It's a must read. I require all my college students to read it. And a person would be August Gold. She's a spiritual teacher who taught me that the thing that we are most ashamed of in life is actually the very thing that will bring us our greatest glory. But we first have to embrace it and be grateful for it. Powerful stuff.



Let's talk about Self-Producing. How do you make it happen and have such a lengthy run of your current show?

Honestly, I don't know. I try not to look at the overall picture too much. And just focus on the baby steps because those are more manageable. I definitely strive to remain balanced--good exercise, healthy eating, lots of rest, and relaxation with friends. And most importantly, I try to remember that it's a labor of love. And that I'm suppose to be having fun in the process. So far, it's been pretty stress free. Knock on wood.




What is your plan in the next 5 years for Spider Webb Productions?

Because I'm a college professor, this is probably going to sound bad, but I don't believe in five year plans. What I do intend is to be doing the same kinds of things that I'm doing now, which is teaching, questioning, and creating.




Any chance you will be remounting The Contract in the near future? If so, I know a great actor named Cornelius Jones Jr. who love to portray the role of Paul.

(Laughs.) I certainly hope so. It's a message that I feel strongly about. I definitely want to share it with audiences in the South. So I plan on taking the piece there.





How long will you continue to do this work, even if you don't achieve celebrity notariety?

Wait a minute. You mean, I'm not a celebrity. Sh_t!



This is a Future Forward favorite: Name 1 guilty pleasure.

If I really like a dog (and it doesn't take much for me to really like one), then I let it lick me in the face. Yea, I'm guilty.






Thank you so much for sharing your story with us James. You are very wise man and I love what you offered on the five year plan question. That's a really wise concept and a cool way to look at life.




THE CONTRACT
by James Webb
October 5th - October 19
The Kraine Theatre
85 East 4th ST
New York, NY

For Ticket information:
or call: 212-352-3101 or 866-811-4111









A.A+W
with Cornelius Jones Jr.
Tune in next Wednesday for more
Arts.Advocacy+Wellness with Cornelius Jones Jr.
Stay connected with me:
FaceBook: Cornelius Jones Jr.
Twitter: CorneliusJonesJ
FaceBook Fan Page: FlagBoy Official Fan Page of the Actor

My Ping in TotalPing.com Get Paid To Promote, Get Paid To Popup, Get Paid Display Banner