
NYC Protest Against "Don't Ask, Don't Tell."
New York, NY (PRWEB) -- This Wednesday,
three young adults will enter the U.S. Armed Forces Recruiting Station
in Times Square with dreams of serving their country. Like most
potential recruits, they are motivated by patriotism, family tradition,
ambition, and duty. But, unlike most of the hopefuls who travel to the
nation’s most iconic recruiting station, these young people are openly
gay, and they are not willing to lie about their sexual orientation as a
condition of service.
Curt
Peterson, Kamal Rashad Davis, and Rhonda Davis will all attempt to
enlist this week as part of the nationwide Right to Serve campaign,
which aims to call attention to the injustice—as well as the
administrative and security costs—of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” Since
August, twenty-three fit, competent young people affiliated with the
campaign have attempted to enlist in eleven cities, and all twenty-three
have been turned away because of sexual orientation.
On Wednesday in Times Square, the potential recruits will be joined by
supporters from Columbia, NYU, Pace, and other nearby schools. If the
enlistees are rejected, some supporters will join them in a sit-in at
the recruiting station. More supporters will surround the station on all
of the side streets to vigil and pass out information about the issue.
One of Wednesday’s enlistees, Kamal Rashad Davis, puts this action in
the context of other historic struggles for civil rights: “In the 1960s
my grandfather participated in protests that lead to desegregation of
Girard College in Philadelphia. Both my father and my uncle served in
the military fighting for democracy and freedom throughout the world. I
am proud of their service and I want to continue that legacy. So I'm
standing up for my right to be all that I can be without hiding who I
already am.”
Kamal Rashad Davis will be accompanied by Peterson, a student from
Vassar, and Rhonda Davis, a former Naval officer who was discharged this
summer for violating “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” Prior to her discharge,
Rhonda Davis served as an award-winning Navy journalist and later as a
public affairs officer for New York Navy recruiting district. She will
attempt to enlist in the Army on Monday at a recruiting station near her
home in Long Island, but will join the other New York enlistees in Times
Square on Wednesday. At that time, Peterson will attempt to enlist in
the Army, and Kamal Rashad Davis will attempt to enlist in the Navy.
Leaders of the Right to Serve campaign expect arrests on Wednesday. Thus
far in the campaign, sixteen people have been arrested at sit-ins in
military recruiting stations. These young activists hope to use civil
disobedience to promote national dialogue and reflection on federally
sanctioned discrimination. The Right to Serve campaign is a project of
Soulforce, a national civil rights organization dedicated to ending
political and religious oppression of gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender persons.
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