Giving Tuesday is on December 3rd. Donate here today and support our HESP Programs and Interns.

All donations, up to $25,000, will be matched thanks to an anonymous donor.

Close alert

Harvey Milk—eloquent, charismatic, and a smart-aleck—was elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977, but he had not even served a full year in office when he was shot by a homophobic fellow supervisor. Milk’s assassination at the age of 48 made him the most famous gay man in modern history.

Before finding his calling as a politician, Milk variously tried being a schoolteacher, a securities analyst on Wall Street, a supporter of Barry Goldwater, a Broadway theater assistant, a bead-wearing hippie, the operator of a camera store, and organizer of the local business community in San Francisco. He rejected Judaism as a religion, but he was deeply influenced by the cultural values of his Jewish upbringing and his understanding of antisemitism and the Holocaust.

This Museum and Congregation Beit Simchat Torah program explores Milk’s life, death, and legacy with Lillian Faderman, a distinguished scholar of LGBTQ history and the author of Harvey Milk: His Lives and Death from the Jewish Lives series. Faderman is joined by Eric Marcus, creator of the award-winning podcasts Making Gay History and Those Who Were There: Voices From the Holocaust.

Watch the program below.

This program’s original recording transcript is below. This transcription was created automatically during a live program so may contain inaccurate transcriptions of some words.

Rabbi Marisa Elana James: Wonderful Thank you so much, and welcome everyone CPS T is thrilled to be co sponsoring with the Museum of Jewish heritage Harvey milk gay Jewish icon.

7
00:01:21.030 --> 00:01:30.630
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: And I will say I find it deeply moving to be involved with anything that honors the many complex facets of Harvey milk, because you kind of leave Rafa may have memory, be a blessing.

8
00:01:31.710 --> 00:01:41.850
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: Like Harvey I am gay I grew up in a conservative Jewish community I briefly worked in teaching and retail and on Wall Street before moving towards social justice work as my profession.

9
00:01:42.810 --> 00:01:57.150
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: Now i'm the director of social justice programming at CBS T, which is in the garment district where century ago, my great grandfather worked in the garment industry, and I have definitely thought to myself at certain moments, what would Harvey do.

10
00:01:58.500 --> 00:02:05.400
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: it's partly thanks to Harvey milk, that the modern world looks the way it looks and certainly for those of us who live in an overlap.

11
00:02:05.730 --> 00:02:21.930
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: The Jewish community LGBT Q Community political activism communities, social justice and human rights communities his influence is profound and i'll be honest that even I hadn't realized the extent of his impact until I read Lillian fader men's book last summer.

12
00:02:23.190 --> 00:02:33.390
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: And, most of us don't have quite as many overlapping complex identities as Harvey did, but I guess that everyone in this room love somebody who is LGBT or Q.

13
00:02:34.350 --> 00:02:44.220
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: i'm guessing that everybody here today cares about somebody who is Jewish and has had their Judaism or had a friends Judaism inspire the work that we do in the world.

14
00:02:45.060 --> 00:02:56.160
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: I would guess that everybody in this room is proud of someone who is very politically active and supports people who are fighting for Labor rights and respect and protection in the workplace, including in our Jewish communities.

15
00:02:57.180 --> 00:03:10.050
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: All of us have felt the impact of Harvey milk's existence in our lives, whether we realize it or not, and i'm very much looking forward to learning more about that impact from William and Eric today.

16
00:03:11.220 --> 00:03:15.570
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: It is hard to know what harvey's life would have looked like had he not been murdered.

17
00:03:16.260 --> 00:03:25.770
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: It is one of the tragedies of our world, but sometimes people who are amazing human beings do not get the attention they deserve unless something terrible happens to them.

18
00:03:26.460 --> 00:03:34.350
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: But the work that Harvey did was remarkable and I am deeply grateful that not only do we know about it, not only did he not disappear into history.

19
00:03:34.890 --> 00:03:43.920
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: But even now more scholarship more writing more pride in who he was and what he did for our world is still coming into.

20
00:03:44.490 --> 00:03:57.450
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: Our reading tables onto our devices into our podcasts that we have such a wealth of archival and historical work to draw from as we seek inspiration for the things that we do today.

21
00:03:59.520 --> 00:04:14.640
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: Harvey milk's memory is indeed a blessing has worked in his passion continue to inspire me, and I hope all of us, and I hope that all of us can continue to make his memory, be a blessing for the generations that will come after us and all the work that we do.

22
00:04:16.290 --> 00:04:17.220
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: All right, thank you.

23
00:04:19.320 --> 00:04:26.220
Ari Goldstein: That was so beautiful rabbi James Thank you an honor is really ours museum of Jewish heritage to be including CBS T.

24
00:04:26.610 --> 00:04:38.310
Ari Goldstein: As our co presenter i'll just add that this is October is LGBT history month, so this is an important story to tell all year but it's particularly meaningful to be gathered today.

25
00:04:39.570 --> 00:04:45.420
Ari Goldstein: you're delighted to welcome Lillian fader in and Eric Marcus who you'll hear from in just a moment.

26
00:04:46.230 --> 00:04:54.060
Ari Goldstein: Lillian is a distinguished scholar of LGBT Q history and the author of 11 books, including Harvey milk is lives and death.

27
00:04:54.300 --> 00:05:07.980
Ari Goldstein: which was published by the wonderful Jewish life series at Yale university press and we'll put the link to order that book in the zoom chat in just a moment among billions many honors or six Lambda literary awards and Anna spelled wolf book award.

28
00:05:09.000 --> 00:05:14.070
Ari Goldstein: Eric Marcus is a distinguished journalist and the author of 12 books, if I have that right Eric.

29
00:05:14.430 --> 00:05:22.860
Ari Goldstein: As well as the founder and host of the making gay history podcast and that those who are their voices from the Holocaust podcast which the museum co produced.

30
00:05:23.280 --> 00:05:34.650
Ari Goldstein: Eric founded and chairs and still no 50 consortium and we just discovered that in 1992 Eric and Lillian work appeared side by side on the front page of the New York Times book review and we're glad to bring them back together today.

31
00:05:35.220 --> 00:05:38.520
Ari Goldstein: We will begin in just a moment with a presentation from Lillian.

32
00:05:39.150 --> 00:05:45.090
Ari Goldstein: i'll share some for Harvey milk expertise and follow that with a moderated conversation between Eric and Lillian.

33
00:05:45.420 --> 00:05:55.050
Ari Goldstein: If you have questions about Harvey milk and his legacy, please feel free to share them anytime zoom Q amp a box will save about 15 minutes, towards the end of the hour to get to them.

34
00:05:55.620 --> 00:06:06.180
Ari Goldstein: we're recording today's program and will send out the video tomorrow by email without further ado, thank you all for joining us thank you lily and Eric for being here and we'll turn things over to you.

35
00:06:07.500 --> 00:06:12.210
Lillian Faderman: Thank you for your introduction are, and thank you for your beautiful birds rabbi.

36
00:06:13.230 --> 00:06:25.290
Lillian Faderman: I first wrote about Harvey milk and my book, the gay revolution, but because his Jewish background wasn't the focus of that book I didn't discuss it extensively.

37
00:06:25.710 --> 00:06:35.280
Lillian Faderman: But I was very aware of it, partly because Harvey was practically Alonso, and his grandfather came from a Lithuanian.

38
00:06:35.640 --> 00:06:48.330
Lillian Faderman: shtetl that was right across the border with lot via and my mother came from a Latvian shtetl that was about 30 kilometers from the Lithuanian borders, so we were booklet box.

39
00:06:48.900 --> 00:06:58.200
Lillian Faderman: So when Yale university press invited me to write a biography of Harvey for the Jewish live series it took me about 10 seconds to say yes.

40
00:06:59.340 --> 00:07:17.340
Lillian Faderman: So before herrick Eric and I chat and answer your questions, I want to show a few pictures and talk a little bit about harvey's jewishness and how it impacted not only his life, but especially his focus as a gay leader.

41
00:07:19.170 --> 00:07:29.460
Lillian Faderman: Like many American Jews, he didn't see his strong Jewish identity is having anything to do with being religiously observant but he loved.

42
00:07:29.910 --> 00:07:44.100
Lillian Faderman: Yiddish kite he was just tied to the cultural aspects of being Jewish I interviewed a couple of people who told me the on the wall of Castro camera the little shop in San Francisco that he.

43
00:07:44.610 --> 00:07:51.210
Lillian Faderman: owned and operated with his partner, he had a his bar mitzvah picture hanging.

44
00:07:51.600 --> 00:08:01.830
Lillian Faderman: I was told by other people that he just love to talk about the joys of pastrami on rye or chopped liver with coleslaw and he really loved to exchange the other phrases.

45
00:08:02.550 --> 00:08:17.370
Lillian Faderman: Those are the fun aspects of being Jewish, but much more seriously, he took very seriously himself the idea of tikkun olam of helping to repair the world.

46
00:08:18.780 --> 00:08:30.090
Lillian Faderman: I think his political ideas can be understood best through that lens the lens of tikkun olam maybe we have the next slide please sorry.

47
00:08:34.770 --> 00:08:36.330
Lillian Faderman: Are we may we have the next slide.

48
00:08:38.370 --> 00:08:40.350
Lillian Faderman: So this is a mouse Shamil.

49
00:08:41.970 --> 00:08:53.130
Lillian Faderman: Harvey top very proudly about his immigrant grandfather now from home, I think he learned a lot about the concept of tikkun olam.

50
00:08:53.910 --> 00:09:04.980
Lillian Faderman: And non discuss the federal that marcia was from he'd been a dairy man kind of like a table or milk in shallow millenniums fiddler on the roof.

51
00:09:05.820 --> 00:09:19.200
Lillian Faderman: He came to America and His story was, I think, very typical of the immigrant American success story, he had married in the shtetl in 1889.

52
00:09:19.740 --> 00:09:27.180
Lillian Faderman: A very quickly had five children with his wife, when the youngest who happened to be harvey's father was six months old.

53
00:09:27.690 --> 00:09:39.510
Lillian Faderman: masha decided that he would go to America and he would make his fortune he had a stepbrother in Kansas city Kansas, and he left his wife and kids behind which very often.

54
00:09:39.990 --> 00:09:50.970
Lillian Faderman: happened because he couldn't afford to bring them to once he got to Kansas, he he had had vague notions about starting a dairy farm.

55
00:09:51.390 --> 00:09:59.040
Lillian Faderman: He discovered he couldn't buy land, because it was too expensive, so he went to work in his stepbrothers dry goods store.

56
00:09:59.460 --> 00:10:07.380
Lillian Faderman: He just hated Kansas city hated the stockyards that were close by his wages were so small that it couldn't send for his family.

57
00:10:07.860 --> 00:10:13.890
Lillian Faderman: And so after three years, he went to New York City he had a distant relative on long island.

58
00:10:14.430 --> 00:10:25.320
Lillian Faderman: He went to the relatives home originally and then he bought a peddlers pap he started pedaling door to door soon he changed his name to Morris milk.

59
00:10:25.740 --> 00:10:36.420
Lillian Faderman: He bought a little store he sent for the family and eventually he opened the first department store on wood mere long island, which is where Harvey was born.

60
00:10:36.840 --> 00:10:45.870
Lillian Faderman: He invested in real estate he became quite wealthy I think if he had returned to yano skiffs they would have thought that he was a.

61
00:10:46.170 --> 00:10:53.310
Lillian Faderman: Noble man he looked very different, as you can see in this picture from the way he looked when he first arrived.

62
00:10:53.850 --> 00:11:05.520
Lillian Faderman: He became a philanthropist he started the first synagogue on wood mere long island, he was very generous to Jewish causes, he was also an activist.

63
00:11:06.120 --> 00:11:15.600
Lillian Faderman: I discovered so many stories that really reminded me of the sort of thing that Harvey might do, for instance, there was an exclusive country club.

64
00:11:16.200 --> 00:11:26.370
Lillian Faderman: near would more with me or it was called the rockaway hunt club and typical of those days it wouldn't allow Jews to join and so he helped start.

65
00:11:27.000 --> 00:11:41.610
Lillian Faderman: The would mirror country club which was a Jewish country club, but it was open to everyone, he was a man who did well and who did good, and I think he became harvey's main role model can we have the next slide please.

66
00:11:45.300 --> 00:11:57.270
Lillian Faderman: So the person in the middle is mini harvey's mother, this was taken knott's berry farm I believed in Los Angeles, the two statues on either side or.

67
00:11:57.930 --> 00:12:14.730
Lillian Faderman: 40 niners images of the guys who came to mine gold in California, it was taken when many and her husband came to visit Harvey in San Francisco but they toured around California.

68
00:12:15.630 --> 00:12:22.920
Lillian Faderman: But what I think you could see in this picture if you had a real sense of humor kind of like Harvey I think he got his sense of humor from her.

69
00:12:23.670 --> 00:12:45.420
Lillian Faderman: And I think he also learned about the Colonel from his mother she died in 1962 she was just in her early 60s died of a heart attack because she had carried a 24 pound Turkey to a settlement house for thanksgiving dinner for the poor, may we have the next slide please sorry.

70
00:12:47.880 --> 00:13:00.210
Lillian Faderman: So this is bill milk harvey's father, with whom he had a very difficult relationship, but I, I think that Harvey had things to learn from him.

71
00:13:00.690 --> 00:13:11.460
Lillian Faderman: As well bill was not a philanthropist but he did have a sense of social justice, for instance in 1940 when he was about 10 years old.

72
00:13:11.970 --> 00:13:23.670
Lillian Faderman: The would mirror school district refused to hire a Jewish woman as a music teacher was a big topic of discussion at home and harvey's father who hadn't been very political.

73
00:13:24.090 --> 00:13:37.860
Lillian Faderman: Before he joined the Group who protested to the school board and made them reconsider and I think Harvey learn from that kind of thing how important it was to become an activist and Community matters.

74
00:13:38.850 --> 00:13:50.040
Lillian Faderman: So harvey's ethnic identity as a Jew was firm, even in his youth, but he never had very much religious identity.

75
00:13:50.370 --> 00:14:00.150
Lillian Faderman: His his beloved grandfather was actually the founder as i've mentioned before, of the local synagogue so of course he had to go to a hater and he had to.

76
00:14:00.480 --> 00:14:11.730
Lillian Faderman: Study for his bar mitzvah but his heart wasn't in it, and I think that was particularly after he realized that he was gay and he feared that he would be rejected.

77
00:14:12.390 --> 00:14:34.410
Lillian Faderman: By Judaism, if he were found out this was, after all, in the early 1940s and there was not a single synagogue in the country, just as there wasn't a single church in the country that express sympathy for gay people, and so I think he was very alienated from organized religion, at that point.

78
00:14:35.490 --> 00:14:43.680
Lillian Faderman: Yet when he went to college he went to the New York state college for teachers in Albany which is now suny Albany.

79
00:14:44.550 --> 00:14:55.830
Lillian Faderman: One of the first things he did, is he joined a Jewish fraternity he attended events like shabbat dinners at the campus hillel this was.

80
00:14:56.700 --> 00:15:08.250
Lillian Faderman: In 1947 48 he went to meetings of the intercollegiate Zionist federation of America, he was very excited about the founding of Israel.

81
00:15:08.700 --> 00:15:19.890
Lillian Faderman: And he proclaimed his Jewish identity every chance, he got and I heard from people that I interviewed and the research, I did just charming stories about that.

82
00:15:20.340 --> 00:15:31.800
Lillian Faderman: For instance, he went home on what used to be called Christmas break winter break and he visited his best buddy from their high school days, who was Catholic.

83
00:15:32.250 --> 00:15:46.710
Lillian Faderman: and his friends family was hanging outdoor Christmas lights and Harvey offered to help but lest anyone forget who he was he fashion the section of lights that he was given into a twinkling Star of David.

84
00:15:48.180 --> 00:15:52.890
Lillian Faderman: Also grew up very aware towards me get this anti semitism.

85
00:15:56.460 --> 00:16:07.140
Lillian Faderman: When he was nine, the war in Europe began 1939 he was old enough to understand the talk of his parents and their Jewish.

86
00:16:07.770 --> 00:16:20.040
Lillian Faderman: neighbors and he was particularly affected by the fall of the Warsaw ghetto in 1943 that was just six days before his bar mitzvah.

87
00:16:20.580 --> 00:16:27.120
Lillian Faderman: And he always claimed to remember that the adults in his family, said about the Jews battles.

88
00:16:27.690 --> 00:16:38.520
Lillian Faderman: Against the Nazi troops that surrounded the ghetto that when something that evil descends on the world, you have to fight, even when it's helpless.

89
00:16:38.970 --> 00:16:49.590
Lillian Faderman: And that I think mark TIM, and it helps to explain his will to fight for justice, even when it seemed that the odds of winning were terrible.

90
00:16:50.490 --> 00:17:04.470
Lillian Faderman: The Holocaust became a major metaphor in Harvey speeches, once he entered the political arena, he just kept returning to stories of the Jews and the Nazis.

91
00:17:04.890 --> 00:17:20.460
Lillian Faderman: Especially to exhort gay people to be vigilant and to be ready for battle, it became a trope that he used over and over again in his speeches, may we have the next slide please sorry.

92
00:17:23.430 --> 00:17:36.600
Lillian Faderman: So, for example in 1978 when he was fighting against California is proposition six, which was a absolutely terrible ballot initiative that would have prohibited.

93
00:17:37.350 --> 00:17:50.400
Lillian Faderman: gay people or anyone who said anything nice about gay people even from working in any capacity and the public schools Harvey led the fight against that proposition and he told me.

94
00:17:51.300 --> 00:18:08.820
Lillian Faderman: He told the audiences to him, he spoke things such as quote I cannot remain silent anymore, there was silence in Germany, because no one got up early enough to say what Hitler really was it was just this this constant awareness of.

95
00:18:10.200 --> 00:18:22.290
Lillian Faderman: The threat that had to be protested against couched in the terms of the Holocaust in another another of his speeches he said just as proposition six.

96
00:18:22.620 --> 00:18:35.340
Lillian Faderman: would prevent gay people from teaching in the public schools so 45 years ago that the German law prohibits us from teaching or holding any other civil service positions.

97
00:18:36.150 --> 00:18:50.250
Lillian Faderman: It wasn't just that he kept returning to that trope it was his oratorical style that was so Jewish to was reminiscent of the soapbox speakers on delancey street in the lower East side of the early.

98
00:18:50.700 --> 00:19:01.440
Lillian Faderman: 20th century and he was very aware of that style being the same kind of style during his first campaign he even wrote the letters s.

99
00:19:01.830 --> 00:19:15.300
Lillian Faderman: A P on a wooden box and he brought it with him to street corners, where he stood on top of it to speak about why he should be elected to the board of supervisors, may we have the next slide please sorry.

100
00:19:17.940 --> 00:19:32.610
Lillian Faderman: So this is Harvey in 1973 he was a hippie he also ran for a seat on the San Francisco board of supervisors at that time it was just a year.

101
00:19:33.300 --> 00:19:45.060
Lillian Faderman: After he came to San Francisco for from New York, from the beginning, he was just very aware of himself in his campaigns, as part of an ultra liberal.

102
00:19:45.480 --> 00:19:56.730
Lillian Faderman: Jewish tradition that fought for all of the oppressed, he was champion of gay people, but not only gay people he was also the champion of workers and women and.

103
00:19:57.120 --> 00:20:03.780
Lillian Faderman: Racial minorities in the disabled and senior citizens everyone who suffered discrimination.

104
00:20:04.440 --> 00:20:15.660
Lillian Faderman: He he often said very Riley Jews know we can't allow discrimination if for no other reason than we might be on that list someday.

105
00:20:16.530 --> 00:20:31.800
Lillian Faderman: He also always felt himself to be a double outsider not only as a gay person, but also as a Jew, and even when he was invited inside as he eventually was through his election to political office.

106
00:20:32.310 --> 00:20:41.580
Lillian Faderman: He never let go of his sympathies for the outsiders, and the oppressed from his very first campaign.

107
00:20:42.300 --> 00:20:57.030
Lillian Faderman: He promoted the liberal Jewish values that he'd learned from childhood, for instance, he was asked to fill out a questionnaire by a group that was preparing a voters pamphlet this was in 1973.

108
00:20:57.510 --> 00:21:07.860
Lillian Faderman: And he wrote about how the government wasted taxpayers money by hiring police to arrest people for victimless crimes such as homosexuality.

109
00:21:08.130 --> 00:21:19.350
Lillian Faderman: When the money or to go to expanding health care for the elderly and the poor, he said on that questionnaire, there should be an expanded operation bootstrap.

110
00:21:19.650 --> 00:21:29.040
Lillian Faderman: To help more minorities and young people go into business for themselves, he said that hard drug addicts should help instead of thrown into prison.

111
00:21:29.460 --> 00:21:44.880
Lillian Faderman: And an answer to a question about civil rights he wrote using the language of 1973 yes civil rights for all, especially gay especially black especially Mexican especially oriental.

112
00:21:45.780 --> 00:21:55.380
Lillian Faderman: He lost that race for supervisor the 1973 race because San Francisco just wasn't ready for an unknown politician.

113
00:21:55.770 --> 00:22:10.320
Lillian Faderman: With a New York accent who looked like Harvey milk did and 1973 with his hair in a ponytail and his mustache but he learned from that he was a very quick learner maybe have been next slide please Ari.

114
00:22:11.790 --> 00:22:15.960
Lillian Faderman: it's hard to believe this is the same guy two years later.

115
00:22:16.980 --> 00:22:29.460
Lillian Faderman: So he changed his style clearly His style was much more sophisticated, but his values were unchanged and this time he managed to get endorsement from.

116
00:22:30.300 --> 00:22:41.310
Lillian Faderman: Various organizations that were not gay organizations such as be longshoreman and organized Labor and we have the next slide please sorry.

117
00:22:43.440 --> 00:22:51.480
Lillian Faderman: So this is Harvey talking to belong foreman San Francisco Bay, you can see from their expression.

118
00:22:52.260 --> 00:22:58.710
Lillian Faderman: which was kind of quizzical that they don't know quite what to make a film but they're very interested and he.

119
00:22:59.550 --> 00:23:06.450
Lillian Faderman: He convinced them, and so they they endorsed him because he convinced them that he really was sympathetic to.

120
00:23:06.810 --> 00:23:16.080
Lillian Faderman: The problems of the working man that he really intended to fight for the problems the working man and he did his homework he knew what their problems were.

121
00:23:16.770 --> 00:23:35.280
Lillian Faderman: He got endorsements also from ecology groups like San Francisco tomorrow, which was the big ecology organization and San Francisco he got endorsements from black groups, and you know groups and Asian groups, and we have the next slide please already.

122
00:23:37.230 --> 00:23:53.520
Lillian Faderman: And he got endorsements from senior citizen groups, because he he told them and he meant it very sincerely, the taxpayers money should be spent on making sure that everyone had decent health care he was particularly interested.

123
00:23:54.990 --> 00:24:07.020
Lillian Faderman: As we are so many years later in the idea of dental care for the elderly, but that was a very novel position and the early 1970s.

124
00:24:08.550 --> 00:24:10.350
Lillian Faderman: He he lost that.

125
00:24:12.960 --> 00:24:24.240
Lillian Faderman: election, but he barely lost it there were six open seats and he came in seven out of a crowded field about 35 people ran for office.

126
00:24:25.470 --> 00:24:41.820
Lillian Faderman: In 1976 he ran again this time he ran for the California Assembly and he lost that too, he was a little naive about democratic politics, he didn't realize about the democratic machine and how.

127
00:24:42.480 --> 00:24:50.490
Lillian Faderman: The powerful democratic politicians had already endorsed art add now Sue was a wonderful liberal but.

128
00:24:51.810 --> 00:25:04.380
Lillian Faderman: Was not K, in any case he lost three elections, he lost 73 he lost 75 he lost 76 but he realized that each time he was getting more and more votes.

129
00:25:04.770 --> 00:25:18.300
Lillian Faderman: Finally, in 1977 San Francisco changed from city wide elections to district elections and so Harvey ran in the district that included the Castro, which was gay.

130
00:25:18.690 --> 00:25:34.650
Lillian Faderman: And haight ashbury which was still pretty hippie and no way Valley, which was fairly liberal he ran against 17 candidates and he got 30% of the vote by now, he was recognized as.

131
00:25:36.360 --> 00:25:42.630
Lillian Faderman: The leader of San francisco's gay community may we have the next slide please sorry.

132
00:25:44.220 --> 00:25:58.860
Lillian Faderman: So this is Harvey with mayor George moscone Harvey took office in January of 1978 one of the first things he did was he introduced a gay rights.

133
00:25:59.280 --> 00:26:08.880
Lillian Faderman: bill, and this is that the signing of the gay rights spill and you could see how happy Harvey is that it was finally signed.

134
00:26:09.390 --> 00:26:24.540
Lillian Faderman: 11 months later, both of these men were killed in November of 1978 Harvey and George moscone were both killed by Dan white a homophobic fellow supervisor.

135
00:26:25.290 --> 00:26:39.480
Lillian Faderman: So why, after so short a time in office and 43 years after his death does Harvey milk still matter I really have the next slide please sorry.

136
00:26:41.100 --> 00:26:54.090
Lillian Faderman: This is Harvey on the board of supervisors and the Chamber, you can see from the stack of papers they're all of the homework that the Board of Supervisors had to do.

137
00:26:54.510 --> 00:27:03.630
Lillian Faderman: I interviewed a couple of people who are on the board with him and they told me that he was always the best prepare and he always did his homework.

138
00:27:04.140 --> 00:27:15.390
Lillian Faderman: Here, he seems to be saying look at all the stuff I have to do, but he did it faithfully he he studied every issue and was very active on the board.

139
00:27:16.500 --> 00:27:24.540
Lillian Faderman: I think he did a lot in those 11 months that can be characterized as an attempt to repair the world.

140
00:27:25.260 --> 00:27:31.950
Lillian Faderman: on a local level, he fought for rent control because he was concerned for the poor, and particularly the elderly.

141
00:27:32.430 --> 00:27:41.610
Lillian Faderman: He fought against the expansion of San francisco's airport, because he believed that a bigger airport would mean more traffic and more pollution.

142
00:27:42.000 --> 00:27:53.190
Lillian Faderman: And more noise and it's so ironic that a couple of years ago a terminal at the San Francisco airport was named after him it's the Harvey milk terminals so.

143
00:27:53.640 --> 00:28:05.040
Lillian Faderman: would be interesting to know what he would make of that but, in any case he he also for fight for issues that resonated far beyond San Francisco.

144
00:28:05.400 --> 00:28:17.370
Lillian Faderman: For example, he fought for the US State Department to close it set a South African consulate in San Francisco to protest against apartheid.

145
00:28:17.790 --> 00:28:29.580
Lillian Faderman: And he convinced the Board of Supervisors that San Francisco should stop investing in corporations and banks that did business with South Africa, and that was the.

146
00:28:29.970 --> 00:28:46.860
Lillian Faderman: Start he was really the leader in this in this thinking, it was the start of municipal movements all over the country to do the same thing by before apartheid ended 112 cities and countries had followed suit.

147
00:28:48.330 --> 00:29:04.500
Lillian Faderman: And, of course, he did a lot that was especially important to the gay community he got the country's most comprehensive gay rights bill passed at a time when other cities were repealing they are gay rights bills, this was the time when and nita Brian.

148
00:29:05.820 --> 00:29:17.280
Lillian Faderman: got Miami dade nita Brian some of you may remember, was a very popular singer of the orange juice lady she did Florida orange juice commercials.

149
00:29:18.180 --> 00:29:30.720
Lillian Faderman: And she was also a religious fundamentalist Miami dade county in Florida had just passed a gay rights ordinance she got the voters to overturn that odd ordinance she.

150
00:29:31.650 --> 00:29:40.620
Lillian Faderman: helped get voters over to overturn gay rights ordinances in St Paul Minnesota and wichita Kansas and eugene Oregon.

151
00:29:41.130 --> 00:29:55.350
Lillian Faderman: And at that time Harvey managed to pass the strongest gay rights ordinance of any city in America is bill protected the people and housing and employment and public accommodations.

152
00:29:55.770 --> 00:30:06.750
Lillian Faderman: And it had teeth in it gave gay people the right to sue if their rights were violated and it became the model for effective gay rights spills all over the country.

153
00:30:07.410 --> 00:30:17.580
Lillian Faderman: He also did other things that were vital for the progress of the gay community, for example, he believed that gay adults had to take moral responsibility.

154
00:30:17.940 --> 00:30:25.530
Lillian Faderman: For gay youth that was an absolutely revolutionary idea in the 1970s, the early.

155
00:30:26.280 --> 00:30:34.020
Lillian Faderman: Homer file organizations were terrified of gay youth they had policies like mashing society.

156
00:30:34.410 --> 00:30:40.800
Lillian Faderman: And the daughters of beliefs, they had policies that said that nobody who was under 21 could join.

157
00:30:41.160 --> 00:30:49.650
Lillian Faderman: And that was because they they feared, of being accused of the stereotype the horrible stereotype that homosexuals molest.

158
00:30:50.040 --> 00:30:59.850
Lillian Faderman: Children, but Harvey thought that gay people had to rise above that fear for something more important, he was the first elected.

159
00:31:00.720 --> 00:31:14.910
Lillian Faderman: politician to publicly declare his determination to help young gay people these days it's it's widely understood that, as a community, of course, we need to be concerned about the welfare.

160
00:31:15.270 --> 00:31:26.130
Lillian Faderman: of young LGBT Q people, of course, we have to make sure that they are not dragged down by bullying.

161
00:31:26.730 --> 00:31:38.340
Lillian Faderman: Nowadays, their anti bullying campaigns such as it gets better there are programs focused on gay youth and every LGBT Q Center in the country.

162
00:31:38.760 --> 00:31:58.530
Lillian Faderman: But that wasn't the case in the 1970s, I think it was harvey's pioneering conviction that gay adults had a responsibility for gay youth had to work for their causes and serve as their role models that really got the ball rolling, and the ideas, no longer debatable.

163
00:31:59.970 --> 00:32:09.060
Lillian Faderman: So last year of harvey's life was glorious because he was just such a force on the San Francisco board of supervisors.

164
00:32:09.510 --> 00:32:27.540
Lillian Faderman: He was the biggest game name in America, but that last year was also very difficult in in just terrible ways he had one terrific victory after another, and he also had one devastating disaster after another.

165
00:32:28.620 --> 00:32:43.350
Lillian Faderman: For instance, he was flat broke he put a lot of money into his for campaigns, he devoted all of his time and energy to being on the board of supervisors and the shop that he ran with his partner Scott Smith.

166
00:32:44.520 --> 00:32:57.510
Lillian Faderman: went broke they went out of business, the supervisor job paid a pittance because of that time it was the very romantic idea of the government of San Francisco that.

167
00:32:58.620 --> 00:33:07.380
Lillian Faderman: People on the Board of Supervisors should be citizens and not career politicians and so he got 90 $600 a year.

168
00:33:08.280 --> 00:33:18.000
Lillian Faderman: that's the equivalent in today's money of $37,000 and, of course, he couldn't live on that and so he had to borrow money constantly from.

169
00:33:18.360 --> 00:33:36.840
Lillian Faderman: Friends just settle his bills and pay the rent and buy groceries and then the worst thing that happened, an absolute horror was that in August of 1978 the man that he lived with jack lira committed suicide.

170
00:33:38.160 --> 00:33:54.750
Lillian Faderman: Maybe it was the terrible things that happened that drove Harvey astonishingly, I think, to the synagogue for the high holidays that October of 1978 just one month before he was assassinated.

171
00:33:55.290 --> 00:34:17.880
Lillian Faderman: He went to shut ours have which was San francisco's case synagogue, and this was perhaps the first time that he gone to high holiday services senses boyhood the rabbi who officiated for those holidays, that I had the opportunity to interview.

172
00:34:18.930 --> 00:34:29.010
Lillian Faderman: said that after the service Harvey went up to him to say how good it felt to finally quote be home in his jewishness.

173
00:34:29.400 --> 00:34:42.690
Lillian Faderman: But i'm going to end my presentation by saying that, in terms of what Harvey stood for I think he never really stopped being quote home in his jewishness and i'll stop here.

174
00:34:54.330 --> 00:34:55.950
Lillian Faderman: i'm sorry I couldn't hear you better.

175
00:34:56.370 --> 00:34:57.540
Eric Marcus: Now I haven't said anything, yet I.

176
00:34:57.540 --> 00:34:57.720
Was.

177
00:34:59.040 --> 00:35:06.480
Eric Marcus: stumbling around trying to move the chat box and Q amp a box, so I could actually read them so William first congratulations on this book.

178
00:35:07.350 --> 00:35:21.060
Eric Marcus: The reviews have been spectacular, which is, as we know, not always the case with a book, so I imagine that's been gratifying just to those of you who are listening, right now, if you'd like to ask a question, please put it in the chat box i'm sorry in the Q amp a box.

179
00:35:22.110 --> 00:35:34.560
Eric Marcus: At and I will get to them at in about 10 minutes, so please do put your questions in the Q amp a box so Lillian did you have any idea that Harvey was so Jewish.

180
00:35:36.450 --> 00:35:59.370
Lillian Faderman: I didn't, in fact, when I first heard of Harvey milk, of course, I heard of him when he was elected to the board of supervisors, he got national attention is being the the first out gay man to win political office there were two lesbians, who had one political office in 1974 but.

181
00:36:00.720 --> 00:36:04.530
Lillian Faderman: He was the first game man I didn't realize, he was Jewish.

182
00:36:05.580 --> 00:36:17.130
Lillian Faderman: Although his his speaking style, as I said earlier, was really a soapbox orator style from delancey street so I should have realized.

183
00:36:18.510 --> 00:36:30.630
Lillian Faderman: It was a such a revelation though to to learn how Jewish he was from the people who knew him that I had the privilege of interviewing I.

184
00:36:30.690 --> 00:36:36.840
Eric Marcus: was surprised in when I reviewed the list of people I included in my book, making history, the original position and making history.

185
00:36:37.830 --> 00:36:49.470
Eric Marcus: I hadn't been tracking the number of Jews in my book, but it was fully a third of the activists were Jewish and I wonder if you have thoughts about that that whether whether.

186
00:36:49.740 --> 00:36:50.280
Jewish.

187
00:36:51.300 --> 00:36:56.910
Lillian Faderman: yeah and I noticed that, too, when I became active in the 1970s.

188
00:36:58.380 --> 00:37:03.630
Lillian Faderman: In the movement and I, I think it was because.

189
00:37:05.250 --> 00:37:27.990
Lillian Faderman: Like Harvey I think there, there was this feeling among gay Jews, that we had to be activists, we had to make things better, we had to be out there, yes, I noticed that so many of the people that I admired, who were active in the beginning of the gay movement where were Jews.

190
00:37:28.470 --> 00:37:33.750
Eric Marcus: And we also have the shadow of the Holocaust, we know we know how bad, it can be yes, yes and.

191
00:37:33.810 --> 00:37:36.810
Lillian Faderman: Harvey, of course, was, as I said, very aware of that.

192
00:37:38.130 --> 00:37:44.310
Eric Marcus: So with that had already been a Harvey milk book by Randy shells, there was a Harvey milk movie so when.

193
00:37:45.810 --> 00:37:46.230
Eric Marcus: i'm sorry.

194
00:37:46.500 --> 00:37:52.680
Lillian Faderman: It was a wonderful movie I think Sean penn was absolutely Harvey milk that buddy did a terrific job.

195
00:37:57.690 --> 00:37:58.170
Eric Marcus: I would you be.

196
00:37:58.830 --> 00:37:59.910
Eric Marcus: interested in doing another one.

197
00:38:00.300 --> 00:38:04.440
Lillian Faderman: i'm sorry you froze for a minute Eric would you repeat that.

198
00:38:04.710 --> 00:38:16.140
Eric Marcus: Yes, of course, it's I live on my 20th street and Chelsea and we joke, that the squirrels chew through the wires but they really do so it's a it's New York City in the 19th century, my question was.

199
00:38:17.250 --> 00:38:24.990
Eric Marcus: Given that there was already a movie and a book about Harvey milk when the published came to you and said we'd like you to do a book why what interested you.

200
00:38:26.880 --> 00:38:39.960
Lillian Faderman: I think it was because I love Randy Schultz book it's terrific the Mayor of Castro street but Randy wasn't very interested in harvey's jewishness and.

201
00:38:40.620 --> 00:38:48.810
Lillian Faderman: That was very interesting to to me, which I first learned about I I guess first studied extensively.

202
00:38:49.530 --> 00:39:05.370
Lillian Faderman: When I was working on on the gay revolution, although I didn't discuss it extensively and the gay revolution, so I thought that, yes, that that would make a terrific subject tell harvey's jewishness influenced his his gay activism.

203
00:39:06.690 --> 00:39:07.080
Lillian Faderman: So.

204
00:39:07.140 --> 00:39:15.480
Eric Marcus: You know the questions are coming in fast and furiously so rather than me ask you more questions to some of these cover things that i'd like to ask i'm going to turn to the list of questions.

205
00:39:16.800 --> 00:39:17.220
Eric Marcus: So.

206
00:39:18.240 --> 00:39:23.280
Eric Marcus: uh huh this comes from Carol did anti semitism figure at all in the murder of Harvey milk.

207
00:39:24.510 --> 00:39:39.030
Lillian Faderman: I don't think so, I think that Dan white was a very disturbed young man, he was only 31 years old, he was certainly very conservative but.

208
00:39:40.320 --> 00:39:55.440
Lillian Faderman: I haven't been able to find any evidence that he was particularly anti Semitic I think it was his homophobia and his upset that he had quit the board of supervisors and then.

209
00:39:56.460 --> 00:40:15.090
Lillian Faderman: could not get his job back mayor moscone said you quit and I can't let you come back and it was Harvey who encouraged mayor moscone to not reverse Dan white's resignation, and I think I think it was.

210
00:40:16.830 --> 00:40:25.770
Lillian Faderman: I think what was primarily behind Dan white's decision that he was going to kill the mayor and kill Harvey.

211
00:40:26.310 --> 00:40:38.310
Lillian Faderman: was first of all, is not being able to get his job back, but secondly, he kept saying to his constituents that San Francisco was going to hell, and it was primarily because of the.

212
00:40:38.880 --> 00:40:55.290
Lillian Faderman: gay activists in San Francisco and the gay gay people all over San Francisco and of course Harvey was in the forefront of that and mayor moscone was very sympathetic to to gay people, and I think that was what was.

213
00:40:56.370 --> 00:40:59.880
Lillian Faderman: Dan white's motivation, rather than anti semitism.

214
00:41:00.210 --> 00:41:02.310
Eric Marcus: I forgotten how young Dan white was.

215
00:41:02.490 --> 00:41:15.840
Lillian Faderman: Yes, he was the youngest person to ever be elected to the board of supervisors and he was absolutely not ready for the job he had been a fireman and he'd been a policeman he.

216
00:41:16.920 --> 00:41:21.780
Lillian Faderman: never went to college he had very conservative notions and.

217
00:41:22.800 --> 00:41:32.790
Lillian Faderman: I think he felt that he was out of his element on the Board of Supervisors came unprepared and was a very uncomfortable situation for him.

218
00:41:33.870 --> 00:41:42.090
Eric Marcus: I thought of Harvey milk is an older person when I first came to know who he was in the 70s, and now I think he was so young, when he.

219
00:41:42.480 --> 00:41:43.650
Eric Marcus: did all of this 40.

220
00:41:44.010 --> 00:41:46.800
Lillian Faderman: yeah 48 when he was killed.

221
00:41:48.930 --> 00:41:55.470
Eric Marcus: um, so this is a question for you do, you have anything to say about Harvey milk service in the navy this comes from, Harold says.

222
00:41:55.800 --> 00:41:56.640
Lillian Faderman: I do.

223
00:41:58.650 --> 00:42:01.020
Lillian Faderman: Something very disturbing for me.

224
00:42:03.090 --> 00:42:15.090
Lillian Faderman: I did a lot of research in there a wonderful archives at the San Francisco public library of Harvey milk's papers are there.

225
00:42:16.290 --> 00:42:28.260
Lillian Faderman: I went through his papers very carefully and among his papers was an Honorable discharge from the navy.

226
00:42:29.130 --> 00:42:35.820
Lillian Faderman: And Harvey had said very often that he got a dishonorable discharge that he was booted out of the.

227
00:42:36.270 --> 00:42:44.190
Lillian Faderman: navy, because he was a homosexual he served four years in the navy it made sense to me that, of course, he would get an.

228
00:42:44.580 --> 00:42:57.120
Lillian Faderman: Honorable discharge, and he said that he was booted out of the navy as a gay activist, because he was sympathetic to so many people who were booted out of the navy, simply because he was gay.

229
00:42:58.140 --> 00:43:08.310
Lillian Faderman: I learned subsequently that that Honorable discharge was forged he was indeed booted out of the navy.

230
00:43:09.180 --> 00:43:18.300
Lillian Faderman: That was so fascinating to me and the archivist this one wonderful archivist at the San Francisco public library TIM Wilson.

231
00:43:19.140 --> 00:43:29.910
Lillian Faderman: Who led me to terrific things in the Harvey milk collection he had no idea that that was a forged Honorable discharge, any more than.

232
00:43:30.510 --> 00:43:47.970
Lillian Faderman: I did so, you know it tells such an interesting story about Harvey that that he was so worried that it would ruin his career chances that, of course, if he had the opportunity to get this forge piece of paper, he would and he he did.

233
00:43:48.780 --> 00:43:51.120
Eric Marcus: Do you have any idea how he did or where it came.

234
00:43:51.120 --> 00:43:52.800
Lillian Faderman: From no idea how.

235
00:43:55.140 --> 00:44:02.100
Lillian Faderman: And I have since scrutinized that piece of paper, it looks like the real thing to me, but he.

236
00:44:03.390 --> 00:44:05.280
Lillian Faderman: Also, since looked at.

237
00:44:06.390 --> 00:44:06.810
Lillian Faderman: The.

238
00:44:08.250 --> 00:44:21.180
Lillian Faderman: papers that show that he was under investigation and he bought a less than Honorable discharge it's called it wasn't a dishonorable discharge, but it was a less than Honorable discharge.

239
00:44:21.360 --> 00:44:25.050
Eric Marcus: To that mean that he was then not entitled to any of the GI benefits.

240
00:44:25.260 --> 00:44:41.550
Lillian Faderman: Yes, it did mean that and he was very proud of his service he had a navy belt buckle that he constantly war, even to the date of his assassination there's a.

241
00:44:42.960 --> 00:44:56.160
Lillian Faderman: gay an LGBT Q Museum in San Francisco and for a while they had in may still have the suit that Harvey war, when he was assassinated, including that belt buckle that.

242
00:44:57.300 --> 00:44:59.730
Lillian Faderman: navy belt buckle very proud of.

243
00:45:00.120 --> 00:45:03.000
Eric Marcus: Well, he was certainly aware of, of how people's lives were ruined.

244
00:45:03.060 --> 00:45:04.650
Eric Marcus: By being out of the military.

245
00:45:04.680 --> 00:45:06.900
Lillian Faderman: Yes, and he talked about it a lot.

246
00:45:09.780 --> 00:45:15.810
Eric Marcus: of how did his parents react his parents and wouldn't be here and i'm a place i'm familiar with, since I grew up in Queens.

247
00:45:16.740 --> 00:45:24.480
Eric Marcus: I can tell you how they grew up in kew gardens how they reacted and your gardens, how did his parents and wouldn't be react to him coming out to the ever did they ever know who's gay.

248
00:45:24.750 --> 00:45:38.700
Lillian Faderman: No, no, his mother died in 1962 he was very closeted in 1962 for a while his lover was Craig rodwell who became a major figure.

249
00:45:39.630 --> 00:45:51.750
Lillian Faderman: In gay activism, he was there at the stonewall riots Harvey actually dropped Craig at least partly because Craig was such an activist Craig had.

250
00:45:52.500 --> 00:46:04.950
Lillian Faderman: At one point, he was trying to organize a meeting in the early 1960s of gay people he went around Greenwich village and wherever he saw on mailboxes.

251
00:46:05.700 --> 00:46:15.810
Lillian Faderman: Two names of the same sex he stuffed a circular for the meeting into the mailbox and he told Harvey about it and Harvey was horrified he said.

252
00:46:16.200 --> 00:46:26.010
Lillian Faderman: you're going to upset them so much there'll be so worried now how can you do something like that so Harvey was not an activist in 1962 he was very.

253
00:46:26.400 --> 00:46:35.160
Lillian Faderman: closeted his mother died in 1962 never really knowing that Harvey was gay, although she might have suspected.

254
00:46:35.730 --> 00:46:49.650
Lillian Faderman: He had a very troubled relationship with his father never told his father that he was gay his father lived until 1974 and Harvey had been running for political office by then.

255
00:46:50.280 --> 00:46:54.330
Lillian Faderman: So his father could have found out through the newspapers that.

256
00:46:55.230 --> 00:47:05.010
Lillian Faderman: Harvey was a gay man running for political office, except that his father was blind by the and didn't read newspapers so his father never knew about it.

257
00:47:05.490 --> 00:47:13.020
Lillian Faderman: And I think that Harvey was always troubled that he didn't come out to his parents, I think it made for.

258
00:47:13.830 --> 00:47:22.320
Lillian Faderman: A very difficult relationship that he had to be dishonest, particularly with his father, and I think it was because of that that.

259
00:47:22.860 --> 00:47:32.550
Lillian Faderman: One of his major messages to the gay community was that you have to come out, you have to come out to everyone, he was one of the first.

260
00:47:33.390 --> 00:47:44.430
Lillian Faderman: politic the first politician gay politician to say that that it's important that you come out to your parents you come out to your friends, you can add to your employer's.

261
00:47:44.790 --> 00:47:54.420
Lillian Faderman: it's, the only way gay people will make political progress it's, the only way we'll win our rights he wasn't the first gay person to say at the.

262
00:47:55.650 --> 00:48:07.170
Lillian Faderman: gay Liberation Front headed magazines that they started in 1969 called come out, but he was the first politician to say that.

263
00:48:08.220 --> 00:48:15.270
Lillian Faderman: He was the first person to spread that message to me a huge segment of the public.

264
00:48:15.930 --> 00:48:32.430
Eric Marcus: it's so striking to me that that he didn't come out because I wasn't aware of that, because he was so he was so public in saying come out and visibility was so key, I can only imagine how painful it was for him.

265
00:48:32.850 --> 00:48:39.990
Lillian Faderman: It was painful yes and I when his father died, he told someone that I interviewed.

266
00:48:40.440 --> 00:48:58.140
Lillian Faderman: Very regretfully, that he couldn't mourn because they never had a relationship, and the reason they didn't have a relationship was that his father didn't know who he was and he felt that he couldn't tell his father who he was so he learned from that, I think.

267
00:48:58.710 --> 00:49:12.270
Eric Marcus: There are so many surprising things that you came across that i'm a little reluctant to ask you what was most surprising, but among the many things that you discovered what were some of the things that surprised you Besides the fact he was so jute so culturally Jewish.

268
00:49:12.510 --> 00:49:18.210
Lillian Faderman: Yes, that that was the most interesting thing to me, is, I wrote the book for.

269
00:49:19.110 --> 00:49:29.640
Lillian Faderman: Yale and the people that I interviewed it told me wonderful stories about his jewishness just one other story that I tell in the book that I absolutely love.

270
00:49:30.150 --> 00:49:42.840
Lillian Faderman: Once he was elected to office in the beginning, he had an open door policy and his buddies from the Castro would just drop by and he realized he couldn't get any work done.

271
00:49:43.410 --> 00:49:53.790
Lillian Faderman: But he also had another constituent a little old Jewish lady by the name of henrietta abrams who just loved him, and she would come.

272
00:49:54.360 --> 00:50:15.090
Lillian Faderman: visit him regularly every week, she would take a couple of buses bringing a box of cookies for his sweet tooth it was an cronenberg his assist harpies assistant to told me the story, so they would sit in his office and munched cup cookies and talk unified and he loved that he just loved.

273
00:50:16.590 --> 00:50:20.460
Lillian Faderman: Your phrases and the Yiddish past.

274
00:50:21.660 --> 00:50:36.780
Lillian Faderman: So I love stories like that, but there were other stories that that surprised me he he was very human in his frailties and I didn't want to hide that.

275
00:50:37.380 --> 00:50:50.490
Lillian Faderman: I wanted to present him warts and all and he had a lot of boards and I loved him I ended up loving him after I learned about those words to and I.

276
00:50:50.940 --> 00:51:03.600
Lillian Faderman: I hope my readers end up loving him as well, even though he had these words I think he wasn't he was wonderful to humanity, I think, in personal relationships, he.

277
00:51:04.140 --> 00:51:30.810
Lillian Faderman: wasn't always wonderful, just like every human being on earth, I think he he was not a perfect guy and I don't think it's the job of the biographer to hide that stuff, and so I I never hide it, although I think he was an admirable figure and a lovable figure he he he had faults.

278
00:51:31.980 --> 00:51:33.780
Eric Marcus: Roberta has asked if you ever met Harvey.

279
00:51:34.680 --> 00:51:37.890
Lillian Faderman: No, I didn't to migrate print yeah yeah.

280
00:51:38.400 --> 00:51:47.430
Eric Marcus: um can you speak about his relationship and this comes from Wendy can you speak about his relationship with and the importance of the gay women's community and his campaigns for office and against.

281
00:51:47.430 --> 00:51:48.090
Lillian Faderman: prompts yes.

282
00:51:48.300 --> 00:51:51.750
Lillian Faderman: that's an excellent question that I address at great length.

283
00:51:52.890 --> 00:52:10.710
Lillian Faderman: There was a huge lesbian feminist movement in the 1970s, particularly in San Francisco but in big cities all over the country, and they were opposed to Harvey in the beginning, at one point he started.

284
00:52:12.180 --> 00:52:23.400
Lillian Faderman: This campaign to to buy gay he wanted people to frequent gay shops, he was visited by very left wing.

285
00:52:24.000 --> 00:52:33.480
Lillian Faderman: lesbian feminist who said he was a damn capitalist and he was just supporting capitalism and he held his own talking about how important it was to support.

286
00:52:33.990 --> 00:52:50.850
Lillian Faderman: gay businesses, but he also realized that he had to address the lesbian community and he did something very clever he he goddesses assistant a wonderful woman who was a lesbian at that time and cronenberg.

287
00:52:51.870 --> 00:52:58.530
Lillian Faderman: Who was very popular in the lesbian community and she was able to convincingly.

288
00:52:59.700 --> 00:53:12.270
Lillian Faderman: tell other lesbians in San Francisco why Harvey milk was pro lesbian was in favor of their cause would not neglect them when he was when he was.

289
00:53:12.990 --> 00:53:31.200
Lillian Faderman: elected to public office and then he did another very good thing, I think he was invited to debate with the terrible state Senator john briggs who had sponsored that initiative that I referred to earlier, that would have outlawed.

290
00:53:32.820 --> 00:53:39.480
Lillian Faderman: Homosexuals or anyone who said anything nice about gay people from working in the public schools.

291
00:53:40.470 --> 00:53:49.260
Lillian Faderman: Harvey agreed to debate him on TV and cronenberg said, I think you need to get a lesbian to debate.

292
00:53:49.680 --> 00:54:10.530
Lillian Faderman: on your side is your partner, and he invited Sally gearhart, who was a wonderful woman who died recently very eloquent lesbian and that really charmed the lesbian community, they would campaign together and Sally told me I interviewed her before she died she told me that.

293
00:54:11.640 --> 00:54:23.460
Lillian Faderman: whenever they would be on the campaign trail together at the end of their talk Harvey would hold up her arm and say your next San Francisco supervisor, that is, he would help.

294
00:54:24.120 --> 00:54:35.490
Lillian Faderman: Her he promised to win a seat on the San Francisco board of supervisors, so he made his peace with lesbians and I think it was genuine I think he.

295
00:54:35.970 --> 00:54:45.570
Lillian Faderman: He really did sympathize with the problems that lesbians had and San Francisco and everywhere, and I think it was an cronenberg who.

296
00:54:46.260 --> 00:54:54.390
Lillian Faderman: helped him understand the problems and so he That was the time when the ERA the equal rights amendment.

297
00:54:55.110 --> 00:55:10.440
Lillian Faderman: was almost at the verge of passing and and cronenberg educated him about the equal rights amendment and, in so many of his speeches he talked about the importance of supporting the ERA the equal rights amendment.

298
00:55:11.280 --> 00:55:20.130
Eric Marcus: I have a couple of more questions for you, before I turn this back over to Ari, although of course I could ask you it's such a treat to have this conversation with you like I.

299
00:55:20.430 --> 00:55:25.410
Eric Marcus: can do this for all afternoon here in New York City, I know it's morning, where you are.

300
00:55:27.600 --> 00:55:34.320
Eric Marcus: A question from Joanne says thanks for for your wonderful presentation and this new angle of Jewish historical appreciation for life of Harvey milk.

301
00:55:35.640 --> 00:55:44.790
Eric Marcus: knowing your extensive expertise and LGBT Q literature and history, I wonder if you are familiar with Leslie newman's 1988 collection of short stories a letter to Harvey milk.

302
00:55:44.940 --> 00:55:56.880
Lillian Faderman: I am and Leslie is a friend and i'm I admire her work very much for those of you who don't know she's the author of heather has to mommy us.

303
00:55:57.330 --> 00:56:16.680
Lillian Faderman: which was actually read into the Congressional record, because the right wing thought it was so shocking that little kids would be taught that there were some families where there were two mothers, that is, lesbian families with children, but yes, I admire leslie's work very much.

304
00:56:17.730 --> 00:56:31.320
Eric Marcus: Looking back over your long life and the changes that you have seen and Harvey comes early in we're in the middle of your life, I wonder what your thoughts are reflecting back on the changes you've seen.

305
00:56:32.400 --> 00:56:45.270
Lillian Faderman: Over these many decades, you know I came out into the lesbian community in the 1950s and at that time we were all criminals to the law and.

306
00:56:45.660 --> 00:57:06.390
Lillian Faderman: crazies to the psychiatric profession and sinners to synagogues and churches and subversives at that time to the federal government, it was thought that if we had important jobs, we would somehow leak government secrets to the Soviets.

307
00:57:08.220 --> 00:57:20.160
Lillian Faderman: I think at that time, if anyone had told me that I would see the day when we could get married when we could serve openly in the military.

308
00:57:20.700 --> 00:57:39.930
Lillian Faderman: When there were major movies and major TV programs about us when to be a homophobe was almost as disgusting as to be a racist If anyone had told me that I think I would have thought in the 1950s, that they were smoking too much pot.

309
00:57:41.430 --> 00:57:56.490
Lillian Faderman: simply could not have believed that that things would become so much better than they had been in the 50s and the 60s and the 70s, of course, the 80s, was a period of tragedy for.

310
00:57:59.100 --> 00:58:01.380
Lillian Faderman: The progress has been remarkably.

311
00:58:01.440 --> 00:58:15.270
Eric Marcus: it's extraordinary I feel now at this age, like some of the people I interviewed felt who had been so who'd been the movement in the early 50s that they just they couldn't even adjust things have moved so quickly that they felt like dinosaurs.

312
00:58:15.660 --> 00:58:27.180
Lillian Faderman: Absolutely, and I have to say to that, I think, in some ways Harvey was partially responsible for it by insisting that we had to come out that has made.

313
00:58:27.720 --> 00:58:39.660
Lillian Faderman: All the difference that that we have come out and now now most of America knows that they know someone gay or lesbian or gay or bi or trans or queer whatever.

314
00:58:40.140 --> 00:58:52.020
Lillian Faderman: It didn't used to be the case, it used to be that most of America thought that we were all child molesters lurking in the shadows ready to jump on some 14 year old kid and.

315
00:58:52.530 --> 00:59:02.670
Lillian Faderman: Harvey is right by saying they have to know that we're your sons and daughters and brothers and sisters and co workers and neighbors and it's made all the difference yeah.

316
00:59:03.960 --> 00:59:12.030
Eric Marcus: i'm gonna turn this back to our either is still some questions I left that I didn't get to ask you, but we've run out of time, so all right back to you and thank you.

317
00:59:12.330 --> 00:59:15.780
Lillian Faderman: So much Thank you so much here it's so good to see you and.

318
00:59:17.550 --> 00:59:24.540
Ari Goldstein: It really is our privilege to listen to you both to see your presentation Lillian in your enriching conversation, thank you both so much.

319
00:59:25.140 --> 00:59:25.620
Lillian Faderman: Thank you.

320
00:59:25.650 --> 00:59:35.880
Ari Goldstein: For, thank you to our audience for joining us, especially during LGBT Q history month and to our wonderful partners at CBS T Robbie James her opening comments.

321
00:59:36.210 --> 00:59:43.860
Ari Goldstein: You can order lillian's book at the link in the zoom chat you can also explore more about the museum and support our work, but the link in the zoom chat.

322
00:59:44.130 --> 00:59:54.120
Ari Goldstein: mentioned that Eric has done a couple of great programs with us, including a fascinating interview with Robert beachy about gay life and y mar Germany in 2019 so we'll send everyone.

323
00:59:54.540 --> 01:00:04.530
Ari Goldstein: A follow up email tomorrow that includes several of these links and, most importantly, the recording of today's program rubber James any closing comments.

324
01:00:06.870 --> 01:00:12.540
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: I was right, I definitely learned a lot more, and thank you Eric and thank you Lillian.

325
01:00:13.650 --> 01:00:24.030
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: I it's amazing the richness of one life and a very complex life, as you say, and I hope that we all can continue.

326
01:00:24.750 --> 01:00:37.230
Rabbi Marisa Elana James: Understanding who some of our ancestors are who may not be included in the canon of who we have been taught our ancestors, but who absolutely are the people on whose shoulders, we stand today, thank you.

327
01:00:38.040 --> 01:00:40.410
Ari Goldstein: Thank you take care, everyone.

MJH recommends

Dive Deeper Into Harvey Milk’s Story
Lillian Faderman’s book Harvey Milk: His Lives and Death, published by the Jewish Lives series, was a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award. Order your copy here and use the code “MILK” for 25% off plus free shipping.

Learn About Gay Life in Pre-War Germany
Before the Nazis came to power, Berlin was dotted with street-side booths circulating gay activist literature and evening drag balls. In 1919, the city became home to the pioneering Institute of Sexuality, founded by German Jewish physician Magnus Hirschfeld. Learn about gay life in Weimar Germany in this Museum program with Eric Marcus and Robert Beachy.

Discover New York’s Gay Jewish History
LGBTQ Jewish New Yorkers—including composer Leonard Bernstein, poet Allen Ginsberg, and the founders of CBST—have made a profound impact on the city. Learn about New York’s gay Jewish history in this Museum program with the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project.

Listen to Eric Marcus’ Podcasts
Eric Marcus is the founder and host of Making Gay History, a podcast that brings LGBTQ history to life through the voices of those who lives it. He’s also the co-producer of Those Who Were There: Voices From the Holocaust, the only podcast dedicated to sharing the history of the Holocaust through the first-hand testimonies of survivors and witnesses. Season 2 of Those Who Were There was co-produced by the Museum of Jewish Heritage.