A local group in
Atlanta released a study saying that harassment against LGBT students is a big
problem locally.
The following is an excerpt from an article printed in the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution. Any opinions either stated or suggested are not
necessarily those of GLSEN or its members.
By James Salzer, Atlanta Journal-Constitution Staff Writer
Wearing a white T-shirt and baggy jeans hung low, the 15-year-old looks the
part of the typical metro teen. But in his Fayette County high school, he stood
out.
He was the kid everyone called "faggot" or "queer."
He was the one kids threw rocks at, tripped, pushed, who they made crude
remarks about, who, near the end of the school year, was assaulted in the locker
room.
The blond-haired rising sophomore with a love for the arts was the one who
had to deal with being called names on a daily basis at school, even before he
formally "came out" and began confirming to family and friends that he
was gay. His grades dropped as the harassment and the pressure built. He had
spent several years being confused about his sexuality, even trying suicide on
two occasions.
His experience is common enough that Enlight Atlanta this spring conducted a
survey of guidance counselors in more than 100 area public and private high
schools to see what is being done about the problem.
The survey results, which will be released Thursday, essentially found that
the answer is, very little.
"We knew there was a problem, but we didn't have the numbers to quantify
it," said Steve Epstein, executive director of Enlight Atlanta, a group
that has helped students facing school harassment. "Now we know this is a
serious problem in schools. It's a crisis."
The survey comes almost three years after a Cherokee County student died
after being punched while getting off a school bus by a student who regularly
picked on him. According to witnesses, the attacker taunted kids he didn't like
by calling them "gay." That case led to a state anti-bullying law.
Just last month, Human Rights Watch, an international research and advocacy
group, released a report saying that 2 million U.S. teenagers were having
serious problems in school because they were taunted with anti-gay slurs. The
report was based on interviews in seven states, including Georgia.
"The U.S. school system gets a failing grade when it comes to providing
a safe place for gay students to get an education," said Michael Bochenek,
counsel to the Children's Rights Division of Human Rights Watch and a co-author
of the report. "Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender kids face a greater
risk of bullying than any other students in American high schools. That has to
stop."
Two years after a national outcry over the harassment of gays following the
murder of college student Matthew Shepard, gay students, or those perceived to
be gay, are still regular targets of slurs in schools.
Such back-and-forth, particularly among boys, has been common for decades.
"Faggot," "gay" or "homo" have been the insults of
choice in a social environment that has set notions of masculinity to which it
expects boys to conform.
Epstein said one thing that's troubling is that those words are being thrown
around starting in the early years of elementary school. Such uses are
reinforced over the years, with children learning "gay" equals
"bad."
However, Sadie Fields, chairwoman of the Georgia Christian Coalition, worries
gay rights groups are trying to gain a foothold in public schools. She said any
school inviting Enlight Atlanta to their campus should first send notes home to
parents, asking if they want their child to participate.
"Everybody needs to take a step back from the sexual exploitation of
children under the guise of education and leave children alone and let them be
kids," she said. "It is one more way for the homosexual movement to
crack the door in public schools. Children need to be taught reading, writing
and arithmetic. They do not need to be bombarded with information about their
sexuality."
For more information, please contact:
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
72 Marietta Street NW
Atlanta, GA, 30303
Fax: 404-526-5746
E-Mail: journal@ajc.com