Showing posts with label youth suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label youth suicide. Show all posts

11 September 2012

'I DIDN'T KNOW ANY FOOTBALLERS WHO WERE GAY'

This article in the Sunday Age on 9 September 2012 has been followed up by a petition on Change.org which will be here first, followed by the newspaper article:

(1)Petition:

JASON BALL'S CHANGE.ORG PETITION



(2)newspaper article:

'I didn't know any footballers who were gay'

September 9, 2012


By Jill Stark


Out and proud: Yarra Valley footballer Jason Ball, third from left, wants the AFL to air anti-homophobia videos at the grand final this month. Photo: Ken Irwin

SOMETIMES he'd say he had a girlfriend. In the world of Aussie rules football, Jason Ball thought he had to play up his ''blokeyness''. When teammates sledged opposition players, calling them ''homo'' or ''fag'', he'd pretend not to care.

Inside the footy club where he'd played since he was five, nobody knew he was gay.
''It was the one place I never thought I'd be able to come out. Ever. It just felt like a really hostile environment. I worried I'd be bullied, maybe I'd get kicked out of the side, maybe the opposition would treat me differently or I'd get abuse [from supporters] over the fence,'' he told The Sunday Age. ''I didn't know any footballers who were gay, so I could only assume the worst, and it scared me.''

The 24-year-old, who plays for Yarra Glen seniors in the Yarra Valley Mountain District Football League, is a rare voice in a football world that gay groups say is struggling to come to terms with homosexuality in its ranks.
Illustration: Matt Golding.

While such groups agree sexuality is a private matter, they say it is significant that no AFL players have revealed their homosexuality.

For Ball, publicly coming out was unnecessary. His teammates figured it out and were supportive. The homophobic language stopped. ''It was like they could see those words have an effect on people because it was hurting me, one of their mates.''

Ball believes there are hundreds, maybe thousands of others like him playing in minor leagues, and professionally, who feel too isolated to reveal their sexuality. There are rumours that a TV network has offered a gay AFL player a six-figure sum to be the first footballer to come out.

Today, backed by online-petition movement Change.org, Ball will launch a campaign urging the league to air anti-homophobia videos at the MCG during this month's grand final. He also wants the AFL to stage a ''Pride'' round next season to celebrate sexual diversity.

Beyondblue chairman Jeff Kennett, who last week launched a campaign highlighting the mental health impact of homophobia, backed Ball's petition. He told The Sunday Age he spoke privately with AFL boss Andrew Demetriou last week, urging him to do more to tackle the problem in the game.

''Beyondblue has a relationship with the AFL anyway, and Andrew and I have been discussing some ideas that have not been done before for next year, which will be about sexuality discrimination,'' Mr Kennett said. ''This young man really deserves to be congratulated because there will be many of his fellow footballers who are in exactly the same position but have been worried about public pressure and therefore kept their sexuality to themselves.''

It comes after the AFL last month wrote a letter of support for ''No to Homophobia'' - a campaign run by gay rights and social justice groups - but were criticised for not doing more.

The fact St Kilda's Stephen Milne escaped with a $3000 fine and an education course rather than a suspension, after calling Collingwood defender Harry O'Brien a ''f---ing homo'', implied that sexual vilification was treated less seriously than other forms of discrimination, Ball said.

''At high school I got picked on for being gay and those words were used to make me feel small and worthless. If you look at rates of suicide, self-harm and depression for gay kids, this is a serious issue. I was fine coming out to my school friends and my family but I was terrified coming out to my football team. That makes it the AFL's problem because this culture is in their sport.''

Some have questioned whether the AFL should be responsible for taking a lead role on every major social issue.

But Ball argues that as long as our cultural life is viewed through the prism of football, the AFL has a greater role to play than most in ''changing hearts and minds''.

''It's no wonder that no gay player at a professional level would come out when the AFL is not working as it could to create a more positive and inclusive environment for that to happen. I think the players are ready. The clubs are ready. But we just need the AFL to lead on changing the culture so that players and fans like me can openly be who we are without fear.''

Dr Caroline Symons, a senior lecturer in social policy in sport at Victoria University, says a 2010 report she co-authored surveying the gay and lesbian community found football was the hardest sport for people to be open about their sexuality.

''If you weren't playing well the terms used to motivate men were, 'You're playing like a pack of poofs or faggots.' So the terminology associates being gay with being weak and that can be very alienating,'' she said.

A spokesman for the AFL said it supported diversity and respectful relationships and did not tolerate discrimination.

■The Australian Christian Lobby has rejected Jeff Kennett's offer to replace the Prime Minister at its national conference. On Thursday, Julia Gillard withdrew from the October conference, citing ''offensive'' comments by the lobby's leader, Jim Wallace, on homosexuality.



19 February 2011

WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS ITEM ON YOUTH SUICIDE?





Choose Life


By Michael Short

February 14, 2011

The Zone - Dr Jane Burns

Dr Jane Burns talks with Michael Short about teen suicide


Young people continue to take their own lives. Jane Burns says this terrible situation won't change unless we realise youth suicide is not a taboo subject and is talked about openly and often. She speaks to Michael Short.

The pain caused by the suicide of a young person is almost too terrible to imagine, certainly too terrible to be adequately described. Words so often elude us here. But we need to talk about youth suicide, not avoid it in the misguided belief that keeping it taboo somehow shelters people in difficulty from dangerous thoughts. Only through appropriate discussion can we cement the crucial concept that young people have many options - and suicide is not one of them.

(• Live chat with Dr Jane Burns here for an hour from noon today. Leave questions here
Dr Jane Burns is in The Zone to help all of us talk about it (the full transcript of our conversation is at: theage.com.au/opinion/the-zone). This mother of three young children can be seen as a crusader for young people, a researcher who broke with traditional academia to work with the young to give them tools and knowledge to confront and combat life's inevitable difficulties.)

''There are ways of talking about it that are better and there are ways of talking about it that are actually bad. And we want to make sure that we don't do the bad things. So, we don't want to glorify suicides. We don't want to provide young people with ideas about how they could take their own lives. And there are very clear media guidelines around that.

''But what's happened with the use of the guidelines is that somehow we've come to a thinking that we must not talk about suicide, and I think we need to differentiate those two things so that we do talk about the things that matter. And the things that matter are: promoting better mental health for young people; getting help earlier; making sure young people feel valued and connected, so that they don't feel suicide is an option for them.''

When a young person takes their own life, it is a desperate reaction to either a long-running issue or to a traumatic event. It is crucial to understand that in the overwhelming majority of cases, mental health problems are involved.

This is where Jane Burns can best help us. As many as one in four young people experience mental health issues such as depression, anxiety, eating disorders, problems with drugs and alcohol and the less common mental illnesses of bipolar disorder and psychosis.

While suicide rates have declined in the past decade, the rate of mental health disorders has not changed. It is a key reason why suicide is the leading cause of death for young people aged 15-24. In an average year 12 classroom, one person has attempted suicide.

''What we'd like to see is a continuing decline in youth suicide rates. We would also like to see a decline in things like youth violence, drug use and alcohol use. They're big, big, big things to shift. So, the things that we believe we can shift in the short-term are things like help-seeking . . .

''At the moment, 11 per cent of young men seek help. It's pretty dismal. We'd like to see that increase. About 30 per cent of young women seek help, so it's still pretty low.''

Burns is a driving force behind an initiative that aims to reduce suicides among young people. She has successfully applied to the federal Department of Innovation for $27 million to set up an organisation that will bring together academics, mental health professionals, young people, technology companies and not-for-profit organisations.

Called the CRC [Co-operative Research Centre] for Young People, Technology and Wellbeing, it will involve more than 50 organisations. Burns will be chief executive: she has had much experience in the field, including helping establish beyondblue and as director of research and policy at the Inspire Foundation, which helps young people lead happier lives.

The promotion of happiness and wellbeing is fundamental to helping young people develop resilience. Burns is keen to shift the focus away from the difficulties young people undergo.

''You see success stories in the young people we work with - hundreds of young people. The stories are up on the [mental health] reachout site. There are stories of young people who've gone though really difficult, traumatic experiences, and come out at end of it saying 'you know, I'm actually doing really well'.

''It doesn't mean they're going to be happy-clappy all the time, because that's not what life is about and we all know that. But it means that when they do go through a really difficult, challenging time, they know where to pull on the resources that they need, whether it's a resource that's online or whether it's talking to a friend, or going to a parent, or going to a professional or going to a teacher. It doesn't matter. It's about saying you deserve to get the best type of care you need and you deserve to be supported in your happiness.''

Burns and her team are going to capitalise on technology to get the information and tools to the people who need them: young people, parents, carers and health professionals. ''Technology affords you the opportunity to reach thousands of young people at any one time without a young person having to come in and sit down and go through that face-to-face one-on-one.''

Burns is empowering young people not only to seek help for themselves when necessary, but to be able to help their friends.

A common conundrum is whether to break a confidence.

''One of the big issues that constantly comes up is 'I'm breaking a confidence; I promised I wouldn't tell anyone what was going on, I'm going to break the confidence and I don't know how to deal with that'. So we've got information about what's more important - breaking the confidentiality or keeping someone safe.

''What would you rather see; your mate happy, healthy, doing well or you feeling that you kept that confidence?''

Burns's advice to us all is to talk, to investigate and to seek help when needed. Taking the first step on that path to help - and to happiness and peace - has become pretty easy. Just explore some of the links below, and you're on your way.

''Young people know when someone is doing it tough. They actually know the symptoms of depression. They know when a mate's drinking is out of control. They're not silly. What they're really telling us they're struggling with is how to make the step from knowing what's going on for a young person who's struggling and then knowing how to take that step to almost sort of lead them to help, to get help and to get help at the right time.''

The lead organisation in Burns's CRC, the Inspire Foundation, has written a declaration that gives us a fine way to start a conversation with our kids.
Our dream/ is for a world where every young/ person can stand up and say:/ I am a young person./ I am loved and I love./ There lies before me a land of endless/ Opportunity where I can learn and grow./ There lies within me a limitless ocean of/ Compassion and kindness./ I respect all people, including myself,/ For who we are.
I celebrate our common humanity and/ I honour our individual differences./ I show up for life each morning ready for whatever comes my way./ I give my best and know it will make all the difference./ I am making my world a better place./ I am happy.

Support is available for anyone who may be distressed by calling Lifeline 131 114, Mensline 1300 789 978, Kids Helpline 1800 551 800
http://au.reachout.com
http://inspire.org.au
http://beyondblue.org.au
http://headspace.org.au
http://kidshelp.com.au
http://lifeline.org.au



14 February 2011

HOMOPHOBIA STRIKES AGAIN - ASSISTED BY THE NSW STATE GOVERNMENT!




Faiths rule on sex from staffroom to bedroom


February 14, 2011 - 9:46AM
• Vote

Holding the line ... Anglican Bishop Robert Forsyth outside St Andrew's Cathedral. Photo: Marco Del Grande

Australia's religious organisations fight for the right to discriminate, writes David Marr.

ADULTERERS? "Yes." Divorcees? "Normally, no." At his desk overlooking St Andrew's Cathedral, an uneasy Bishop Robert Forsyth is listing the sinners officially barred from working for the Anglican Church. A postcard of Christ keeps watch on this uncomfortable scene. The unmarried and unchaste? "Yes." Gay men or lesbians in relationships? "Yes."

The churches of Australia guard with absolute determination the right to hire and fire according to the ancient sex rules of their faiths. Orthodox Jews and Muslims claim and exercise the same right, too. But across the faiths and denominations, religious leaders are far happier talking the talk of religious liberty than detailing the human cost.

Are de factos on the list? "Yes." Single mothers? The bishop pauses. "General carte blanche, no. You need to know why." The key is repentance: an unmarried mother is employable if she repents of the "behaviour" that occasioned conception. Indeed, everyone on this list of shame can save themselves – and their jobs – by being seen to wrestle with their sins.

Forsyth, who speaks on this issue for the Anglican Church in Australia, says it isn't a matter of proving harm or showing someone can't do the job. The damage to church organisations is inevitable: "In the long run, someone behaving in a way that is consistently immoral working for an organisation is going to depower and chill the fervour and the life of the organisation."

Who the faiths employ in their pulpits is their own affair. If they want to tear themselves apart over the ordination of women or homosexuals, they are answerable only to themselves. But ever since anti-discrimination laws first appeared 30 or 40 years ago, the faiths have fought for exemptions to allow them to employ only the sexually virtuous in their welfare agencies, hospitals and schools.
Services are denied. Promotions are blocked. Individuals are picked off. Applications are rebuffed. Jobs are lost.

It is not a boutique issue. The faiths are big employers. Indeed, the Catholic Church is one of the biggest private employers in Australia and claims the right to vet the sexual morals even of the gardeners in hospital grounds. It says: "Catholic agencies must be free in employing staff and accepting volunteers to prefer practising and faithful Catholics even in support roles, and not just in roles directly concerned with pastoral work or the teaching of religion."

The issue spooks – and bores – politicians. Grappling with religious leaders complaining about threats to religious freedom is about the most distasteful contest a government can imagine. At something like a dozen inquiries over the past five or six years, the exemptions have been challenged by human rights advocates, peak law bodies, gay and lesbian advocates and a handful of determined politicians. These tussles are barely reported and almost never successful.

The British government was forced to retreat last year when the Pope attacked British plans to allow exemptions only for the hiring of "vicars, bishops, imams and rabbis". Benedict XVI denounced this as interfering with the "freedom of religious communities to act in accordance with their beliefs" and the reform died in the House of Lords, voted down in a revolt led by the Anglican bishops.

Even so, the exemptions are far tighter in Britain than they are here. Religious bodies can't discriminate when delivering services for any public authority. When the churches are doing the work of the state, they have to obey secular rules of fairness. That's not so in Australia. Though public money is their lifeblood, church schools and hospitals in this country remain free to pick and choose staff according to the rules of religion.

The former Victorian government fought to tighten the exemptions so religious rules would apply only when sexual virtue is an "inherent requirement" of a position in a religious agency. Though then Attorney-General Rob Hulls reported Anglican and Catholic bishops were content with the final form of the changes, they are to be reversed by the Baillieu government even before coming into effect.

"A Liberal-Nationals Coalition government will restore the rights of freedom of religion and freedom of association in relation to faith-based schools and other organisations by removing the inherent requirements test which Labor has imposed," the new Attorney-General of Victoria, Robert Clark, told the Herald.

The exemptions issue is back on the boil because the Gillard government has promised to extend federal anti-discrimination laws to cover sexual orientation and gender identity. It's a late move. Most states and territories did so many years – even decades – ago. Tony Abbott and the Coalition back the plan in principle. A Galaxy poll indicates public support is running at roughly 85 per cent. But religious bodies are demanding exemptions to allow them to ignore the reforms.

At the heart of this story is a political mystery: where are the votes in giving the religious privileges so distasteful they are rarely used? The laws of every state and territory – with the notable exception of Tasmania – allow for adulterers, homosexuals and like sinners to be stripped from religious payrolls. Yet there are never any pogroms. Careers are ruined quietly. Both church and state appear to recognise there are profound political hazards here.

Yet national politics is shaped by the subterranean battles to protect the exemptions. The death of Frank Brennan's proposal for a national charter of rights can best be explained by the role of the churches. Among the many enemies of the charter, they were the best-organised and made no secret of being driven by the fear that a charter might undermine the exemptions.

"There is no doubt about that," Brigadier Jim Wallace of the Australian Christian Lobby told the Herald. "This is an extremely important issue."
Cardinal George Pell set out to destroy the charter for just that reason. "There is no doubt that if Australia gets a charter of rights, upfront or by stealth, it will be used against religious schools, hospitals and charities by other people who don't like religious freedom and think it shouldn't be a human right," he thundered.
"The target will be the protection in anti-discrimination laws that allow religious schools to exercise a preference in employment for people who share their faith."

The Anglicans lined up with Rome. "We don't spend our nights tossing and turning wanting more laws," Forsyth tells the Herald. "It's when we see the state moving and we think if we don't watch out we will seriously lose a freedom to operate in a way we think we need to operate, and that's what we're concerned about – concerned about the human rights and anti-discrimination lobby intruding too deeply into our organisations. That's why we react."

But even in the ranks of the religious, there is deep disquiet about these privileges to discriminate. The Anglican bishop of Gippsland, John McIntyre, says they are "at odds with the essence of what the founder of the Christian faith lived, taught and died for. How bizarre that the followers of Jesus Christ would oppose, and ask for exemptions from, a legal instrument that has at its heart a declaration of the dignity and value of every human life and the basic rights of every person".
The Reverend Harry Herbert of the Uniting Church blames this on the old obsessions of Christianity. "The church is stuffed up about sex," he told the Herald. "It all arises from that. The church has this thing that you can only have sex to have babies. It all goes back to that."

A LAWYER and a social worker, O. V. and O. W., offered to foster a child through a service run by Sydney's Wesley Mission in 2002. The men were told: "As part of Wesley Mission, our policies must align with the ethos and values of that church, which does not support same-sex relationships." They lodged a complaint with the NSW Anti-Discrimination Board which the mission spent seven years and at least half a million dollars fighting.

Court cases that test the power of the churches to discriminate against sinners have been rare in the past so many churches watched intently as the case against Wesley Mission made its slow way through the courts.

The NSW Anti-Discrimination Act forbids discrimination on many grounds including sex, marital status and homosexuality but exempts "any act or practice" that conforms to the doctrines of a religion. O. V. and O. W. argued that fostering children was not a religious or pastoral function of the mission and denying a child to them was not dictated by the teachings of the wider Uniting Church.

A win for O. V. and O. W. in April 2008 provoked the NSW Attorney General, John Hatzistergos, to intervene on the side of the Mission. This was necessary, a spokesman for the Attorney-General told the Herald, because the case "raised particularly difficult and complex issues of statutory interpretation".
(see last paragraph in bold!)

The key issue Hatzistergos backed was this: that the NSW law exempts all the efforts – not just the pastoral work – of religious bodies.

Cardinal Pell was one of several churchmen who expressed relief when the case began to go the Mission's way. But it took another two hearings before the government-backed victory over O. V. and O. W. was clinched in the Administrative Decisions Tribunal just before last Christmas.

The upshot is that religious bodies in NSW now have an open slather to discriminate in all their operations against anyone who breaks the sex rules of the faiths.
So unhappy was the tribunal to reach this decision that the panel of three called the criteria for religious exemptions so "singularly undemanding" that they called for the "attention of parliament".

But the politicians disagreed. Hatzistergos announced: "It is not envisaged that there will be changes to the current exemptions in relation to religious institutions." And the Leader of the Opposition, Barry O'Farrell, backed him.
More victims are pushing back in the courts. That win for the churches in NSW came only weeks after a big loss in Victoria when a sect called the Christian Brethren was fined for refusing to allow WayOut, a suicide prevention group for gay kids, to rent cabins at the sect's Phillip Island Adventure Resort one weekend in 2007.

Though happy to host the Collingwood Football Club at this commercial operation, the sect justified knocking back the kids and their counsellors because their camping ground was "a place where God is honoured, where there is an atmosphere of peace, and where there is an opportunity of experiencing the truth of God's love".

Judge Felicity Hampel in the Civil and Administrative Tribunal made mincemeat of the sect's claims. She declared the resort a secular business usually untroubled by the sex lives of its customers. She didn't doubt the Brethren faithful deeply disapproved of homosexuality, but she found rebuffing gay kids was compelled neither by doctrinal necessity nor the need to protect the religious sensitivities of sect members.

The sect is appealing. But win or lose, the WayOut case displays exactly why the churches fear charters of rights. In NSW there is no such instrument, so "religious freedom" trumps "freedom from discrimination" every time. But the Human Rights Charter in Victoria compels the courts to interpret every law as far as possible to favour human rights – not the rights of religious institutions, but of ordinary and fallible human beings.

MASTURBATORS? Stephen O'Doherty takes the question seriously. While he has no doubt teachers in the low-fee schools he represents would denounce the vice, he wonders if masturbation at home would be a sacking offence from school. He lists adultery, living in sin, homosexual intercourse and being transsexual as sure career-stoppers. But masturbation? "I don't think I've ever heard a teaching on that issue."

O'Doherty has clout. Once a journalist and later a Liberal parliamentarian in NSW, he has been the face of Christian Schools Australia for nearly a decade. Protecting the exemptions is a big part of his job and he counts on the fingers of both hands the public inquiries where, over the years, he has had to grapple with the issue. "At any one time we have generally got two or three of these on the go."

He talks of the 130 or so schools he represents as communities of faith where all – down to the gardeners in the grounds – must show they not only believe but live by their beliefs. "Anybody who is employed in one of our schools but whose lifestyle didn't reflect any one of a number of teachings – let's say they became profligate gamblers – we would say absolutely we reserve the right to disengage them on the basis that they are not living by the values of the church, because they are there as exemplars to the kids."

Concerned with Canberra's latest plans, O'Doherty made a submission last October to the Australian Human Rights Commission consultation on the proposed extension of Federal anti-discrimination laws. "Current exemptions should be maintained," he wrote, "in order to ensure that faith communities can continue to exercise their rights to freedom of religion, consistent with both Australian and international law."

Dozens of submissions from religious bodies put the same argument to the commission. They are a familiar mix of high praise for human rights in general, broad demands for religious liberty and a remarkable coyness about who might suffer in the workplace if the faiths have their way.

None are as coy as the Catholics. Efforts by the Herald over nearly a month to clarify who might suffer under Rome's rules of employment proved fruitless. A list by Melbourne's Archbishop, Denis Hart, to an earlier inquiry had "seven attributes" demanding exemptions: "Religious belief or activity, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, lawful sexual activity, marital status or parental status or status as a carer."

Neither the Sydney nor Melbourne archdiocese would clarify Hart's list, but it looks like the lot. Francis Moore, the business manager of the Melbourne archdiocese, says hiring and firing turns on public conflict with Church teachings: "The failure in behaviour has to be relevant, at odds with these teachings, the role of the Church body and the role the employee performs in the Church body. It is against these criteria and not a simplistic categorisation of individual personal circumstances that Church bodies determine their employment practices."

By contrast, Rabbi Dr Shimon Cowen of the Institute for Judaism and Civilisation offered the Australian Human Rights Commission a full-throttle denunciation of homosexuality. "Judaism's position on the practice of homosexuality is unchanged over more than three millennia," he wrote. "Homosexual practice remains a moral wrong alongside adultery, incest and bestiality. The same God prohibited them all at Mount Sinai."

Dr Cowen concedes Jews are divided on this issue. "I speak on behalf of Orthodox Judaism and Orthodox Judaism accounts for the overwhelming majority of congregations in Australia." And no Orthodox school or hospital, he says, will employ homosexuals, the openly promiscuous, the flagrant adulterer and Jews in de facto relationships - though "for non-Jewish teachers it would not constitute a major problem".

Transsexuals need not apply. They don't worry Anglicans, it seems, but repugnance to transgender is a powerful, ecumenical bond across most denominations and faiths. Jews, Evangelical Christians and Muslims are at one insisting we must all stick with the sex we were born with. Ikebal Patel, the president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, lists transsexuals as the least likely to find work with Islamic organisations.

Muslims want exemptions but don't lobby for them. "It is not a priority," Patel says. Islamic schools in Australia employ about 5000 people. They will include homosexuals, de factos, sexually active singles and adulterers who keep their moral views to themselves.

"Marriage between a man and a woman is a very strong requirement of Islam," Patel says. "So if there is someone in the school who is trying to espouse otherwise, then we would like to have the right to terminate their services."

For Brigadier Jim Wallace and the Australian Christian Lobby, gender confusion is only one of a number of nightmares. No politicians' doors are shut to him and his lobby. Political leaders queue to speak at his evangelical shindigs. Wallace believes church agencies have a right to sack any sinner for any sin without being answerable to any secular tribunal. On the sex front, he sees no place on Christian payrolls for the unchaste and unrepentant - heterosexual or homosexual.

"My view - and the view of most Christians - is that we are all sinners. I would very much doubt that somebody is going to be fired on the basis that they were found to be an adulterer if they repent of that and correct themselves. If it's an unrepentant adulterer, why would he expect not to be fired?"

None of the Christians the Herald consulted could find a Biblical text that directs them to shed sinners from their payrolls. Bishop Forsyth and Stephen O'Doherty came up with some rather opaque teachings about gentiles, tax collectors and the dangers of yoking believers with unbelievers. Wallace simply laughs at the idea. "Clearly the texts of the Bible do not cover employment. But there are loads of texts that say homosexuality is a sin."

He is a candid man. The demands by the faithful to be allowed to hire only the virtuous began when homosexuality was decriminalised here and in Britain from the 1960s onwards. The exemptions were a sop to churches that demanded, all the way to the end, that governments go on punishing homosexuals. Adulterers and de factos hardly matter. The exemptions were designed to allow religious bodies to continue to punish homosexuals in their own way by refusing them work.

Wallace disagrees categorically. "The homosexual community is now determined to punish the church. I cannot understand for one moment how a community that has demanded tolerance, demanded the acceptance of diversity, is now attacking the right of the church to be diverse and different in a multicultural environment. Right?"

Bishop Robert Forsyth barely blinks when I report that lesbians in large numbers are working for Anglicare. Forsyth, who was on the board of his church's mighty welfare arm for many years, insists this is news from the blue: ''It was never discussed. Ever.''

Sinners are everywhere on church payrolls just as they are on the books of BHP and Westpac. ''There are heaps of poofs and dykes in the community sector,'' says Sally McManus, the NSW secretary of the Australian Services Union. ''Anglicare has lots of lesbians. It's a bit like 'don't ask, don't tell'. Everyone knows and it's just so much part of the culture that it's not something anyone would even question or talk about.''


O.V. AND O.W. are now parents. Within days of losing their case against Wesley Mission, they became the first gay couple in NSW to be allowed to adopt children: a boy of nine and a girl of five they had been fostering for some years through Barnardos. Judge George Palmer remarked that his court was not concerned with ideological debates surrounding gay adoption. He declared the men: "Unquestionably capable of parenting these two children."


16 April 2010

JEWISH COMMUNITY COUNCIL OF VICTORIA AND BEYONDBLUE - WHAT DO THEY HAVE IN COMMON?

Two organisations in Victoria, the Jewish Community Council of Victoria (JCCV)(sic) and Beyondblue, Jeff Kennett's "organisation" have one major theme in common - they are both homophobic. They are both responsible, either directly or indirectly, for gay, lesbian, transgender and HIV/AIDS members of our communities who suffer from depression or have suicidal ideation, being able to get any assistance from these organisations trumpeting loudly - and with financial assistance from many sources - that they are there to help those -young and old - with depression and suicidal thoughts.

Beyondblue has been in the news a great deal over the last few months, but the club known as the JCCV is mostly in the media such as the Israeli zionist times aka the Australia Jewish News, and only makes it into the mainstream when people like John Brumby, premier of the state of Victoria present themselves to some Jews in an election year to ensure that he and his government get as many votes from Jews in the communities as he possibly can.

Here is Brumby at such an event:

Brumby pays tribute to Jewish contribution
Posted on 22 March 2010 in the "Australian Jewish News"

by PETER KOHN

PREMIER John Brumby paid tribute to Victoria’s Jewish community for its role in fostering diversity and multiculturalism in the state at a United Israel Appeal (UIA) fundraising dinner on Tuesday evening (March 16).

“Victoria’s Jewish community, the largest and most vibrant Jewish community in Australia, has itself played an immense role in making our state so diverse, so multicultural, so multi-faith and so tolerant,” the Premier said.

Brumby added that his government’s efforts “to stamp out religious and racial vilification have received immeasurable support from Jewish communities here in Victoria”.

He recalled the Jewish community’s support when, as Opposition leader in the mid-1990s, he worked closely with the Jewish Community Council of Victoria to develop a framework for racial vilification legislation that was brought into law by the ALP government in 2001-02.

“As you know, there were quite significant differences in many of the multicultural communities about the value of that legislation. So it was really the leadership of the Jewish community working with us and making that commitment that saw that legislation put into place in 2001.

“And in particular, in that regard, I would want to acknowledge the work of the Zionist Council of Victoria and the Jewish Community Council of Victoria because you’ve all worked so hard to promote mutual understanding and tolerance and to support the democratic fundamentals of dialogue and inclusion.”

Urging the Jewish community to support the UIA, Brumby noted that the organisation “is concerned not only with material assistance, but also with the preservation and protection of the neshamah, the concept of the Jewish soul”.
He commended UIA’s initiatives in taking Jews and non-Jews, many from Victoria, to Israel on cultural exchange programs, “to share the values of the Australian Diaspora community” and to bring home new ideas to Australia.

He gave as an example the groundbreaking Victoria-Israel Science and Technology Research and Development Fund (VISTECH) - launched by Brumby as minister for innovation in 2005 - which has received 175 expressions of interest and is now into its seventh round of grants.

Special guest Kathy Kellerman, an American who made aliyah, also spoke at the function about the Keren Hayesod-UIA Nitzana Youth Village initiative in the Negev, where she lives and works.

She predicted that Israel’s south, comprising more than 60 per cent of the country’s land mass, would become a major population centre in the future, as sustainable water and power technologies, now under development in Nitzana, became widespread.

UIA Victoria paid tribute to veteran fundraiser George Kuran, 90, who told the gathering his passion for digging deep to help Israel was sparked by a solidarity drive at South Caulfield Hebrew Congregation during the Six-Day War, and has grown ever since. In his honour, the UIA funded a 12-month scholarship for a young Victorian to take part in the programs at Nitzana.



(This comment is awaiting moderation: AJN)

March 25, 2010 at 2:14 pm

John Brumby paints a delightfully rosy picture of Victoria’s Jewish community. One would expect no less of a key guest speaker at a community fund-raising dinner. One could even be forgiven for thinking that if he said nice things, people might vote for him and his party.

Apparently as a community we “foster diversity” and are “so tolerant”. Nice words, but honestly, he can’t be serious. Much of the Victorian Jewish community struggles with diversity and tolerance big time on a number of issues, but mostly when it comes to the taboo topic of homosexuality.

Our community should hang it’s collective head in shame when it comes to it’s handling of this issue. Rates of suicide amongst same-sex attracted youth are at startlingly high levels in religious communities around the country, as revealed by Suicide Prevention Australia in 2009. This is being ignored by every leader of the community, but most especially by the JCCV, the organization that claims to speak on our behalf. Not a single person is talking about it.

Both homosexuality and suicide are taboo in many sections of our community. These need to be confronted head on and dealt with immediately. It’s your children and grandchildren whose lives are at stake. We can’t afford to lose them, especially to religious bigotry.

It’s time the community spoke out and started asking questions. Why are our leaders not talking about homosexuality and youth suicide? I’ve given them the statistics, but they chose to ignore them. Our leaders are playing games while the community’s youth are suffering.

Michael Barnett.
Ashwood, Victoria.

26 August 2009

GAY, LESBIAN, TRANSGENDER SUICIDES

GAY, LESBIAN, TRANSGENDER SUICIDES
26 August 2009
The media have been very busy over the last few weeks discussing whether the television programme, which was to go to air about the suicides of 4 young people from the same Geelong school, should be released at all.

A great deal of the fuss was being made by Jeff Kennett who started an organization called “beyondblue’ to deal with depression in the community.

The trouble with all of the fuss is that nowhere is there any mention of gay, lesbian, transgender and HIV/AIDS members of the community who are more at risk of suicide in the community than their heterosexual counterparts, and that is in part because of the homophobia of Jeff Kennett and much of the media in general.

Some of the arguments about publicizing the events in Geelong run along the lines of ‘if you give these suicides publicity it may, in all likelihood, lead to copycat suicides or ideations thereof.’

It seems, on the face of evidence available at the moment, that publicity would not only be a good idea, it may bring to the public attention the fact that there are very real problems among many young people in the community and these problems need to be addressed and addressed very urgently.

It is time the attitude changed of keeping so many taboo topics ‘in the closet’! Child sexual abuse is these days given a great deal of publicity – why would it not with so many religious men and male family members and their male friends guilty of child sex abuse, usually statistically of female children?

Other topics which are still taboo in the media are issues such as euthanasia, atheism, religious right-wing homophobia and intolerance and discrimination, elder abuse by governments and nursing homes and other government and non-government agencies, and other topics which haven’t been mentioned at the moment.

Suicide is a very real problem, youth suicide is an ongoing tragedy, and the refusal of all organizations such as beyondblue and the media to include gay, lesbian and transgender young persons’ suicide is part of the ongoing tragedy in the community of the endless homophobia we face on a daily basis.

Publicity is needed and organizations should be formed to address the issues which lead young people to feel so desperate that they kill themselves. It is not surprising, up to a point, when young people see how those who govern the country and those responsible for education, training and employment are so self-serving that they fail to see the tragedy at their doorsteps.

Unfortunately the present political and economic set-ups under which we live our daily lives do not provide a great deal of inspiration to young people, and if these young people do make cries for help to people in the community, these are often not heard or are ignored – ‘they will grow out of it and grow up eventually!’

People like Jeff Kennett should be told that their ignorance of the situation is such that they should shut up and get out of the business of interfering in matters about which they know nothing, or very little. And the media should publish and be damned!

RED JOS - ACTIVIST KICKS BACKS



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90 years old, political gay activist, hosting two web sites, one personal: http://www.red-jos.net one shared with my partner, 94-year-old Ken Lovett: http://www.josken.net and also this blog. The blog now has an alphabetical index: http://www.red-jos.net/alpha3.htm

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