Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Hundreds Remember Milk, Moscone in Somber Ceremony
A fading light silhouetted the gilded dome of City Hall as the crowd lit small candles in preparation for the vigil in the Castro, the neighborhood up the hill that Milk represented on the board of supervisors in 1978.
In this file photo from April 1977, San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk, left, and Mayor George Moscone are shown in the mayor's office during the signing of the city's gay rights bill. Milk, the late San Franciso supervisor and subject of 'Milk,' the biographical film that opened this week with Sean Penn as the pioneering gay politician who was assassinated along with Moscone 30 years ago Thursday.
(AP Photo/File) There's been a similar celebration every year since Milk's death, but current political and cultural events - the recent release of the Hollywood film "Milk" and the defeat of gay marriage with the passage of Proposition 8 - brought new resonance to the gathering.
"I have to find a new way of bringing Harvey forward," said Michael Goldstein, who stood on the edge of the crowd, holding a large black and white photograph of Milk, in suit and tie. Over one corner of the photo, Goldstein, former president of the Harvey Milk Club, the Democratic club founded by the former supervisor, had pasted a decal remnant of a more recent political battle. It said, "Fight 8."
Thirty years ago Thursday, disgruntled former Supervisor Dan White, also a police officer, shot the mayor and Milk at their City Hall offices. Moscone had refused to reappoint White to a city seat from which he had resigned; Milk lobbied against his reappointment.
Former Mayor Willie Brown, then a state assemblyman, had just left a meeting with Moscone when White came in and shot the mayor. Then White walked down the hallway and shot Milk.
The assassinations plunged the city into grief and mourning that November day in 1978. Tens of thousands gathered at a candlelight vigil in the Castro.
Jonathan Moscone, the former mayor's son, said Friday that his father was "an agent of eternal change," for bringing the city's diverse population into city government.
Stuart Milk, a nephew from Florida who spoke at the vigil, quoted a letter written to his family by his uncle the year he was killed.
"My hope is to leave a world "... a place that embraces difference," Milk wrote in 1978, "not with hate, but with love." Stuart Milk acknowledged the Hollywood producer Dan Jinks, who stood in the crowd, for his new role in keeping his uncle's "message of hope and example of courage" alive in the recently released film starring Sean Penn as Milk.
Milk and Moscone, Brown said, "are two individuals who shaped the nature of politics and public policy in this city." Their legacy, he said, are today's gays and lesbians in politics, such as Supervisor Tom Ammiano.
In an aside that drew laughter, Ammiano began his remembrance with an imaginary meeting.
"I can just imagine Harvey Milk and Sarah Palin," he said, referring to the Republican vice presidential candidate and governor of Alaska.
"Hate your politics," he said, continuing with the reverie, "Love your shoes!"
The assassination of Milk, Ammiano said more seriously, was an effort to silence a movement that his friend started with a simple call to gays and lesbians to come out and become part of community life.
"You can kill the messenger," he said, "but you can't kill the message."



14 Comments so far
Show AllYou can kill the messanger, and only get 5 years for it. Justice?
I knew a couple of guys in CA who killed their wives and only got a couple of years each. Also saw a program once about women in prison who'd killed their husbands. They were there for a long, long time.
My conclusion has been that gays, women, and blacks are disposable, so the killing of any of them is a minor offence. But if any of them kill a white male, then lock them up and throw away the key!
"gays, women, and blacks are disposable, so the killing of any of them is a minor offence."
That is extremely offensive.
Being a women, I totally agree that it's extremely offensive.
Granted, we're a little more civilized, and probably the majority of people don't think this way, but for many it's something they don't even try to gloss over.
I've seen enough and experienced enough as a woman; and I'm old enough to remember when blacks were thought of as only a little higher than cattle, and as the church now does with the gay issue, then it was the bible quotes about blacks and why they needed to be "kept in their place" to make the comment I made.
I understood what you meant instantly. Irony has a vibe that just doesn't resonate with many on comments threads.
And speaking of irony, it's becoming clearer and clearer to me that identity politics turned out to be a Trojan Horse (no offense to Trojans here), or a vaccine that tragically mutated into something as virulent at the thing it was developed to cure.
· Your Obd't Servant
Guess it's probably time to lock up the irony and playing devil's advocate, which will pretty much silence me. I'm not at all sure I know how to speak otherwise.
sorry, now i get it!
Perhaps the most obscene thing after the actual murder itself was it was that it served as the booster rocket of Diane Feinstein's political career.
www.wunderman-comics.com
You are arguing from single instances to general trends. There are plenty of women or black men who have killed white men and only served a year or two. I will not attempt to justify our criminal justice system which I regard as inherently flawed, but I would suggest that all you are saying is continuing the current system of deterrence to gay hate crimes is a solution to the problem. It is not. Both the problem of an unjust and poor criminal justice system and societal homophobia need to be addressed separately.
i lived in sf when it went down. worked at the i-beam and went to school. dan white was homophobic homicidal scum. i can't believe the post i just read by 'wilmoor,' but i am a little innured. this web-sight has a lot of that. arizonacomefindmyscoped30aughtsix. it is buried. letusbenice.
I think Wilmoor was being critical of the differential value placed on human lives.
Joe
Thank you Joe. That was exactly my point.
As an aside, I'm forever amazed at how diverse people are in their interpretations. It's no wonder the world is in the mess it's in.
Who can forget the lame "TWINKIE DEFENSE" used in court by "The Establisment's Own," Dan White, the murderer, that allowed him to go "scott free."
Of course, justice eventually prevailed when, not being able to live with himself, he, soon after, took his own life.
Great article on Milk, Feinstein and Dan White if you care to hear the whole story.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/11/26/MNM514C75R.DTL&tsp=1