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Despite his support for many gay rights issues, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has resisted endorsing same-sex marriage, calling instead for civil unions. A majority of black voters remain opposed to gay marriage. (Photo by Rick Bowmer/AP)
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HOME > NEWS > NATIONAL NEWS
By: JOSHUA LYNSEN COMMENTS
Black pastor denounces ‘miseducation in the pulpit' |
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Despite growing support for same-sex marriage in the United States as measured by several recent polls, black Americans remain steadfastly opposed to gay unions.
According to research conducted by the National Black Justice Coalition and several other organizations, as many as two-thirds of black Americans are against gay marriage. Although the numbers vary by poll, research shows most blacks oppose both gay marriage and civil unions.
The findings come as some surveys show a majority of whites have dropped their objections to same-sex unions. A poll by Pew Research Center in May showed that fewer than 50 percent of whites object to gay marriage.
H. Alexander Robinson, executive director of the National Black Justice Coalition, said the continued opposition among black Americans shows that he and other advocates must recommit themselves to their work.
“I don’t think we have a moment to waste in making the case,” he said. “And quite frankly, we have to move these numbers.”
Released in April, the National Black Justice Coalition report notes that blacks “are virtually the only constituency in the country that has not become more supportive over the last dozen years” of gay rights.
It says Asian-Pacific Islanders showed the highest rate of support for gay marriage or civil unions at 55 percent. Support among whites was at 46 percent, among Latinos at 35 percent and among blacks at 23 percent.
The report notes those findings reflected “strong gains in each of these groups except for blacks.”
Some experts have been careful to note the findings should not be interpreted to mean that black Americans are the only ones who oppose gay marriage or civil unions.
“I know that we’re looking at one set of polling data about African Americans and their attitudes on GLBT equality, but let’s not use that data and suggest that gay people only face challenges in the African-American community,” said Cuc Vu, chief diversity officer for the Human Rights Campaign.
“There is a lack of support for LGBT equality in many other communities. In 2004, for example, we witnessed 6,000 Chinese Americans protest marriage in San Francisco. Homophobia is very real in every community.”
But it is, perhaps, best documented among blacks. A survey for HRC in March 2004 showed fewer than one-third of black voters said gays should be allowed to marry.
Twenty percent of that survey’s 600 respondents indicated they strongly believed that gays should be allowed to marry. Another 8 percent agreed that gays should be allowed to marry, but did not hold a strong position on the issue.
According to the survey, 50 percent of blacks strongly believed that gays should not be allowed to marry and another 11 percent agreed, albeit “not strongly.”
Four years later, surveys show the numbers generally are unchanged.
A national survey of 1,505 people by Pew Research Center in May shows 26 percent of blacks favor gay marriage, while 56 percent oppose it. By comparison, the same survey shows 40 percent of whites favor gay marriage and 49 percent oppose it.
Rev. Larry Brumfield, a black pastor at Westminster Church of the Brethren in northern Maryland, said he was saddened by the findings.
“I wouldn’t say I’m surprised,” he said, “but I’m a little put off by it because I feel that we have, as a people, as a group, as a demographic unit, we have not educated ourselves and learned and grown.”
Brumfield, who is straight, said too few blacks accept sexual orientation as the immutable trait many scientists believe it to be.
“I think a lot of folk think it’s a conscious choice,” he said. “But like blue eyes or green eyes, it’s how God made us.”
Robinson said although he and other gay activists have progressed in their educational work among religious and secular black communities, support for same-sex marriage has been agonizingly slow to materialize.
“African Americans, in large part, have been very resistant to any notion of discrimination against anyone, even when it comes to same-sex couples,” he said. “But we have not made the case yet that excluding same-sex couples from marriage is discrimination.”
Several prominent, straight black leaders have tried to help drum up support for same-sex unions.
Among those who have announced support for gay marriage are Coretta Scott King, the wife of Martin Luther King, Jr. who died in 2006; activist and former Democratic presidential candidate Rev. Al ...
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