This story features materials that may be triggering
to some of the individuals reading it. Please do not force yourself to read if
it makes you uncomfortable and reach out for help if you need it.
Here are some resources for readers in crisis:
CAPS (Counseling and Psychological Services): http://caps.sdes.ucf.edu/
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255
Something
that we have discussed intermittently in my time as a Women and Gender Studies
student is homosexuality in the Latin community. Before now, I have not had the
opportunity to share a personal story on the subject, a story that continues to
affect me and my family.
My uncle,
Isidro Martinez, spent most of his too-short life in the closet in fear of his
family, my family, rejecting him. He was in his 30’s, with a wife and 3
children before he came out. He told my mother/ his little sister that his
children inspired him to come out. He said that he wanted to be himself so that
they knew it was okay to be themselves. His coming out was predictably not well-received
as he was a gay man who belonged to a Cuban community.
Typically
speaking, Latin American men are all about machismo. To be gay, or worse-
proudly gay, was and often still is seen as harmful to the macho image many
Latin American men embody.
When my
uncle came out, my abuela/his mother told
him that he was not gay. She, being the devout Jehovah’s Witness that she was,
said that it was simply “the devil disguising himself as homosexual tendencies”.
When my uncle persisted, she disowned him. After all, she was a sister in her
congregation and having a gay son would hurt her image in the church. My abuela
did not talk to my uncle for years- his most trying years, when he needed her
the most. She said horrible things to him, emasculated him in front of his
children, and forcefully kept him and my mother apart (my mother was still
young and had no say in the matter). All of this because of the stigma
surrounding gay men in our culture.
That is not
all that my uncle had to endure. His wife left him, for obvious reasons. She
later came out as gay herself but she was less than understanding when it all
went down as she was admittedly struggling with her own feelings and projecting
her insecurities onto him. She limited his time with his children and spent
years being angry with him.
My uncle
Miguel, Isidro’s older brother, constantly mocked him. Miguel would refuse to
let Isidro anywhere near his children so as not to influence them with his gayness.
Miguel threatened Isidro’s life once or twice, crediting his urge to murder his
brother as getting rid of weak blood in the family line.
After my
uncle was diagnosed with AIDS he felt more alone in the world than he ever
should have had to. His mother wasn’t talking to him, his ex-wife was angry
with him, he barely got to see his children, his brother was threatening him,
his community was mocking him, he was diagnosed with a life-threatening
disease, and he had no one to talk to because he was prohibited from seeing his
little sister/best friend. It was here, at his darkest point, that my uncle
Isidro attempted suicide. His ex-wife found him a few days after the attempt,
after not hearing from him for a while she got worried and checked in on him.
He was hospitalized and discharged.
He attempted
suicide once more the first time he was left alone again. This time, he got
closer to death than the first attempt and it scared our family.
My abuela
did something very uncharacteristic of her at this point. In fear of his life,
she moved my uncle in with her despite what her congregation thought about it.
He was allowed to see his sister again. He was building a good relationship
with his mother again. He was seeing his ex-wife and children more. My uncle
Miguel was strongly encouraged to shut his mouth anytime he was around Isidro.
My uncle Isidro didn’t feel so alone anymore and it was because of the
acceptance he received by his loved ones. His mental health improved and his
suicidal urges diminished.
AIDS took
his life a few years later. He was thin, frail, but happy in his final years.
Happy to be who he was the entire time, only openly. His courage to come out
inspired his ex-wife, and later good friend, to come out to her family as well.
His courage to be himself still shapes the lives of his children, and his
nieces and nephews (myself included). Though it makes me deeply sad to think of
the years he spent depressed, rejected, and alone, I know that there are
lessons to be learned from his story- so his struggle was not without purpose.
There are so
many young men in the Latin American community that continue to face the same
struggles that my uncle had to. To be forced out of your community, family, or
home is a horrible thing to have to experience and yet it happens all of the
time. Let us try to learn from these stories so that we can move to a more
accepting place where members of the LGBTQIA community don’t have to worry
about being themselves. Let us advocate for such acceptance, and education as these
are our strongest tools in the name of social justice.
Thank you
for reading.
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