Kendall Curtis Lovett
6 October 1922 to 21 October 2020
These two photos were taken by Gary Jaynes on 7 October 2020 the day after Ken's 98th birthday.
Ken died on 21 October, 15 days later.
We had 27 unforgettable years together in Sydney, Newcastle and Melbourne for the last 20 of those years.
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Remembering 78er Kendall Lovett
Article courtesy of Di Minnis and Ken Davis from First Mardi Gras.
Sadly just a few short weeks after turning 98, 78er Kendall Lovett has passed away. Ken is survived by his partner of 27 years, Mannie De Saxe.
Ken was a tireless activist and campaigner for LGBTQI, refugee and human rights. Every demonstration that Gay Solidarity Group, later Lesbian and Gay Solidarity, organised from the late 70s onwards had Ken’s placards, banners, slogan vests or people-shaped placards – all in his distinctive calligraphy.
Ken was a lovely supportive colleague in the Gay Solidarity Group (GSG), which organised the first Mardi Gras and coordinated the massive Drop The Charges campaign that followed.
Ken joined GSG after the first Mardi Gras in 1978, and was arrested in the August demonstration in Taylor Square. Often during Mardi Gras parades and demonstrations, Kendall was waiting on alert with bail money ready. Ken stayed active in GSG, later renamed Lesbian and Gay Solidarity into the 2000s, after he and Mannie moved to Melbourne.
Ken had been active in Gay Liberation after he returned to Sydney from the UK in the late 1960s, and took part in the 1972 demonstration outside St Clement’s Anglican Church at Mosman after they had dismissed Peter Bonsall-Boone from staff. Kendall’s main political activism prior to GSG in 1978 was in a resident actiongroup saving Woolloomooloo from developers, with the support of the Builders’ Labourers Federation Green Bans in the early 1970s.
In the early 1980s Ken and GSG were active in organising around inclusion of homosexuality in the NSW Anti-Discrimination Act, in demanding removal of the anti-buggery law and in responding to the rise of the Christian Right. Just prior to American Jerry Falwell’s visit in 1982, Kendall and Leigh Raymond registered the name, Moral Majority, and used it to campaign against Fred Nile and Falwell.
Ken also supported the Gaywaves radio program on 2SER FM over many years. He provided a weekly news bulletin – GRINS (Gay Radio Information News Service) – sometimes as a collective effort, but mainly as a one-man band, week in and week out. This was circulated to other lesbian and gay media across the country.
Ken was a key member of the Sydney collective of Gay Community News (1980-82) and the organising body for the Sixth National Conference of Lesbians and Homosexual Men in Sydney (1980). He was also a correspondent to gay newspapers overseas and the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA).
In 1985 the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence canonised him, in recognition of his extensive gay activism, as St Kendall the Constant.
Kendall formed a relationship with Mannie De Saxe, a revolutionary socialist and Jewish anti-Zionist activist from South Africa, after they met in GSG. Both of them remained active in lesbian and gay, and other social justice, causes. They volunteered to help people with AIDS, and founded SPAIDS, which planted a memorial grove of trees in Sydney Park.
After retiring from his job at Choice magazine, Ken moved to Newcastle. Twenty years ago, Ken and Mannie moved to live together in Melbourne and in recent years had practical home support from otheractivists and friends.
Ken and Mannie have been very engaged in the Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives. They have made big contributions to the struggle to improve services for older lesbian, transgender and gay people. Ken and Mannie were featured in the “2 of Us” in Good Weekend magazine on March 10, 2007. But they were very angry in 2009 when the government, as part of a path to marriage equality, decided they were a couple and cut their pensions, even though they had been independent tax payers.
Ken and his long-term support for LGBTQI and othersocial change struggles will be sadly missed.
Our condolences to Mannie and to Ken’s many friends.
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First Mardi Gras.
Vale Kendall Lovett
Kendall Lovett (L) and Mannie De Saxe (R) holding the Lesbian and
Gay Solidarity banner at an 'Out of Iraq' rally for peace, Melbourne,
2005.
Photo by John Story, courtesy Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives.
Vale Kendall Lovett
6.10.1922 – 21.10.2020
A life of activism for social justice
We are sad to report that a few weeks after turning 98, 78er Kendall Lovett has passed away. Ken is survived by his partner of 27 years, Mannie De Saxe.
Ken was a tireless activist and campaigner for LGBTIQ, refugee and human
rights. Every demo from the late '70s onwards had Ken’s placards,
banners, slogan vests or people-shaped placards – all in his distinctive
calligraphy.
Ken was a lovely supportive colleague in the Gay Solidarity Group, which
organised the first Mardi Gras and coordinated the massive Drop the
Charges campaign that followed.
Ken joined GSG after the first Mardi Gras in 1978, and was arrested in
the August demonstration in Taylor Square. Often during Mardi Gras
parades and demonstrations, Kendall was waiting on alert with bail money
ready. Ken stayed active in GSG, later renamed Lesbian and Gay
Solidarity into the 2000s, after he and Mannie moved to Melbourne.
Ken had been active in Gay Liberation after he returned to Sydney from
the UK in the late 1960s, where he was part of the move for homosexual
law reform. He took part in the 1972 demonstration outside St Clement’s
Anglican Church at Mosman after they had dismissed Peter Bonsall-Boone
from staff. Kendall’s main political activism prior to GSG in 1978 was
in a resident action group saving Woolloomooloo from developers, with
the support of the Builders’ Labourers Federation Green Bans in the
early 1970s.
Ken was very active at the time of the nationalist bicentenary in 1988,
helping organise a big queer contingent in the First Nations
mobilisation, around the slogan “200 years of oppression and bad taste.”
He was involved in Enola Gay, the peace and antinuclear activist group,
and founded “Inside Out” a network supporting gay and lesbian
prisoners. Ken was one of the people in GSG who was very involved with
international solidarity. He sustained a long correspondence with
anti-Apartheid gay activist Simon Nkoli when he was in prison in South
Africa on treason charges.
In the early 1980s Ken and GSG were active in organising around
inclusion of homosexuality in the NSW Anti-Discrimination Act, in
demanding removal of the anti-buggery law and in responding to the rise
of the Christian Right. Just prior to American Jerry Falwell’s visit in
1982, Kendall and Leigh Raymond registered the name, Moral Majority, and
used it to campaign against Fred Nile and Falwell.
Ken also supported the Gaywaves radio program on 2SER FM over many
years. He provided a weekly news bulletin – GRINS (Gay Radio Information
News Service) – sometimes as a collective effort, but mainly as a
one-man band, week in and week out. This was circulated to other
lesbian and gay media across the country.
Ken was a key member of the Sydney collective of Gay Community News
(1980-82) and the organising body for the Sixth National Conference of
Lesbians and Homosexual Men in Sydney (1980). He was also a
correspondent to gay newspapers overseas and the International Lesbian
and Gay Association (ILGA).
In October 1982 Ken and GSG supported Roberta Perkins and the Australian
Transsexual Association (ATA), in staging the first transgender protest
in Australia, in Manly. The protest was held to challenge a judgement
against two transwomen, who a Magistrate had ruled were men. In response
the NSW Attorney-General said that ‘Attorneys-General of the six states
had committed to new legislation to recognise the validity of sex
changes’.
In 1985 the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence canonised him, in
recognition of his extensive gay activism, as St Kendall the Constant.
Kendall formed a relationship with Mannie De Saxe, a revolutionary
socialist and Jewish anti-Zionist activist from South Africa, after they
met in GSG. Both of them remained active in lesbian and gay, and other
social justice, causes. They volunteered to help people with AIDS, and
founded SPAIDS, which planted a memorial grove of trees in Sydney Park.
After retiring from his job at Choice magazine, Ken moved to
Newcastle. Twenty years ago, Ken and Mannie moved to live together in
Melbourne and in recent years had practical home support from other
activists and friends.
Ken and Mannie have been very engaged in the Australian Lesbian and Gay
Archives. They have made big contributions to the struggle to improve
services for older lesbian, transgender and gay people. Ken and Mannie
were featured in the “2 of Us” in Good Weekend magazine on 10
March 2007. But they were very angry in 2009 when Social Security, as
part of a path to marriage equality, decided they were a couple and cut
their pensions, even though they had been independent tax payers.
Ken and his long-term support for LGBTIQ and other social change
struggles will be sadly missed. Our condolences to Mannie and to Ken’s
many friends.
- Tribute written by Diane Minnis and Ken Davis, the Co-Chairs of
First Mardi Gras Inc., a community association for 78ers. 78ers.org.au.
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Freedom Socialist Party and Radical WomenKen Lovett Presente! Immense legacy for all with a passion for justice
The world is a better place today, thanks to Kendall Lovett. Ken exuded enormous energy and creativity as a community campaigner and movement linchpin who identified with all who are exploited.
Ken died peacefully at home in Melbourne, where he lived with his partner of 27 years, Mannie De Saxe. He was 98 and remained active until the end, responding to emails and sharing political news.
My earliest memories of Ken were in 1980. I’d travelled to Sydney to participate in the 6th National Homosexual Conference, which Ken helped organise. He was living in a small townhouse in the inner suburb of Woolloomooloo. His home also housed boxes of material, carefully organised for archiving — a lifelong tradition, which the Australian Lesbian and Gay Archives will long thank him for.
Ken was proud of his working class community. He’d been an activist with Residents of Woolloomooloo (ROW), which won the crucial support of the Builders Labourers Federation. A green ban, in place for two years, from 1973 til 1975, prevented the suburb from being bulldozed, gentrified and replaced with skyscrapers.
The ‘70s was an explosive period for Gay Liberation. Ken was in the thick of it from the get-go. After the arrests at the first Mardi Gras in 1978, Ken joined Gay Solidarity Group (GSG). He was arrested during the tumultuous campaign to drop the charges, which followed. The movement in this period was militant, liberationist and multi-issue. This was reflected in the refrain that rang out through the streets of Darlinghurst to “stop police attacks, on gays, workers, women and blacks.”
GSG drew the connections between LGBTIQ oppression and the struggles of all the oppressed — this solidarity was at the core of Ken’s activism. He was a voluminous letter writer. This included writing to gay prisoners, through the prisoner support group, Inside Out. Ken had a long correspondence with Tseko Simon Nkoli — the Black, gay, anti-apartheid activist who was diagnosed with HIV while in jail on treason charges. Nkoli became internationally known in the ‘90s when he went public about his sexuality and HIV status at a time when the stigma in South Africa was immense.
Ken’s commitment to challenging racism ran deep. He joined many marches to stop Aboriginal deaths in custody. In 1988, he rejected the gross nationalistic jingoism and joined up with Gays Against The Bicentenary. On January 26, “Invasion Day,” First Nations people from across the continent led the 40,000-strong March for Justice, Freedom, and Hope. Marching alongside Ken and the huge queer contingent with my FSP Comrades is one of my enduring memories.
In 1993, after Ken retired from his job with the consumer advocacy magazine, Choice, he moved to Newcastle. Then early this century, Ken relocated with Mannie to Melbourne. He had met Mannie, a socialist and anti-Zionist Jew, through GSG. In Melbourne the pair continued organising, carrying on the traditions of marching against war, in support of Palestine and for refugee rights. Ken made many unique banners, signs and a host of innovative protest artefacts. He was also a prodigious photographer. In the days before digital photography, when documenting rallies was more costly, he captured and carefully labelled many hundreds of photos.
As well as being regularly out on the streets, Ken was also a movement builder, contributing a great deal behind the scenes. This included community media. He was part of the Sydney Collective for Gay Community News. For 10 years, from 1983 to 1993, he produced the Gay Radio Information News Service (GRINS). He researched and wrote the scripts for this weekly gay news service — recording the bulletin each week and packaging and mailing cassette tapes around the country to be played on community radio stations, including 3CR in Melbourne and 2SER in Sydney.
Ken’s passion for feminism was legendary. He supported reproductive justice, frequently challenging anti-choice bigots. He also went nose to nose against the right wing, embracing many creative tactics. He was part of a duo that registered the trade mark Moral Majority in Australia ahead of a visit by Jerry Falwell in the ‘80s. He then designed a selection of bright yellow Moral Majority ™ stickers declaring support for a pantheon of radical causes! He also had a long record of protesting the vile Fred Nile!
He was a mainstay of the Sydney Park AIDS Memorial Grove (SPAIDS), and after moving to Melbourne, he helped push Northern Melbourne Institute of TAFE into re-opening the AIDS Memorial Garden at Fairfield.
Ken supported the work of the Freedom Socialist Party since our Australian Section was founded. He was one of the first Australian subscribers to the Freedom Socialist newspaper and kept his subscription current for almost 40 years. He wrote a piece for the Freedom Socialist Bulletin about the need to resist discrimination sparked by HIV/AIDS, and we published many of his photos. Ken never missed donating to our regular fundraising drives. Ken was always pleased to get behind socialist projects — the month he died, he and Mannie had a large sign outside their house, advocating a vote for the socialist candidate in the local council election.
We celebrate the life of Ken Lovett as one very well lived. He will be missed by many, but especially Mannie. His legacy will long continue to provide inspiration for all who have a passion for justice.
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From Red Flag
Vale Ken Lovett
Ninety-eight years old and Ken Lovett hadn’t stopped! Ever the activist, while facing terminal cancer, Ken made sure he posted his voting papers for Victorian Socialists’ candidate Omar Hassan in the 2020 local council elections. He died just a few days later, politically committed to the end.
Ken lived through economic depression, world war, McCarthyism and then the hope of the late 1960s and early 1970s, when revolutionary struggles swept the world. This life experience made him a passionate campaigner in the fight against oppression.
In the mid-1960s, when living and working in London, he joined the Albany Trust, an educational, counselling and research organisation that worked alongside the Homosexual Law Reform Society. Law reform was partially won in the UK in 1967, but the Albany Trust continued its valuable work.
When Ken returned to Sydney, he threw himself into the still very new LGBTI+ activism, joining the lively Homosexual Law Reform group there. In 1972, when Peter Bonsall-Boone was dismissed by the Church of England after he came out on ABC TV’s Chequerboard program, Ken joined the rally outside the church. It was to be the first of many protests in Sydney, Newcastle and Melbourne.
When the Sydney suburb of Woolloomooloo, where Ken lived, came under threat from corrupt and greedy developers, he co-founded the activist group Residents of Woolloomooloo. Backed by the New South Wales Builders Labourers Federation, he was part of the world-famous battle to save this important working-class suburb. He was also a keen environmentalist and anti-nuclear activist, joining protests as part of the LGBTI+ Enola Gay group, named after the US plane that bombed Hiroshima on 6 August 1945.
As the LGBTI+ activist movement grew, he was involved in groups such as the Gay Solidarity Group, later Lesbian and Gay Solidarity, which organised the first Mardi Gras in 1978. Hundreds, including Ken, were arrested in Sydney during 1978 in the demonstrations for gay rights and Ken was heavily involved in the successful Drop the Charges campaign arising from these protests. The charges were eventually dropped, but the campaign also won the right to protest without a permit in New South Wales, a victory not just for LGBTI+ people, but for everyone.
From 1978, Ken was involved in countless groups, protests and campaigns, including the Sydney-based Gay Radio Information News Service in the Gaywaves program on Radio 2SER and the Gay Community News Sydney Collective. His stand against right-wing homophobes led him to join the Coalition Against Repression which organised protests during the visit of British homophobe Mary Whitehouse.
In the 1980s, he and others campaigned against another visiting homophobe, this time the US Christian preacher Jerry Falwell. As his friend Ian McIntyre recalls, they cheekily registered the name Moral Majority—a name previously associated with Falwell and other right-wing homophobic, sexist groups. Under that name, they put out badges, T-shirts, banners, stickers and press releases, all proclaiming that the Moral Majority supported gay rights, abortion, women’s and trans’ rights and so on. Ken himself was a strong supporter of women’s rights.
He was anti-racist and an internationalist to the core. He had a long-term correspondence with Black, anti-Apartheid, gay activist Tseko Simon Nkoli after he was jailed in South Africa on treason charges. Nkoli became known around the world in the 1990s, when he went public about his sexuality and HIV status at a time when the stigma in South Africa was immense.
Ken was also involved with Inside Out, an Australian gay prisoner support group, and marched to protest Aboriginal Deaths in Custody. He was part of the big Gays Against the Bicentenary contingent that joined the tens of thousands in Sydney on 26 January 1988 to protest Invasion Day. Then there was the Gay and Lesbian Immigration Task Force NSW and Friends of the ABC that he was involved in, and he was equally committed to Palestinian, refugee, anti-war and other human rights causes.
In October 1982, Ken and the Gay Solidarity Group supported Roberta Perkins and the Australian Transsexual Association in staging the first transgender protest in Australia. The protest was held to challenge a ruling that two transwomen were men. In response, the NSW attorney-general gave an assurance that all states had committed to recognising sex changes.
One of Ken’s abiding causes was for people with HIV-AIDS, volunteering for and supporting two HIV-AIDS garden memorials in Sydney Park and the Melbourne suburb of Fairfield.
More recently, and while not himself wishing to marry, Ken was a strong supporter of the marriage equality campaign, attending every Melbourne protest he could. He wrote thousands of letters of protest, submissions to enquiries and often designed and produced his own banners with his own distinctive writing style and imaginative slogans.
Twenty-seven years ago, he met his dearly loved partner Mannie de Saxe, a committed socialist, anti-Zionist Jewish activist, a South African and fierce opponent of that country’s apartheid regime. Together, they campaigned for so many of these and other causes, for equal rights for all, including, more recently, many contributions to improve services for older lesbian, transgender and gay people.
We have all lost a committed fighter for our rights, but one who has enriched the struggle and helped give us the strength to keep on fighting.
From Iain MacIntyre 22 October 2020