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Standing with Women on Mother’s Day

April 27th, 2008

As we prepare to celebrate the mothers in our lives on Mother’s Day, a group called Standing Women is encouraging women–and men– to also recognize the most important mother of all: Mother Earth. On Sunday, May 11 at 1 p.m., thousands of people around the globe will stand together in silence for five minutes in local parks, schools, churches and other gathering places to promote a better world for future generations. The result will be a 24-hour global wave of humanity standing to motivate and invigorate others to realize the dream of a better world for all.

In May of 2007, thousands of women stood together in 75 countries and on all the continents of the globe to show their support for the world of which they dream. Inspired by a story written by Sharon Mehdi of Ashland, Oregon, The Great Silent Grandmother Gathering, collectively they decided that it was time to take a stand to make a difference. By standing for a moment of silence, participants will recognize the importance for all of the children of the world of issues such as safe drinking water, clean air, food for all to eat, access to basic education, adequate health care and safety from violence.

Standing sites in all 50 U.S. states and around the globe are listed on the Standing Women Website and range from large-scale groups of a thousand or more to individual standings. Participants have the option of attending one of the gatherings listed or starting their own. There are promotional materials and a video about the effort on the Standing Women Website.

As of Sunday, April 27, the Standing Women Website lists 217 events listed in 9 nations, including 65 organizations. In Georgia, five public and private “standings are listed, including at the gazebo in Downtown Central Park In Canton, Ga., and around the pond in Shorty Howell Park in Duluth, Ga. More information on the event can be found at www.standingwomen.org.

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May Onge Rest in Peace

April 18th, 2008

Andrea “Onge” Capozzi, a longtime Atlanta resident active in the LGBT community, has lost her battle with cancer. Onge died on Tuesday, April 15, in the Hospice facility at St. Josephs Hospital in Wayne, NJ. Onge’s family had moved her back home to New Jersey from Atlanta after she was diagnosed with terminal cancer. (Read my post, Ode to Onge, for more information.) The family has requested donations to the American Cancer Society in lieue of flowers. Onge’s obituary, as published in the New Jersey Star-Ledger, read:

Andrea Capozzi, 39, died on April 15, 2008, in the Hospice of New Jersey at St. Josephs Hospital in Wayne. A Funeral Mass will be held at Notre Dame Church, North Caldwell, on Saturday at 12 noon, followed by cemetery services at Prospect Hill Cemetery, Caldwell. Arrangements are by the Farmer Funeral Home, Roseland. Andrea was born in Belleville and raised in West Caldwell. She graduated from James Caldwell High School in 1986 as a scholarathlete. She was an outstanding softball pitcher for the Caldwell Chiefs and continued to be involved in sports throughout her life. Andrea attended Rutgers University for three years as a psychology major before transferring to Life Chiropractic College in Atlanta, Ga. Graduating with her doctoral degree in chiropractic medicine in 1993, Andrea opened her private practice, Loving Hands, where she has continued to practice for the past 15 years. Andrea had a special commitment to treating HIV patients and those who could not afford treatment. She was a true humanitarian who believed in giving back to her community. She was involved in Helping Hands, an organization which delivered food to housebound people. Andrea was an animal lover and through the years she has fed and sheltered many stray dogs and cats. Besides her achievements and professional success, Andrea will be remembered most for her beautiful, radiant smile and her love of life. She was a consummate teacher and was always happiest when she could help someone in need. Andrea was truly an forgettable women, loved, admired and adored by many. Andrea was predeceased by her identical twin sister, Michele Bryant, in December 2007, and her mother, Roseann Capozzi. Surviving are her father, Henry Capozzi; stepmother, Donna; younger sister, Renee Infantolino; brothers-in-law, Anthony Infantolino and Thomas Bryant Jr.; nieces, Danielle, Christine and Carly Infantolino, Taylor and Ashleigh Bryant and nephew, Thomas Bryant III. In lieu of flowers, donations to the American Cancer Society, 507 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth, N.J. 07208 would be appreciated.

May Onge rest in peace. And may we who knew her always remember and honor her kindness and compassion.

There is an online Guest Book for Onge on NJ.com. You may also share your thoughts as a comment on this post or my previous post about Onge. I will see that the Capozzi family and friends of Onge receive a copy of your comments. The Farmer Funeral Home is at 45 Roseland Avenue, Roseland, NJ 07068-1247, phone 973.226.1111.

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Ode to Onge

April 13th, 2008

Andrea Capozzi, a 39-year-old Atlanta resident, Life University graduate and a successful Midtown chiropractor, has been diagnosed with terminal cancer. On Tuesday, February 26, doctors told Andrea’s family that she had less than seven days to live. As of this writing, she is still alive, almost seven weeks later. She is living in a hospice facility back home in New Jersey, when her father moved her after the doctors at Atlanta’s Grady Hospital had diagnosed the Ovarian cancer that had spread to her brain. Her tenacity is surely testament to her focus on health. A benefit has been scheduled for next Sunday, April 20 from 1 until 8 p.m. at Calavino’s in Decatur to raise money for medical expenses. Ironically, but not surprisingly in this country’s woefully inadequate healthcare system, Andrea is a healthcare professional with no health insurance.

When I first visited Loving Hands Family Chiropractic, Andrea Capozzi had just completed chiropractic school. She took x-rays, evaluated the black-and-white view of my aching back, and explained chiropractic care to me in an attentive, engaged manner that I have rarely encountered with healthcare professionals. Endless repetition can make such orientations more often rote than not. But not with Andrea, known affectionately as Onge. I had never been to a chiropractor before. My first impression of one was in the form of a young, beautiful, fellow lesbian with tremendous charisma, an ever-present smile and a genuine enthusiasm for her profession. Now well more than a decade later, I sit here wondering what I can say that would not seem a cliche. What can you say when someone you’ve known for the majority of your adult life, someone who is younger than you, someone who provided care to you, has been diagnosed with terminal cancer?

When I first met Onge all those years ago, she was literally fresh out of school. She did not personally adjust me until some time later, after she had received her license following exams. My first adjustments were from her then partner, Natalie Topeka, an equally charismatic woman of great wit and what sometimes seems a miraculous talent for her work. After the license to practice arrived, I was adjusted by whichever partner was available when I showed up. For the first couple of years, I went to Loving Hands twice almost every week. I wasn’t in particularly poor health. Most of my visits were for wellness care, or for relief from a cold. I did have off-and-on back pain, mostly because I have never understood that gravity applies to me. The truth is many of my visits were as much about seeing Natalie and Onge as about the adjustments. I became, and still am, a true believer in chiropractic care. But I wonder if Andrea’s ever-present smile and the warm hug that came after every adjustment were as healing as any of the twists and turns of my spine. Natalie’s pranks at Halloween and playful Easter-egg hunts also had entertainment value.

These brief encounters continued for years. I never became close personal friends with either Andrea or Natalie. We met for pizza a time or two. They came to a pool party at my old place in Stone Mountain. I played on the Loving Hands softball team the summer my father was dying in 1996. I was an emotional rollercoaster during my father’s struggle with cancer, and not always pleasant to be around on the Softball Country Club fields, but those games were a welcome relief, a moment of play, in an otherwise deadly serious time of my life.

I eventually stopped going to Loving Hands Chiropractic about a year after Natalie and Andrea ended their partnership and Natalie left the practice. I was healthy and was traveling a lot with my work, so I had cut my chiropractic visits back to every couple or three weeks in my last years as a patient there. I ran into Onge regularly at clubs and events around town after that, and always got that bright smile and warm hug. My last conversation with her was shortly after she closed the Loving Hands office on Lavista Road and moved her practice to Midtown.

When I heard the news of Andrea’s cancer in mid-March, I was profoundly shocked and saddened. My perspective, as a casual friend and former patient, surely pales in comparison to the shock and sadness and grief being endured by her family, her close friends, and her partner–who is now separated from Onge by her duties with the U.S. Navy. Thanks to “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” Onge does not have her partner by her side.  LGBT servicemembers do not have the option to request hardship leave to be with a dying partner.  But that is more pain and frustration than I can write about in one sitting.

I have been shaken by the news of Andrea’s illness. I’ve said prayers, lit a candle, directed energy toward New Jersey. I have felt a little strange, too, that I have had such a profound reaction to the illness of one of my doctors, only a very casual friend. Then, a very good friend suggested to me that because Onge was my caregiver, my healer, there is naturally a part of her that is connected with me. I guess the care that Onge is giving now is the knowledge that all of our encounters with others in this life have meaning. Our care for others, our compassion for their pain and struggles, our work to improve their condition–whether that condition is physical, emotional or spiritual–has a profound and lasting effect on their lives. Onge’s life and work have enriched my life. I wish I knew of some way to give back to her now.

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Posted in Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Health and Wellness, LGBT Events and Meetings, Queer Atlanta, Uncategorized | Tags: | 3 Comments

Where Not to Go on Your Gay Vacation

April 11th, 2008

The International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA) has released a new poster that maps LGBTI rights around the world. Think of it as an important reference for your gay travel planning. The map is color-coded to indicate where you may be subjected to the death penalty (seven countries) or imprisonment (76 countries and six other governmental or territorial entities) for being homosexual. It also indicates where you are protected by anti-discrimination laws (49 countries and 33 entities) and where you can get gay-married (19 countries and 14 entities). You may view the full map here.

An excerpt of ILGA's gay rights map

ILGA created the map as a part of its celebration of the organization’s 30th anniversary. ILGA will also release a report on state-sponsored homophobia in time for the International Day Against Homophobia on May 17.

Members of ILGA will receive a copy of the map free of charge. Others who would like to own a copy or distribute multiple copies should contact the ILGA at information@ilga.org.

ILGA is a federation of more than 600 groups and businesses campaigning for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) rights. Every continent and over 90 countries are represented.

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Posted in Gay Rights, International LGBT, Queer Travel, Uncategorized | Tags: , , | 1 Comment

GLAAD to Watch the Media’s Queer Coverage

April 2nd, 2008

The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) has launched a new Website called “Newsroom ‘08,” to track how media talk about issues affecting to the LGBT community as they pertain to local, state and national elections in November. The site offers video clips of comments by candidates and pundits on queer issues, a blog with analysis of election coverage, and resources for both journalists and media watchers.

“Election years give us increased opportunity to talk about our issues and to hold media accountable for fair, accurate and inclusive coverage,” said GLAAD President Neil G. Giuliano. “Newsroom ‘08 provides a unique analysis and insight on media coverage of the November elections as they pertain to LGBT issues.”

“GLAAD has been hard at work holding media accountable at the national and local levels,” said Rashad Robinson, GLAAD’s senior director of programs. “Newsroom ‘08 gives journalists and community members additional resources to move beyond oversimplification and to promote election coverage that portrays the LGBT community and issues in a fair, accurate and inclusive light.”

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Archbishop Desmond Tutu to Give First U.S. Speech to the LGBT Community

April 1st, 2008

The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) announced today that Archbishop Desmond Tutu will give an historic 30-minute address to the LGBTI community in San Francisco on April 8, 2008. It’s the first time that he has directly addressed such a large LGBTI gathering in the United States. He will speak to a crowd of approximately 400 people at A Celebration of Courage, the IGLHRC’s annual gala awards ceremony, where he will also be honored for his leadership on human rights. Archbishop Tutu, a Nobel Prize winner for his work against apartheid in South Africa, has persistently challenged discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. He has publicly condemned persecution on the basis of sexual orientation, comparing it to apartheid. In article published in The Times of London in 2004, he wrote:

“We struggled against apartheid in South Africa, supported by people the world over, because black people were being blamed and made to suffer for something we could do nothing about-our very skins. “It is the same with sexual orientation. It is a given. I could not have fought against the discrimination of apartheid and not also fight against the discrimination that homosexuals endure, even in our churches and faith groups.”

Archbishop Tutu has also vigorously criticized the Catholic church for its homophobia. Last year, he told BBC radio, “If God, as they say, is homophobic, I wouldn’t worship that God.” He has even challenged the church for “being almost obsessed with questions of human sexuality” when other issues such as poverty, HIV/AIDS and war are more deserving of attention and action. He told Union Theological Seminary students in 2006 that “All belong–white, black, red, yellow, Arab, Jew, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, young old, male, female, rich poor, gay, lesbian and so-called straight–all belong.”

I find his use of the term “so-called straight” to be an interesting choice.

More »

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Posted in Gay Rights, International LGBT, LGBT Events and Meetings, Religion & Spirituality, Uncategorized | Tags: , | No Comments