Fighting homophobia
THIS MONTH is Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) History Month. Although now officially supported by the TUC, several government departments and individual politicians, its origins lie with the grassroots.
Liam O'Connolly, Glasgow
Often, LGBT people hide themselves in wider society, often for their own safety.
The aim of the month is to rectify this and deal with the "legacy of silence" which surrounds the history of the LGBT movement.
However, the history of LGBT liberation is also intertwined with the fight for socialism and goes back nearly a hundred years.
Bolshevik Russia, for a period, effectively legalised homosexuality - the first country in the world to do so.
Although this was reversed under the Stalinist regime in the 1930s, it gave a glimpse of how socialism could advance the fight for LGBT equality.
In 1918, the Communist Party in Germany, inspired by socialist revolution in Russia, argued for full equality for lesbians and gays. But the socialist revolution in Germany was defeated.
Years later the gay and lesbian community was defenceless as tens of thousands were sent to the concentration camps alongside socialists and Jews.
With the recent introduction of civil partnerships for same-sex couples, the equalisation of the age of consent and the abolition of the notorious Section 28 amongst other legal reforms, you could be forgiven for thinking that the LGBT community now enjoys equality and the struggle is almost complete.
Unfortunately this isn't true. Homophobia is alive and well in workplaces, in schools and on the streets.
This prejudice is a feature of the capitalist system whose ideology is used to justify and satisfy the interests of a privileged elite.
We need to counter prejudice and division with the call for unity of working-class people and youth into a mass movement for decent jobs, homes, and services.
The case for LGBT liberation needs to be taken to the trade unions, universities, schools and workplaces with the call for genuine equality for the LGBT community and against homophobia.
Socialism, based on ordinary people planning society for the benefit of the majority, will remove the cause of discrimination and oppression.
Only then will the LGBT community enjoy genuine equality.
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