The Social Action Committee
of the Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations, CSJO, consisting
of affiliate groups in the United States and Canada affirms
its support for legal recognition of same-sex marriages. We
call for an end to all forms of discrimination based on sexual
orientation or gender identity and for the repeal of the Defense
of Marriage Act.
We join other progressive movements
in Jewish life at the forefront of the three decade long struggle
to affirm gay and lesbian (and bisexual and transgendered)
identities and affirmatively seek to include gay and lesbian
Jews in our institutions and communities. This solidarity
is based on our own long historical experience as abused outsiders;
as conversos or hidden Jews, forced into a closet to preserve
our lives; as a people who saw gay men wearing the pink triangle
and suffering persecution in Nazi concentration camps. Our
history reinforces our moral imperative to offer our solidarity
to all minorities subjected to discrimination and violence.
As Secular and Cultural Jews, we are
particularly aware of the hypocrisy of religiously-based opposition
to same-sex marriages. Those who quote the book of Leviticus
to condemn homosexuality are playing a game of highly selective
religious observance, insofar as there are scores of other
prohibitions and punishments in Leviticus that they ignore.
We therefore urge religious activists in the Jewish community
and beyond, to find within their traditions the teachings
of tolerance and acceptance and counterpose these to the dehumanizing
preachings of the religious right.
Fear and hatred of homosexuals is,
thankfully, diminishing in American life as we expand our
notions of who is entitled to basic human rights. The American
psychiatric establishment removed homosexuality from its list
of mental disorders in 1973. The Supreme Court decriminalized
gay sex by rejecting as unconstitutional all state sodomy
laws in 2003.
And while it is part of the democratic
process to mobilize religious principles in support of, or
opposition to, government policies, the right of all people
to seek "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" – not
Leviticus 20:13 or any other biblical passage - is what we
hold sacred as America's creed. We are confident, therefore,
that we will see the right of gay and lesbian Americans to
marry their beloved ones established soon and in our own time,
just as we saw the right of interracial couples to marry established
in the last generation. We pledge ourselves to participate
in the struggles to bring about this fulfillment of the U.S.
Constitution.
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