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Stonewall Riot's 43rd Anniversary
Today marks the 43rd anniversary of the Stonewall Riots which
took place on June 28, 1969. That night a usually unremarkable event happened in New York's
Greenwich Village: the police raided a gay bar, something that occurred many times before across the US over the decades. This time, shortly
after 3 a.m., at the Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street in NYC’s Greenwich
Village, the largely gay and lesbian clientele fought back with aggressive retaliation. Until then, raids on gay bars were commonplace
as neighbors objected to patrons of gay bars participating in sexual acts considered
deviant and unacceptable. The police raided the Stonewall Inn for serving
liquor without a license among other violations. As the raid progressed, the
crowd on the street watched as the police arrested the bar's employees. When
three drag queens and a lesbian were forced into a paddy wagon, the crowd reacted.
Ejected customers started to throw coins at the
officers, in mockery of the notorious system of payoffs - dubbed “gayola”
- in which police took huge sums from gay bars, using “public morals” raids to
carry out the scheme. Soon coins were followed by bottles, rocks, and other
items. Cheers ran out as the prisoners in the van were liberated. Officers had
to take shelter inside the bar. Two policemen were slightly injured before
reinforcements arrived to disperse the mob. The protest spilled over into the neighboring
streets and order was not restored until the arrival of New York's Tactical Patrol Force (TPF), a crack
riot-control squad specially trained to disperse people protesting against the
Vietnam War.
To this day, the Stonewall Riots are viewed as the birth of the LGBTQ rights
movement. The riot lasted for the next six days of demonstrations in New York
and was the impetus for the formation of the Gay Liberation Front as well as
other gay, lesbian, and bisexual civil rights organizations. It is also
regarded by many as history's first major protest on behalf of equal rights for
homosexuals.
The Brooklyn Law School Library recently acquired the
DVD Stonewall
Uprising (Call #HQ76.8.U6 S76 2011) available in the library’s AV
collection. Filmmakers Kate Davis and David Heilbroner
explore the event that launched a worldwide rights movement. The film
revisits a time when homosexual acts were illegal throughout America, and
homosexuality itself was seen as a form of mental illness. Hunted and often
entrapped by undercover police in their hometowns, gays from around the US fled to New York for sanctuary. Hounded there still by an
aggressive police force, they found refuge in a Mafia-run gay bar in Greenwich
Village, the Stonewall Inn.
Details about the event is shown in a video, Tim Robbins reads Martin Duberman,
"Stonewall", with excerpts from Martin Duberman’s 1994 book.
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