While the Wilfahrt family shows us the right way to honor soldiers who died in combat, the Republican presidential candidates show us the wrong way.
Corporal Andrew Wilfahrt
We say the greatest sacrifice of all is to give
one’s life for one’s country. It
is those who are left behind who ensure
the legacy. Corporal Andrew Wilfahrt was willing to die for his country, and
notwithstanding their insurmountable grief, his parents are charged with ensuring
their son’s relevance in a country that has failed LGBT service members.
Until the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” gay
and lesbian service members had to serve in silence unable to reveal their true
selves. On September 20, the
Draconian law died, but not before Corporal Andrew Wilfahrt’s death. He was never
able to enjoy the openness he deserved.
And as a result, his parents are left in a fight
that most others who have lost a son or daughter to war can skip. Most parents whose
children’s lives ended in the service of our freedoms do not have to justify
their family and their dead son’s life. Lori and Jeff Wilfahrt now boldly
perceive that added burden as their obligation to their son, his military
family and their country. The grieving and loving parents are reminding America
that even though their son served in great honor, he served in exclusion. Even
though others can now serve openly, the discrimination our service members carried
through silent service persists until such time as full equality is attained for
all LGBT people in the United States.
Andrew died “protecting rights that he himself
could not enjoy, especially the right to marry the person he loved,” said Lori
Wilfahrt this past weekend during the first OutServe Leadership Summit National
Dinner. Her moving speech
delivered to more than 200 post-DADT celebrants highlighted the ongoing
discrimination: “The Constitution our son died for was intended to protect
rights, not to deny them,” she said.
What many do not realize is that repeal of DADT
serves only to legitimate open service but does not provide gays and lesbians
in the military with equality. The right to marry and the benefits derived
therefrom are still missing. What’s changed is that the iniquity can now be
framed through the lenses of gays and lesbians who are open about their sexual
orientation and who serve their country with equal valor, pride and patriotism
as their heterosexual counterparts.
Like Lori and Jeff fighting for their son, all
of us are charged with testifying for those who have fallen — on our behalf. Surely that includes our elected
officials?
It is unimaginable to me that anyone vies for
the highest position of commander-in-chief yet denigrates our service members
and the freedoms for which they die.
It seems too easy for these presidential candidates to spew unfettered
bias from behind debate podiums. How can a potential leader of the most
powerful nation on earth expect to command a military that he or she also encourages
to disdain its own?
As we head into the primary to elect the
Republican nominee for president, we are faced with a field of candidates who have
shown their intention to roll back progress America has made toward equality.
To add insult to injury, some candidates have signed a pledge from the National
Organization for Marriage, to which they promise to one day legislate against
equality. Such a binding pledge derogates from the role of a leader and the
ability to remain open to facilitate and participate in negotiations on all
issues. They have made their voices clear, and it has become increasingly
difficult to distinguish one from the other on the issue of equality:
·
Herman
Cain says homosexuality is a sin and a choice.
·
Rick
Santorum believes being gay is a social experiment that should be kept out of
the military.
·
Michele
Bachmann says, “If you are involved in the gay and lesbian lifestyle it is
personal bondage, personal despair and personal enslavement.” She also
considers being gay and lesbian a sexual dysfunction.
·
Rick
Perry supports a federal amendment to ban gay marriage — as do most of them.
They’re indistinguishable.
In short, these people are unfit to command an America
of today!
This past week’s OutServe event was an historic
moment of clarity. Gay and lesbian Americans can serve in the open, but they
still need a commander-in-chief as qualified as President Obama to lead in
truth. They need the voice of Republican candidates such as Fred Karger, who
while excluded from the debates had the courage to lambast Santorum and the
other candidates for not taking a stand on behalf of the soldier who was booed during
a Republican debate.
When Santorum says “homosexuality undermines the
family,” I am struck by the strength of family that I was privy to witness on
Saturday night at the OutServe event.
Gay or straight had no place in heartfelt mourning and pride of service.
We were all one American family at that moment when in great tradition, with hundreds
of glasses raised in the hands of gay service members in attendance, a toast
was given to the commander-in-chief, to each and every branch of the military, and
— in memory of Andrew — to the least undermined family of all, the Wilfahrt
family.
MELANIE NATHAN is a lawyer
and human rights activist who is author of GAY U.S.A. the Blog, which is run in conjunction with GAY
U.S.A. the Movie. Video by KRISTINA LAPINSKI.
The following video is a
tribute to Corporal Andrew Wilfahrt, a fallen gay soldier, whose parents, still
deep in their grief, attended the
first-ever Military Leadership Summit after repeal of DADT.
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