USC News

All School Day Celebrates Diversity

02/27/08
The mayor of West Hollywood helps USC School of Social Work students explore what it means to be part of the gay, bisexual and transgender community.
By Geoff Rynex
West Hollywood Mayor John Duran, right, sits on a panel at the USC School of Social Work's All School Day. Sharon Franklin Brown, left, and Rita Gonzales also shared stories at the event.

Photo/Brian Goodman
A teenage John Duran was convinced that it was Los Angeles that had done it to him.

Raised in a devout Catholic family in the 1970s, it wasn’t conceivable that he could actually be gay. So he skipped town for what he thought would be the straighter pastures of Orange County. He got a job at Disneyland, believing the family atmosphere would set him on the right path.

Three weeks later, he was dating Peter Pan. He knew there was no more running away from it – he was gay.

Duran, the mayor of West Hollywood and one of only four HIV-positive elected officials in the country, shared his story with students and faculty at the USC School of Social Work’s All School Day on Feb. 7. The theme of this year’s event was Human Rights, Not Special Rights: Understanding the LGBTQ Community. The event featured Duran and a panel of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender leaders from the community.

All School Day began in 1992 after simmering racial tensions sparked the Los Angeles riots. Each year since, the School of Social Work has brought people together in a forum to exchange ideas about diversity and all matters of human conflict.

Duran spoke about his early days in the gay community when the social scene was far less open than it is today. Gay bars had no windows and no doors, he said. They used to exclude lesbians, bisexuals and transgenders.

Before the LGBTQ movement started, each community was really very separate, and there was not much sense of community between the groups. They didn’t work or socialize together, and they didn’t identify with one another, Duran noted.

“I didn’t know there was such a divide within the LGBT community,” said MSW candidate Lydia Lesar. “It’s important to hear leaders like this talk about it from their perspective, because you can’t have a clue about what they’re going through. You think you understand, but you don’t have any idea.”

Part of the problem for the LGBTQ movement, Duran said, is that people have been misinformed, and vital issues of human rights have been left in the hands of a frightened majority when the issues are ones of minority protection.

“I thought the history of the community was fascinating – the history of HIV/AIDS and how people have been viewed or marginalized. They’re things we’ve heard a little bit about but never in detail,” said MSW candidate Janet Cho.

Members of the panel also shared personal experiences and educated the audience of future social workers about diversity within the LGBTQ community, a diversity that is often taken for granted as society groups the various factions together under the umbrella of gay rights.

“There are so many letters and acronyms now, you can’t even fit it on a t-shirt,” said radio producer and activist Rita Gonzales.

Gonzales, who began her career more than 20 years ago with Gay and Lesbian Latinos Unidos, the oldest Latino LGBTQ organization in Southern California, echoed the sentiments of Duran and her fellow panelists about the need to recognize each part of the LGBTQ community as a separate entity, with separate issues and methods of achieving the goals of the larger community.

Miguel Martinez, who manages the risk reduction program at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles that provides HIV care and prevention education to youth, started out protesting for gay rights on the campus of the University of California at Berkeley.

His advice to students was to be prepared to help younger clients deal with the harsh social stigma attached to youth with HIV/AIDS. He said the battle is to try to make people see themselves as valuable.

“That’s how we break down stigmas by celebrating who we are,” Martinez said.

MSW student Eddie Ramos echoed his sentiments, sharing his support for bringing LGBTQ issues out in the open and hoping society sees a broader perspective.

“We’re all human beings, and we’ve got to respect each other,” he said.