Community Potluck (LGBTQ+)
Episode 6 | 7m 28sVideo has Closed Captions
KJ uncovers South Carolina's LGBTQ history, and the one picnic that started it all.
LGBTQ+ rights advocates in South Carolina wanted to start a movement, even when coming out meant risking their relationships, their jobs, and their personal safety. So activists like Harriet Hancock built safe spaces that Queer and Trans people could call their own. A simple picnic in the late 1980s started a fight for LGBTQ+ equality in South Carolina that continues today.
Funding for CITIZEN BETTER is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Community Potluck (LGBTQ+)
Episode 6 | 7m 28sVideo has Closed Captions
LGBTQ+ rights advocates in South Carolina wanted to start a movement, even when coming out meant risking their relationships, their jobs, and their personal safety. So activists like Harriet Hancock built safe spaces that Queer and Trans people could call their own. A simple picnic in the late 1980s started a fight for LGBTQ+ equality in South Carolina that continues today.
How to Watch Citizen Better
Citizen Better is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipKJ Kearney: This is legitimately good.
I'm going to take this barbecue back to# Charleston.
We are here at the Hancock Center at one of their monthly potlucks, and we are eating# delicious, slow cooked, pulled pork barbecue.
If you are not standing with the LGBTQ community,# this is the kind of stuff you're missing out on.
When patrons of the Stonewall Inn,# including trans women of color, fought back against a police raid of a gay bar in# 1969, they sparked the modern Gay Pride Movement, but that was in New York.
In South Carolina, a# picnic, sort of like this one, took the growing Pride Movement here in Columbia to a new level.
I'm KJ Kearney, and this is Citizen Better.
The Harriet Hancock Center is focused# on advancing LGBTQ+ rights and safety.
And they know that sometimes community# safety just means getting people together for some good food, but they're also tapping# into Columbia's long history of protest.
Matthew Butler: So back in the '80s, the community would get together at Dreher Island# State Park and have a picnic.
Dreher Isl.. of course, is a lovely place at Lake Murray.# It's very secluded.
We're still very much in the Conservative South, the Bible belt,# and so for folks to get together in a public setting was not something that was# very appetizing for folks at the time.
KJ Kearney: But activists like Harriet Hancock, the mother of a gay son, were interested in making# more of a statement.
She took a clipboard and collected names of people who were participating# in Columbia's first Pride March the next year.
Matthew Butler: That first march, people were scared.
The city couldn't really# offer protection or wouldn't provide the resources necessary, so people were scared.
I mean, you# could still be fired.
People were considering wearing clown makeup, and a number of people# actually did, and then others were concerned about being shot.
I recall Harriet telling me she# and her son walking and they were just in tears, in tears.
People were wiping the makeup off# their faces as they got closer to the State House because they realized what a powerful moment# that was for the community in this first march.
KJ Kearney: Matt's not talking about Stonewall in the '60s.
He's talking about a pride march in 1990.
The# march that started with people wearing makeup to hide their identities ended with# the group finding safety in numbers, marching to the State House to make demands of# non-discrimination.
It's understandable that people were worried historically.
Institutions# like the justice and healthcare system don't keep all of us safe, particularly for the# LGBTQ+ community who have often faced threats to their safety from these systems.
Police raids were frequently used as a tactic to intimidate and beat patrons of gay# bars through the '50s and '60s.
State laws criminalizing same-sex sexual relationships# weren't ruled unconstitutional until 2003.
Marriage equality has existed nationwide for less# than a decade and 137 bills have been introduced in the state and federal legislators to ban# gender-affirming healthcare this year alone.
Matthew Butler: This year, very unfortunately, the state legislature passed and the governor# signed into law a bill that bans medically necessary care for trans kids.
KJ Kearney: Because these institutions aren't always safe for# and trans people, the Harriet Hancock Center works to build community safety from within these# systems by educating people about legislation that affects their community and helping# them contact their lawmakers to advocate for themselves.
But they also build safety from# outside these systems by forming a network of support groups and resource guides for LGBTQ-owned# and friendly businesses and service providers so that people can feel confident that they will# be safe and included in choices as major seeking transition-related healthcare or planning a# wedding to as minor as getting a haircut that expresses who they are.
Cristina Picozzi: Often when people are in crisis, they might not# even know what they need.
And so fo.. resource center, we're looking at how can we help# fill in those gaps and make it less overwhelming for them, whether they're looking for a medical# resource that's affirming or behavioral health, or even someone who's looking for an aesthetician# that supports transgender or gender expansive people.
KJ Kearney: And members of Harriet Hanco.. surrounding counties, sometimes driving an hour# or more just to have a space where they can be their authentic selves.
Cristina Picozzi: We really are trying to create as many# spaces and tell people, you are safe here.
We accept you for who you are, even if you# don't know exactly who that is quite yet, to give them that space to rise up and just be# themselves because queer joy also matters.
KJ Kearney: That's why here you'll find multiple generations sharing a meal together in a space they know# they'll be accepted and understood, like Harriet herself, who still attends every potluck.
Harriet Hancock: My son came out to me as gay in about 1980, '80,# '81, and he was just reluctant to tell me this because he did not know how I would take it.
And# I knew that he needed me.
He was distraught.
He was in a terrible situation having to come out# to your mother and be fearful of rejection, not knowing what's going to happen to you.
I just# put my arms around him and hugged him and I said, it's okay, and everything's going to be okay.
So# he was extremely relieved.
I said, it's okay.
I accept you.
I love you unconditionally, but# it's going to be a problem for other people and I don't want you to be mistreated.
We're talking about 1981 here.
I was more concerned about what society and how this# world was going to be treating my son, and I wanted to change that.
I didn't# want my son to have to live with that.
KJ Kearney: You've been doing this work since 1982, so I.. Harriet Hancock: Because there is a need, and I am totally invested in this.
This community# has been wonderful to me.
I have made so many friends within the LGBT community and they have# enriched my life.
I can tell you that my life has been enriched by this wonderful people, and if I# have helped them, I will continue to help them as long as I've got breath in my body.
KJ Kearney: Community safety can come in many different forms,# but if we can learn anything from Harriet Hancock is that a lot of it is just about showing up for# your community consistently for as long as you can.
Where support and safety don't always exist# in traditional systems, activists like her have long worked to build alternatives because while# you can and should participate in the democratic process, at the same time, we don't need to wait# for institutional approval to build community and support each other.
My name is KJ Kearney# and thank you for watching Citizen Better.
Funding for CITIZEN BETTER is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.