How Masha Gessen Failed Russian Gays at Sochi
And now, ladies and gentlemen, I present you with the call to action before Sochi from domestic and emigre LGBT Russian leaders: "______________________________________."
As a global queer activist engaged on Russian issues since the early 1990s when the USSR still existed, who organized a speaking engagement with visiting gay leader Roman Kalinan at Washington's now-defunct Lambda Rising book store while the Iron Curtain draped across Eastern Europe, I'm quite displeased with Masha Gessen today. I knew her back in the day when we were both involved with ACT UP and worked with her on Roman's appearance in DC.
(A reminder that Gays Without Borders holds a solidarity rally on Monday, March 3 at 7 pm outside Davies Hall, as Putin's pal Yuri Temirkanov conducts the St. Petersburg Philharmonic. Info at this
Facebook page.)
Masha has penned an offensive piece at Slate titled
How the International LGBTQ Rights Movement Failed Russian Gays in Sochi, and not once does she state what the hell she and other Russians asked global activists to do. If they issued a call to action, I missed it. The headline is very misleading since Masha is solely focused on American groups.
She writes that she and prominent Russians including members of Pussy Riot called for a boycott of the Olympics, which didn't materialize. Masha cites plans of the Human Rights Campaign, Athlete Alley, AllOut and Human Rights Watch and celebrities to call attention to the plight of Russian gays:
It all failed. Sure, American Apparel sold the T-shirts, hats, and bags,
and [Melissa] Etheridge sold the song, and money was raised, and representatives
of Athlete Ally and Human Rights First went to Sochi. But nothing
happened there. The movable Pride House idea was nixed by both the
Russians and the IOC. None of the competing athletes agreed to wear
Principle 6 clothing. Olympic sponsors politely took meetings with
human-rights advocates and proceeded to do nothing.
Did Masha have a plan for success on any front regarding the Olympics? Not that I've seen, but she did jet over to Davos, Switzerland, with the
financial assistance and maybe even a private airplane ride from sleazy and corrupt venture capitalists Paul Singer and Dan Loeb. She spoke on a
panel that garnered a fair amount of media and online attention, but I don't recall a list of do-able actions for either her super-wealthy friends or ordinary Western gays to carry out. She goes on to say:
Indeed, international media attention to the Kremlin's homophobic
campaign seems to have had a major chilling effect on Olympic athletes
and spectators, who traveled to Sochi with a set of largely unfounded
fears, which kept them from doing anything at all.
There were countless stories in myriad languages about Putin's hateful anti-gay policies and the violence gay Russians face and at least one transgender Italian activist, Vladimir Luxuria, acted up and caused a two-day headache for Olympic and Russian authorities. Granted, not much but what exactly did Masha want others to do in Sochi, while she was comfortably sitting in front of her computer in New York City?
Masha rightly praises courageous handfuls of LGBT Russians who took to the streets of Moscow and St. Petersburg as the games began and mentions the hassles they now face:
Now many of those
who were detained will face fines of between $285 and $570 and, quite
possibly, further legal and extralegal persecution.
These brave Russian activists came out to protest because they thought
that the eyes of the world were fixed on them that day and that their
American activist allies in Sochi would support them by word and deed,
staging their own protests and ensuring that the thousands of
international correspondents in Sochi would hear of their protest and
the treatment they faced. They were wrong.
Sounds to me like the Russian activists did not organize themselves very well, surely they expected to be detained and fined for their street protests, and apparently they didn't secure the commitment of the unnamed American allies in Sochi. Sorry, but these are not reasons to say the global gay movement failed the Russians. Does Masha propose any course of action for Westerners? She says:
First and foremost, working with LGBTQ activists in Russia has to
involve ensuring that their names and their individual arrests and court
hearings are well-publicized in the Western media. It also means
ensuring that their fines are paid: The point of those extremely high
fines is to open the way for further prosecution for nonpayment.
How about Masha telling us their names and what's happening with legal proceedings of the Russians in this Slate essay? Nope, she does not follow her own advice and a week into the Olympics she used her access to the New York Times' opinion page, where she's a contributing writer, to publicize troubles with her Citibank gold card in a
piece titled Banking While Russian. Not one word was said about those arrests and brave detained activists.
Regarding those relatively paltry fines the activists must pay, in the context of at least $100,000 grant from venture capitalists Singer and Loeb, $150,000 from Stoli, more grants from the Arcus Foundation and American Apparel, cash from the UK and European government and NGOs, in addition to robust funds from the U.S. State Department's Global Equality Fund, there's plenty of funding to take care of the fines.
Not through with trashing the nonprofit advocacy groups, groups I might add that she has not criticized up to now and with whom she has closely aligned herself particularly the Human Rights Campaign, at least for her participation in Davos, Masha says:
Meanwhile, as the founder of an online community for LGBTQ youth faced a
court hearing on charges of “homosexual propaganda” on Feb. 20,
American groups strategized about their social-network presence during
the closing ceremony.
Name the groups and take them to task. Lumping them together contributes nothing to accountability and better performances in the future from HRC, AllOut, HRW, Athlete Ally, and the rest. Adding further insult, Masha ends with this:
The Sochi Games were the U.S. gay rights movement's first real attempt
to venture into international work. It was an embarrassment. If U.S.
groups continue to do nothing but stage fundraisers and strategy
sessions, it will be a disgrace.
Excuse me, Masha, but there have been decades of global activism by U.S. gays on Russia and other countries where LGBT people are persecuted, hated, stigmatized, bashed and also killed for their sexual orientation and gender identity. You've been in bed with those U.S. groups and involved with the strategies, and you paint with a very broad brush your opinion that _we_ failed the Russians.
Since the summer, unpaid activists with groups like Queer Nation NY and Gays Without Borders and other grassroots collectives around the world who don't receive funding from sleazy venture fund capitalists or clothing and alcohol companies or nonprofit foundations or government ministries, have poured time and money into lots of street actions, boycotts of Russian vodka and targeted a few cultural institutions and done all we could with nothing more than our own blood, sweat and cheers to keep the plight of Russian gays in the news.
What did she want us to do, parachute into the opening ceremony with rainbow flags and toss glitter in Putin's face while singing "Over the Rainbow'?
For Masha to be so shortsighted and arrogant in her essay is wrong, especially because she presented no plan of action prior to Sochi and got into bed with Gay Inc and venture capitalists. I say to her, look in the mirror and you'll see who failed the Russian gays.