Henry Gerber was an early homosexual rights activist in the US. Inspired by the work of Germany's Magus Hirschfield and by the organization Bund fur Menschenrecht, Gerber founded the Society for Human Rights in 1924, the nation's first known gay organization and Friendship and Freedom, the first known gay publication. Unfortunately, SHR was short-lived as police arrested several of its members shortly after it incorporated, including Gerber himself. Gerber maintained contacts within the fledging homophile movement of the 1950's and continued to agitate for the rights of homosexuals. Gerber was even placed in a mental institution once and when the US went to war with Germany, he was given the choice to stay in and be labeled an illegal alien or go join the army. He ended up serving three years in Germany and that is when he came back with his learnings to set up the SHR. But Gerber's courage and advocacy helped lay the groundwork for many of the queer liberation movement we now know today. Gerber spent the last decades as a resident of the Soldiers' and Airmen Home, where he worked on his memoirs and a novel. He was 80 when he passed and was buried in the adjoining US Soldiers' and Airmen National Cemetery.
Happy Gay Pride 🌈
That is a great, inspirational, and brave person.
ReplyDeleteTundra Bunny here... this reminds me of the PBS documentary entitled, "The Lavender Scare" about American LGTBQ civil servants, diplomats and military personnel drummed out of their jobs. I highly recommend seeing it, if you haven't done so already!
ReplyDeleteIm not so sure I didn't see that. It sounds very familiar
DeleteI'm betting he had very broad shoulders to help him carry around that enormous set of balls he must had to do that.
ReplyDeleteMore history we never learned in school. Kids today won't either if the Repuglicans keep getting their way.
ReplyDeleteI posted about Gerber, too, a few years back; https://ishouldbelaughing.blogspot.com/search?q=Henry+Gerber
ReplyDeleteA truly remarkable human being that so many of us don't know, but to whom we owe a geart deal., Thanks for sharing his story. 🏳🌈🏳🌈🏳🌈
I will have to pop over and read that and see if a remember that.
DeleteWhat a brave person!
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
A man truly ahead of his time!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to see you post our recent history. People need to know.
ReplyDeleteJimmy
Thanks Jimmy! I wanted to do something little different this pride month and remember some fine people.
DeleteXOXO
Love it. Truly inspiring. And what an honorable human being. Thanks for sharing. Kizzes.
ReplyDeleteI never knew any of this. Even at this age I'm learning things still.
ReplyDeleteI had never heard of him!
ReplyDeleteThanks for writing this post. We do need to know whose shoulders it is that we're standing on.
XOXO
I agree with Jimmy. It's nice to read and learn our history. The last two of these post I had no idea and I'm embarrassed to admit that.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see this one. I love a good sip of history. This is what gay pride is. The month is shaping up for interesting posts
ReplyDeleteI've read about him. One reason it was so hard and took so long to get a gay rights movement off-and-running is because any literature advocating such rights was deemed to be obscene, and thus not protected by the First Amendment!
ReplyDeleteIt seems we have always had obstacles, right?
DeleteThank you for this!
ReplyDeleteEvery single person taking these brave steps paved the road for all of us who came after and we owe them not just our gratitude, but our lives.
ReplyDeleteSassybear/Breenlantern/Idle Eyes/ Sean
https://idleeyesandadormy.com/