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Memories of '69


The scourge of AIDS decimated an entire generation of men, including many who fought for gay rights back in the heady days that followed Stonewall in 1969. But one of those brave men, John Knoebel, is alive and well, and telling the story of the early days of gay liberation.

Knoebel, who works as the vice president of consumer marketing for Regent Media (the parent company of The Advocate ), spoke to blogger Christopher De La Torre about moving to New York City a week after Stonewall, being the victim of a hate crime, and working for the Gay Liberation Front, an early gay advocacy group.

"Already something of an antiwar activist from my college days in Madison, Wis., I did feel immediately drawn to the radical energy of GLF and started attending meetings in November 1969," Knoebel says. "For the next few months, I became a student of gay politics, participated in numerous street demonstrations, and very energetically 'came out' in the movement."

Knoebel worked closely with GLF on the first gay pride march that took place in June 1970, "However, on the Friday night before the march, I was gay bashed in the Village with four of my friends, and ended up in Bellevue Hospital getting 14 stitches on my face. Nonetheless, on Sunday we made the march, pushing our friend Peter Ruffit, who had suffered a broken ankle in the attack, in a wheelchair all the way to Central Park."

JOHN KNOEBEL CURRENT XLRG (COURTESY) | ADVOCATE.COM Knoebel also discusses GLF's interactions with the Black Panthers, who had influential leaders like Huey Newton and Afeni Shakur (future mother of rap star Tupac Shakur) embracing the gay cause. Knoebel and two other GLF leaders once met up with Newton and Jane Fonda in Fonda's Upper East Side penthouse to discuss working together on a joint liberation effort for blacks, women, and gays.

"Within minutes, Huey arrived shirtless, still drying himself with a bath towel," Knoebel remembers. "I remember him as a very attractive individual, well-built and with particularly striking eyes. We wondered later if he'd been intentionally showing off."

Knoebel ends the interview by saying the root cause of homophobia remains sexism, and that gays will not achieve equality in America until women do.

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Allen Young
    Date posted: 7/2/2009 9:02:00 PM
    Hometown: Royalston, Mass.

    Comment:

    I am so pleased to see this on your website. I was honored to work with John in the early days of the Gay Liberation Front in New York City. Many of us fear that our pioneering efforts will be forgotten; furthermore, those who came before us, in the pre-Stonewall gay or "homophile" movement, have the same fear. Interviews such as this, and the work of young gay and lesbian historians, will help preserve this important legacy.

  • Name: E M uprichard
    Date posted: 7/2/2009 7:03:00 PM
    Hometown: sf

    Comment:

    couldn't agree more with the final sentence... the real roots of homophobia is men's unconscious hatred and fear of women.

  • Name: Michael R
    Date posted: 7/2/2009 7:02:00 PM
    Hometown: Fort Lauderdale

    Comment:

    Thank you John and thanks to all the brave souls who pushed our community forward in 1969. I was a 14 year old Midwestern lad who was cheering you and the others on, in private, of course! Interesting take on ending sexism before eliminating homophobia, I think you're on to something big there.



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