Stand Together | Pocketmags.com

COPIED
3 mins

Stand Together

35 years down the line, the Ireland I came out in now seems like an alien planet. It was a fiercely hostile place for women: the Eighth Amendment had just been inserted into the Constitution, 15 year-old Ann Lovett had died alone at a grotto having given birth to her stillborn baby, we had to bear witness to the appalling treatment of Joanne Hayes, while Eileen Flynn lost her job as a teacher because she had a baby with a man to whom she wasn’t married.

I could go on, and on. For women, the rule was head down and knees together except within the sacred confines of marriage (no such thing as a registry office in those days). For even a married woman to speak about the pleasures of sex was inconceivable. If you dared put so much as a toe over the sexual and/or reproductive line, you were institutionalised, ostracised or on the boat to England in the blink of an eye.

The mere fact of being a woman guaranteed you inferior, second-class status. To fail to bow to convention and tradition was risky in the extreme, while feminists were seen as a disgrace and as danger incarnate.

To be an out lesbian in that bleak and brutal place was outlandishly beyond the beyonds of permitted womanhood: to be lesbian was to be scandalous, even monstrous to the point where the word never sullied the lips of Irish citizens. I was in my 20’s when I heard the word for the first time and eventually met real live lesbians. When I came out over a decade or so later it was only to other lesbians (who had already spotted me anyway), and the few gay men I knew. Nobody else wanted to know, and even if they did, they couldn’t utter the word.

Unlike gay men, lesbians were not criminalised, prosecuted, or imprisoned. No law was necessary because we were unthinkable and therefore both unspoken and unseen. For lesbians of my generation in Ireland and no doubt pretty well everywhere, there is a bitter memory of being treated like a pariah species. It would be hard to overestimate the price so many of us paid for living our lesbian lives. Some – many – lost jobs or never even got a job in the first place and had to emigrate; many lost the comfort of their family; some of us lost our children. Most of us lost, at least for a time, our ability to trust the world we lived in. None of us enjoyed the respect, justice and equality which is our due as human beings.

All of this was horrible, but not at all surprising. After all, lesbians are the real live kicking and shouting embodiment of the rejection of heteropatriarchy! We were, back then, and many of us still are, hell bent on the destruction of that dangerous, freedom-denying social organising system.

The human price of pain and hurt and damage paid by so many at that cruel time was immense as we now recognise to our eternal shame as a nation. We must hold on to that and never, ever let it happen again, to lesbians or to anyone else in our LGBTQ+ community. We must resist it with all our might when it is inflicted on others. I’m acutely aware of how urgent it is at the present time for us all to join together and stand up against the violent hatred targeted at queer people generally and at trans people in particular, along with the never-ending onslaughts of misogyny. We must stand up fiercely against vicious racism, misogyny and ableism and against the targeting of all marginalised groups, whether that’s the Traveller community, migrants and asylum seekers, disabled people or anyone else. We know how to do that in our amazing and extraordinary diversity as a community.

I’m sometimes asked if I’m proud to be lesbian, and the answer is no. Being lesbian isn’t an achievement for me, it’s who I am. I love it, and I love loving women. But I am very proud indeed of the bravery of lesbians over the decades in refusing to be cowed and browbeaten and of the immeasurable contribution we have made to the LGBTQ+ community, to feminism and the women’s movement, and to Ireland as a whole. Despite the stigma and silencing, we have been prime movers and leaders in propelling Ireland out of the darkness of a grim past to a place where we can see more clearly what a society needs to do to ensure freedom, equality and justice for all.

Ailbhe Smyth

This article appears in 378

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
378
Go to Page View
From the Team
Welcome, dear reader, to the Pride edition of GCN!
The Galas Awards
Happy Pride from all of us on the NXF board! We hope that everyone has a joyful and safe Pride month.
NFX at Dublin Pride 2023: A Year of Significance
The National LGBT Federation (NXF) is looking forward to once again participating in the Dublin LGBTQ+ Pride celebrations.
Inside SLM
Ireland’s first Sexual Liberation Movement started in the final months of 1973. As part of a new series, Ethan Moser interviews the people behind the SLM.
Aiteach agus Gaelach
AerachAiteachGaelach (AAG) is a queer arts collective which operates through Irish. Ciara Ní É explains the similarities between Pride in our language and in our identities.
Back to Our Roots
‘Pride is a Protest!’ isn’t just a sentence that’s printed on tote bags. As Swantje Mohrbeck describes, it’s a sentence to remind everyone that Pride is more than just the big happy party it sometimes appears to be.
Preserving Our Stories
With the exciting upcoming digital launch of GCN’s archive - sharing our LGBTQ+ history with the public for the first time - Stefano Pappalardo describes his own journey alongside that project.
The Revival of Outhouse LGBTQ+ Centre
“Following extensive consultations with our communities and stakeholders over six months in late 2022 and early ‘23, it is with great excitement I am sharing our new five-year plan for Outhouse LGBTQ+ Centre,” says Oisín O’Reilly (he/him), CEO of Outhouse.
A Liberating Party
As we mark the 40th anniversary of the Dublin Pride Parade and the 30th anniversary of decriminalisation, Tonie Walsh traces the evolution of Ireland’s largest and oldest LGBTQ+ Pride festival.
Better Out Than In
DublOUT is a stunning new photography exhibition by Dean O’Sullivan seeking to connect the LGBTQ+ community through our shared experiences. Dean kindly shared a taster of what to expect and explained why this was a project that needed to be made.
A Growing Legacy
In 2023, Belong To, the organisation supporting LGBTQ+ youth, leaves its teen years and turns 20. Iarf hlaith O’Connell celebrates the impact it has had on Irish society and shares their own experience with an iconic and beloved institution.
13 Years of Mother
The year was 2010, the last vestige of time in which, when the beat dropped in the club, there would be thousands of hands in the air simultaneously cutting through the laser lights instead of holding up little glowing bars to film it. It was the year Mother launched.
Uncharted
Back in the distant 2015, sub-prime lender AmigoLoans commissioned a study about the most important milestones people hope to achieve in life and at what age they expect to do so. Beatrice Fanucci noticed a marked difference between what are considered ‘big life moments’ for the queer community and our straight counterparts.
Pride Body
There is never a good year to be fat, but even by the usual standards of societal fatphobia, 2023 has really taken the proverbial cake right out of our chubby hands with a healthy dose of fat-shaming “for our own good,” shares James O’Hagan.
Ireland's Decade of Hate
With its warm and welcoming culture, Ireland has long been seen as a beacon of tolerance and acceptance. Recent years, however, have been marked by a troubling rise in violent, anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric. Charlie Hayward asks where it all went wrong.
No Place Like Home
Fun Home, an acclaimed musical adaptation of the iconic graphic novel by Alison Bechdel, debuts shortly at Dublin’s Gate Theatre. Letícia Barbosa gets the lowdown from the creative team behind a riveting true story of coming out and long-hidden family secrets. Photo by Ros Kavanagh.
Rainbow Connection
Coming on the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, The All Island LGBTQIA+ Forum was launched to improve north-south cooperation between Irish organisations. Keev Ní Bhaoill gets the lowdown from those involved on what is promising to be an inspiring team-up.
Success in Solidarity
Pride resonates with the echoes of our defiant history. It draws inspiration from the queer warriors that fought for our liberation. Their courage is a thread that weaves through the fabric of every Pride flag, reminding us that we too can ignite change.
More Than One Direction
On June 28, 2010, a 16 year-old boy from Mullingar walked onto the infamous X Factor stage in the hopes of landing his big break. When asked by Louis Walsh why he was auditioning, he said, “I’m here to be the best artist I can be”. Elliott Salmon shares how that is exactly what Niall Horan has done.
Steps to a Better Sex Life
We’re lucky to be part of a community where we are able to be more open about our sex and our sex lives than most of the population. Our sexual desires and preferences, after all, are largely what we have in common. Chris Rooke shares news of We-Consent - an important new campaign ensuring we have the best sex lives possible.
Queer Shelter
An adequate standard of living has become even more unattainable for many people across Ireland due to the ongoing housing crisis. Oisín Kenny explores the ways in which a growing lack of affordable housing harms the LGBTQ+ community by continuously restricting their access to vital support services, secure spaces, and each other.
Coverage of Decriminalisation
June 2023 marks the 30th anniversary of what is commonly referred to as ‘Decriminalisation’; essentially, the passing of the Sexual Offences Bill 1993. Han Tiernan looks back at the progression of the movement and how it was covered in the pages of GCN -Ireland’s national queer press.
Fighting Stigma One Test at a Time
Extraordinary community heroes are the backbone of MPOWER’s work. Brídín Ní Fhearraigh-Joyce speaks to the dedicated and understanding volunteers providing rapid HIV testing in LGBTQ+ spaces and hears why they do what they do.
Pride for All?
With the community about to come together for Pride celebrations across the country, Vic Kelly-Victor shares how accessibility to Pride shouldn’t be something special and what needs to be done to ensure inclusion for all.
Don't Ask - Don't Tell
While many may think that teachers in our country don’t face discrimination because of their identity, Primary Education Officer at Education Equality, Simon Lewis shares the reality of LGBTQ+ inclusivity in Irish primary schools.
Stand Together
35 years down the line, the Ireland I came out in now seems like an alien planet. It was a fiercely hostile place for women: the Eighth Amendment had just been inserted into the Constitution.
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article
378
CONTENTS
Page 122
PAGE VIEW