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We can celebrate our freedom — but it's still not enough

It's fifty years since the law changed on homosexuality. Benjamin Ellis considers what's changed for LGBT+ Jews

July 6, 2017 12:28
GAY PARADE
2 min read

It's fifty years - a jubilee - since the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales.

Of course, a jubilee should be a celebration, and so it is. Everyone who believes in a free and open society should celebrate this milestone. We can celebrate our freedom together, as we will at Pride in London this weekend. And in England, Scotland and Wales, we can now celebrate our love and commitment through marriage.

As LGBT+ Jews, we know that celebration also involves memory. We must not forget how our own societies have treated LGBT+ people for centuries. And we must remember the daily humiliation and punishment that LGBT+ people still endure in other countries. We cannot take anything for granted. Every hard-won freedom must be cherished, and every right fiercely guarded. The UK government is now dependent on the support of an openly homophobic party. Would we be silent if it were Jews, rather than LGBT+ people, who were discriminated against?

With discrimination rife despite decriminalisation, LGBT+ people in this country learned to look after ourselves. From the foundation in 1972 of the Jewish Gay and Lesbian Group – which is still going strong – to the establishment in 1990 of the LGBT+ synagogue Beit Klal Yisrael, LGBT+ Jews have come together and created our own communities. There have been pioneering LGBT+ rabbis too, including Rabbi Lionel Blue who in 1981 was the first UK rabbi to come out as gay, and Rabbi Sheila Shulman and Rabbi Eli Tikvah Sarah, ordained by Leo Baeck College in 1989. When Aids began to devastate the lives of gay men in particular, in 1988 the Jewish Aids Trust was formed to support those in our community living with HIV and Aids, challenge the stigma around the condition and educate around sexual health.

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