Today is an interesting and important day to remember, especially this season:
On June 12, 1967, the United States Supreme Court overturned the conviction of a married couple named Loving – he was white, she was black. They lived in Virginia and had violated the southern state’s law against inter-racial marriage. The high court’s decision made interracial marriage legal in all 50 states. Today, the Loving decision is celebrated as an important victory for multi-culturalism and democracy.With temperatures topping 35 degrees centigrade, it wasn’t just the music that was hot at the 5th annual New York City Loving Day Celebration, one of several such events around the country.
Kathleen and David and their two cocoa-colored children were among the estimated 1000 people gathered under a big tent along New York’s East River. The group included many interracial couples like them.
Kathleen and Dave Graham, and their children Max and Miles are a healthy interracial family. Kathleen says she is grateful that the Lovings helped pave the way for their freedom
“There are a lot of people who had to fight really hard so we can be legally married,” says Kathleen. “We can own property, we can have the kids and we don’t get hassled about it. We’re normal now.”A normal life was all that Mildred and Richard Loving wanted in 1958 when they fell in love, married in Washington, D.C., and settled in nearby Virginia. Six months later, they were convicted of violating a state law barring inter-racial marriage. At the time, such unions were illegal in half the U.S. states. The Lovings’ one-year jail sentence was suspended after they agreed to accept banishment from Virginia.
In the early 1960s, when new civil rights legislation was being crafted, Mrs. Loving wrote to U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy for help. After a long legal battle, the Supreme Court overturned the lower court decision, ruling in favor of the Lovings on June 12, 1967.
Loving Day Celebration Founder and President Ken Tanabe and Vice President Madeleine Kanai are both children of mixed race marriages and equally committed to the right to love and marriage between all peoples
The Lovings’ determination and courage inspired Loving Day founder Ken Tanabe to organize these celebrations. “They were just normal people,” he observes, “and look at the difference they made. And I think everyone should be inspired by that to make a difference in their own lives. That’s what Loving Day is all about.”Madeleine Kanai, who helped Tanabe organize this year’s event and is herself of mixed-race parentage, says that Loving Day is about both celebration and education. “I think the best way to inform people is by having a big party… and try to share with as many people as possible. It’s just such a positive message… and such a wonderful combination of everyone’s efforts and everyone’s energies.”
No one at today’s celebration can miss the loving energy that emanates from Nadia and Dave. For this young couple, falling in love has been merely personal, never political. “We’re just a couple,” Dave says, “and it kind of just happened. Although I did learn that in 2000, [the southern state of] Alabama finally agreed to [remove the state constitution’s ban on interracial marriage]. Being in New York City you don’t think of these things.”
Nadia and Dave, a happy and committed inter-racial young couple, were not even born when the Loving decision was handed down in 1967
Nadia denies that the couple ever gets “raised eyebrows” on the streets of New York. She said that might have been the case a decade ago, but adds, “now it’s such an open thing and it’s just wonderful to see!”
Dave chimes in with a laugh, “I think if anything we get people looking at us because we are having more fun than they are! It works!”
Rich and Shaqira – he’s white, she’s black – have noticed no prejudice in their native New Jersey. But Shaqira does admit to having had some initial worry. “It was just a concern as far as having children was concerned,” she says, “if they would feel like they didn’t belong or they weren’t sure who they were. But there has been a lot of support, so I am not really as concerned anymore.”
Rich says their respective families love their choice of spouse, “so it’s cool.”
An imperfect world: Tammi and Victor love each other and may want to marry, but will face resistance from Tammi’s parents, who are concerned about society’s treatment of them and their future children
The road has not been so smooth for Tammi and Victor of Boston, Massachusetts. She is white and he is black. While the two have been best friends for many years, they continue to agonize about getting married, due to her family’s concerns.
“My parents [want to] see me with a socially acceptable white guy. They are worried about what other people think. Yes,” she says, with a sad shake of her head, “we are in the year 2008, but some people just aren’t there.”
Loving Day founder and organizer Ken Tanabe agrees. “You might not expect people to put a burning cross on the front yard, but you [do] have… people who are against people of other nationalities, different races, [and] different cultures. And what we are trying to say is these things shouldn’t divide us.” He adds that while intermarriage may be legal in the United States, the fight for tolerance and justice is far from over. “We are trying to eliminate that low-lying prejudice that still exists, even though in may not be in the bright sunlight.”
I take this time to thank the Lovings for making me possible as something other than a bastard. Obama should say something about this, anyone know if he is marking today as well?
This post continues my series in the effort to remind you all: he’s not “black,” whatever that is supposed to mean. Or rather, he’s as “white” as he is “black.” Even though I understand why he must refer to himself as a “black man,” I would bet money that he is like me, and desires an end to stupid and unscientific “racial” classification superceding all other discussion of “what he is,” “what he means when he says…” and so forth.
As I pointed out to some friends recently, you almost never heard a bobblehead speak of Edwards or HRC with the intro, “today, White Presidential hopeful Edwards said…” Let’s start treating Obama with the same respect. He’s a man, a human being, and the color of his skin tells you next to nothing about him. Period.
…and as a queer person, I’m not a little bitter that more than thirty years after our Leaderz decided that “jungle fever” was legally acceptable, they still won’t let me and any of my girlfriends exchange rings. Not that I want to just now, but you know, it’d be nice if we could enjoy the 14th amendment too.











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Four days and counting
Monday here in CA we start letting every citizen have the same legal rights as every other citizen. Shocking concept, not sitting well with everyone, but there will be no going back now.
Deep appreciation to the Lovings, for their committment to each other and for their courage to fight for the rights that should belong to all of us.
that's just pathetic, BIO
“doesn’t have the resources to marry gay and straight couples.” what utter bunk. someone should order a whole mess of lesbian (not str8 guy fantasy of, but the real kind) pr0n in her name and ship it to her place of work.
Redneck country
knew you’d get a kick out of it. The people in political power out there are descendents of Dust Bowl migrants, straight out of Grapes of Wrath and Elmer Gantry. Lots of Baptists, of the hell-fire-and-brimstone variety. Bush country, still today.
The original plan was to refuse to issue the marriage licenses on grounds of freedom of religion. State stepped in and said no, and if we have to we’ll take over local government. Plan B was issue the licenses but then arrest any gay couples and the ministers right after a wedding, to - and I kid you not, this was said on TV - “teach them a lesson, teach them we don’t want their kind around.” State stepped in again, apparently with a more exasperated tone, explained to the county people about this newish concept called “The Law” and how it actually works, and again threatened to take over and run things for them. Shallow end of the gene pool out there, many slow learners.
Much concern expressed about children being seduced into the “gay lifestyle” (what, squads of fairies teaching little boys how to swish?) but the real nut of the fear was evident in a warning from one minister about how the Ho-mo-sex-u-al A-gen-da is to steal away the God-fearing wives of God-fearing menfolk. Said minister was divorced a few years ago, call me silly but I’m guessing that ex-Mrs Minister is now happily involved with her new ladylover and Mr Minister is still feeling, ah, deflated over the whole thing. Don’t know that, but I’d bet a bundle.