Search Results Tag: Devote Campaign

From Seneca Falls to Selma to Stonewall to Asheville, North Carolina: Becky and Sanne Fight for the Right to be Together in this Country

President Obama, meet Becky and Sanne, and their 2-year-old daughter, Willow. Becky, who was born in this country, is a middle school teacher. Sanne comes from the Netherlands, the first country in the world to allow same-sex couples to wed. Sanne could have sponsored Becky as her spouse for the Dutch equivalent of a “green card.” Instead, they chose to live in America, where federal law refuses to recognize their marriage at all, including for immigration purposes. Fighting for their right to be here together as a family has become part of their daily lives.

Becky and Sanne settled down in Becky’s home state of North Carolina, where, last spring, a majority of voters passed an amendment banning same-sex marriage (and all other legal forms of same-sex unions). Gay and lesbian couples were already barred from marriage by law in North Carolina, but 61% of voters decided to enshrine discrimination in the state constitution anyway.

Perhaps you are wondering why Becky and Sanne chose to live where they do, considering that most North Carolinians do not see them as devoted and loving wives and mothers worthy of equal protection under the law.

For them, it was a no-brainer. First, they simply wanted to raise their daughter near the friends, family, and mountains they love. Plus, there was no way they were ever going to live overseas and wait for change to happen before following their hearts home. Rather, they were determined to be in the thick of the fight for equality, advocating for the kind of world any parent, gay or straight, would want to raise their child in – one characterized by respect and equal opportunity.

Becky and Sanne are living their lives unapologetically and by example where change is needed most. They are literally on the front lines sharing their story with whomever will listen, making their case in the most influential court in the land: the court of public opinion. They are as strong and positive as people in their position could ever be. But they are struggling not knowing if they will be able to reap the benefits of their tireless work.

After all, the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) is still in full effect, ensuring that even though these upstanding and dutiful women are married, Becky cannot sponsor Sanne for a green card to live and work in the United States, as is possible for opposite-sex couples. Without a green card, Sanne has no legal status in the United States, despite having entered legally. Raising a family solely on Becky’s modest middle school teacher’s income is almost impossible. Both women are desperate to “root down” and plan their future, for themselves and for the well-being of their beautiful daughter. Instead, even the most basic decisions such as whether to splurge on a new kitchen table, are soured by the inevitable question: “what if?”

When you announced that your administration would no longer defend DOMA in federal court, Becky and Sanne hoped that you would take steps to ensure that they were recognized as deserving of the same rights and protections of all American families — especially the right to be secure in calling this country home. Like so many other binational same-sex couples, they know that you can implement interim solutions offering them at least a temporary reprieve from the anguish and uncertainty that haunts their every day. Now more than ever, executive branch action in defense of families like Becky and Sanne’s is an imperative.

As President, you have championed equality for gays and lesbians, including the right to have our marriages treated equally under the law by the federal government. In your recent inaugural address, you noted that “if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well.” The love Becky and Sanne share is inviolable, strong, and precious. It is equal and it must be protected.

Taking no action is inconsistent with the ideals fought for by brave citizens at Seneca Falls, Selma, and Stonewall. If we are to carry on the fight for civil rights, every day counts. Becky and Sanne are doing their part. As President, you can ensure that their green card petition is not denied, but instead put on hold until either the Supreme Court strikes down the Defense of Marriage Act or Congress passes an immigration reform bill that includes the gay partner provision you put forward.

You are the President who spoke of change. These are your faithful warriors. Help them get to the promised land.

_______________________

The above video is the second in a series of short films titled ‘Love Stories: Binational Couples on the Front Lines Against DOMA’ produced in collaboration between the DeVote Campaign and the DOMA Project.

Time to Get Personal — Announcing the Launch of Our Series of Short Films, “Love Stories: Binational Couples on the Front Lines Against DOMA”


Photo by Joanna Chau

When Lavi Soloway, co-founder of The DOMA Project, came to the United States in 1989 as a foreign student from Canada, he could never have imagined that one of his greatest challenges would also present him with a chance to bring about positive change in this country.

As one half of a binational couple and a newly-admitted lawyer with an expiring visa, he went looking for help with his own immigration status. What he found was common cause with activists and other lesbian and gay couples. This empowered him to join the broader LGBT movement for social justice and launch a national grass-roots campaign for immigration equality. Over time, strategies evolved, but he remained absolutely convinced that the greatest tool for achieving victory was the personal stories of binational couples struggling to be together in this country.

Los Angeles based filmmaker, Brynn Gelbard, first met her Irish-born partner, Lisa, eleven years ago in San Francisco. By then, Lisa had already won a green card in the lottery. Over the years, they came to know other couples who weren’t so lucky, which inspired Brynn to help.

Through her project, The DeVote Campaign, she has been creating videos of people from all walks of life discussing what inspired them to fight for LGBT equality. For so long, binational couples were afraid that if they publically took a stand, they risked being torn apart. As the Obama administration introduced new family-friendly deportation policies, binational couples seized the moment and began speaking out more forcefully than ever before about the hardships they endure. Increasingly, their target was the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), the law that denies recognition of their marriages for all purposes including immigration and thus remains the sole obstacle to attaining a green card and a secure future for their families. Brynn jumped at the chance to record their stories and publish them online as a tool for inciting dialogue and change.

When Lavi and Brynn met in 2011, their decision to collaborate was rooted in the mutual conviction that exposing a mass audience to the unimaginable, real-life implications of this unjust law——the excruciating choices, crippling uncertainty and gut-wrenching sacrifices——was essential to mobilizing widespread, public demand for action.

On a shoe-string budget, Lavi and Brynn have traveled from Boston to Miami Beach, from Charlotte to San Francisco, collecting hundreds of hours of video of married lesbian and gay couples who are fully engaged in the fight against DOMA. These are voices of spouses who are assuming their own equality, who do not need a court or a Congress to tell them that their marriages are deserving of the same respect and, most importantly, the same protection under the law.


Photo by Joanna Chau

The result is “Love Stories: Binational Couples on the Front Lines Against DOMA,” a series of short films featuring these brave couples. The first to be released introduces Daniel and Yohandel, two young men who met and fell in love in Miami and soon found themselves searching for a way to stay together in the U.S. Yohandel contends with the profound disconnect between the ideal of freedom that prompted his parents to leave Cuba and the experience of second-class citizenship that he struggles with as a gay American. As Daniel and Yohandel share their devotion to each other and their determination to overcome the inhumane consequences of DOMA, we are left asking ourselves how such a cruel law could exist in a country that promises “liberty and justice for all.”

The DeVote Campaign and The DOMA Project join forces to publicize the plight of same-sex binational couples struggling to remain together in the U.S. due to the Defense of Marriage Act

The DeVote Campaign is excited and honored to join forces with Lavi Soloway and The DOMA Project to personalize and publicize the plight of binational same-sex couples struggling to remain together in the U.S. as a result of the discriminatory Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). When opposite-sex binational couples get married, the American spouse can sponsor the foreign born spouse for a green card to legally remain and work in the U.S. Married same-sex couples do not have this option, since DOMA defines ‘marriage’ as a union between one man and one woman in all areas governed by federal law including immigration. While the Obama administration declared that it would no longer defend DOMA in February 2011, no blanket measures have been taken to stop the deportations and green card denials that thousands of committed couples continue to endure.

There are an estimated 36,000 same-sex binational couples currently living in America. Countless others have been forced into exile, live apart, or exist “under the radar” in constant fear of being discovered and torn apart. Nobody should have to choose between attending a parent’s funeral or staying in the U.S. with his/her spouse for fear of being denied re-entry, but one real example of the unbearable reality faced by same-sex binational couples under the dark cloud that is the Defense of Marriage Act.

Please consider donating to our joint efforts to record and publicize these personal stories far and wide. Help us not only inspire change now, but archive these stories of true love and commitment for future generations.

DeVote is fiscally sponsored by the Independent Feature Project. You can make a tax-deductible contribution by visiting www.devotecampaign.com.

Devote in New York: Returning Home to Collect Stories

by Brynn
Published on: October 5, 2011
Categories: Uncategorized
Comments: No Comments


Going home to New York this summer to collect stories for Devote was particularly meaningful for me, having grown up on Long Island. I have many vivid memories of being back in high school and feeling so alone and confused by longings I had for certain other girls. But it was the mid-nineties. There was no dialogue around sexuality and gender identity or safe havens like an LGBT alliance where I could come to know myself and other like-minded peers. I don’t believe there was a single ‘out’ student in the whole school, including on any of my sports teams.

Things have definitely changed. Sitting down with 16-year-old bullying victim turned activist, Corey Bernstein, the whole Devote crew was blown away by the courage this young man displays speaking out for safe schools. For him, part of being an effective advocate is opening up about what he endured and how it feels seeing so many kids his age take their lives rather than waiting for things to get better.

Luckily, there are a growing number of opportunities for people like Corey to channel their experiences into making a difference. There are resources sprouting up all over the place to support queer and questioning youth. Yet, Jamey Rodemeyer recently took his life rather than be taunted another day, and at a school dance just after his death, some of his sister’s peers teased her about it. It is everyone’s responsibility to nourish young minds and shield them from hate – directed at themselves and others.

Down the street from where I live now in Los Angeles, there is a memorial for Robert F. Kennedy outside the former Ambassador Hotel, where he was assassinated on June 5th, 1968 following a victory speech for the California primary. Sometimes, I walk my dogs there in the morning to gaze at a wall etched with quotes spoken by him, as well as brothers John and Edward, Maya Angelou, George Bernard Shaw, and Caesar Chavez, to name a few.

One quote by Robert Kennedy is especially relevant now that we are facing an epidemic where young people are committing suicide because there is no universal support system in place empowering them to find and be themselves.

‘Here before us today there are hundreds of young people. America should allow them to be anything which their talent and intelligence can make them. If America fails these young people, if through indifference or callousness they are denied jobs, opportunities, or education, then the American dream will have failed.”

Devote’s Segment with Senator David Norris on Ireland’s An Lár TV

by Brynn
Published on: May 1, 2011
Categories: Uncategorized
Comments: No Comments


I often think back to the lunch hour Lisa, Karl and I spent in Merrion Square with Senator David Norris discussing the LGBT rights movement. That the Senator was so forthcoming about his personal experiences coming out of the closet was definitely a highlight of our shoot.

Whatever walk of life we come from, politicians or otherwise, we are each faced with the choice of living and speaking our personal truths or living and speaking what is more likely to appease others.

Mr. Norris had yet to officially announce his candidacy for president of Ireland at the time, but the option was certainly on the table. The Senator could have chosen to play a potential candidate during our session, but he instead played himself and proudly bared his humanity.

In doing so, he set an example for people not necessarily even old enough to vote that the greater risk comes from being dishonest and one day having to face the consequences. Speaking candidly about his sexuality may cost Senator Norris some votes but what is more important – lives or votes?

History will show that the people Senator Norris inspires to follow in his footsteps will have a more positive impact on the world than any person he might have tried to appease by keeping his truth quiet.

Thank you to An Lár TV for broadcasting our segment with Senator Norris and for turning up the volume of the conversation about the global nature of the equal rights movement.

David Norris for President

by Brynn
Published on: March 21, 2011
Categories: Uncategorized
Comments: No Comments

It’s official. Devote subject, Senator David Norris, has announced his campaign to be president of the Republic of Ireland. How exciting!

Asked about whether Ireland is ready for an openly gay president, the quick-witted Norris replied, “I don’t see myself as a gay president, I see myself as a president who happens to be gay.”

On the first of this year, the Civil Partnerships and Certain Rights and Obligations of Cohabitant Act, 2010, went into effect. It so happens the first couple to be officially recognized as civil partners was a bi-national couple civilly partnered in Northern Ireland last year and having relocated to the Republic of Ireland. At first, Immigration officials were not sure how to handle a legally binding civil partnership involving a same-sex couple, but they quickly came back with a ‘Congratulations!’

Many in Ireland, including Norris, advocate for full marriage rights, which Civil Partnerships do not provide.

In 1988, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Ireland’s laws prohibiting homosexuality violated the European Convention on Human Rights. It wasn’t until 1993 that homosexuality was officially decriminalized in Ireland, thanks to Senator Norris and the Campaign for Homosexual Law Reform.

If elected, Senator Norris promises to take a substantially reduced salary and use the rest in the interest of the people.

What is the Devote Campaign? Really

by guest
Published on: December 7, 2010
Categories: Uncategorized
Comments: No Comments

It’s easy to get lost in the political debates around marriage equality, repealing DADT, and same sex couple adoption, to name a few. And sometimes with the media craze and election pressures, everyday people who have chosen a less publicized path of action are often overlooked.

The subtle act of living ones life, openly and honestly, is the most basic declaration of Self. This small action, of being oneself, and expressing a voice, can turn into a monumental movement. As difficult as it can be when the Self is challenged, identity and ideas questioned, and close relationships are resistant, the glory of overcoming these pressures and continuing the journey is success. It’s powerful. And it’s contagious. You’ll see.

For many years I’ve held the manta changing the world one person at a time. I even had it posted as the signature to my email until I had to replace it with a more professional, yet standard: name, company name, and contact information. Today it may be less publicized, but it remains a reality and a truth we all experience and witness. Everyday, each one of us has the opportunity to change the world one person at a time. It’s our responsibility to determine in what regard, positive or negative, we will induce that change.

So how is this all connected you ask?

Our dear friend Ms. Barbie-Q, in response to aggressive demonstrations of intolerance towards the GLBT community, said it simply, “Do you know a gay person? REALLY know a gay person? Because if you did, you would not be acting this way.”  It’s true, it’s hard to hate people when we start to see them as what they really are – people. And as people, we have A LOT in common. More than 99.9% of our DNA, we share human emotions – feelings, love, fear, anguish, loss, pain, joy. Though the experiences may differ on the surface, as humans we all struggle at times, and succeed at others. Remember the moment you lost a family member, or were passed over for the promotion at work, or found out the one you loved, didn’t love you in return. Remember? Or what about your first love, the nervous and excited feeling in your stomach, or getting your dream job, or seeing your favorite band for the first time. Can you feel it? It’s something we ALL experience.

We are not a political campaign, an activist movement or a civil rights organization. At times we may look and behave like all three, as it’s often difficult to talk about human rights without venturing into political territory. Rather, we are a group of filmmakers turned citizen journalists traveling around the country and capturing your story. This may be your struggle, your challenge, your quest to be yourself, or the same difficult journey to accept someone else. It may also be the impact of another, and the effect their courageous Self has had on you.

This is the triumph we all share and the story we have to tell.

The Devote Campaign is our story.







What Meghan McCain didn’t say: Gay activists DO want help from straight Republicans

by guest
Published on: October 25, 2010
Categories: Uncategorized
Comments: No Comments

Let me say it, here, and for the record – Gay activists DO want help from straight republicans (err hm, Ms. Meghan McCain).

Did we say it loud? Was it clear? Will our voices carry far enough out into the distant corners of cyberspace and reach Meghan?

Meghan was recently a guest on The Rachel Maddow Show and talked about her role as a gay rights advocate, and her views on repealing Don’t Ask Don’t Tell. Watch below.

TRMS blog link here:

We are inspired by Meghan and appreciate her efforts to reach across the aisle and stand up for the rights of the GLBT community. As she mentioned in her interview, she is in a unique position to reach individuals and communities across the country.

And this is exactly why we need you.

As young activists, we share the great priviledge and responsibility to connect with young people, ignite change, and inspire the generations that follow.

We are the future, and are stronger together than we are divided. Gay, straight, republican or democrat. This is not an issue of differences, it’s an issue regarding the fundamental qualities of being a human, and the rights we ALL deserve.

We look forward to joining forces with Meghan, and would be thrilled and honored if she would allow us to prove her wrong – with a formal invitation to unite with Devote Campaign. Meghan, please join us.

The fight has just begun and we want and need everyone. Including straight republicans.

To get in contact with us, please email: cristin or brynn at info@devotecampaign.com







page 1 of 1
Welcome , Today is Friday May 24, 2013