Go beyond remembering.

Matthew_shepard_head_shot

Nine years ago today, this young man died a horrible death. You and I–we didn’t know it was happening, we couldn’t help him, but I think we can help others like him. We must, I believe.

Shortly after midnight on October 7, 1998, east of Laramie, Wyoming, 21-year-old Matthew Shepard was robbed, pistol whipped, tied to a fence in a remote, rural area in freezing temperatures, and left to die by two men–Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson–because he was gay. Shepard was discovered by a cyclist eighteen hours later, still alive but unconscious. The cyclist first mistook him for a scarecrow.

He had suffered a fracture from the back of his head to the front of his right ear. He had severe brain stem damage, which affected his body’s ability to regulate heart rate, body temperature, and other vital signs. There were also about a dozen lacerations around his head, face and neck. His injuries were deemed too severe for doctors to operate. Shepard never regained consciousness and remained on full life support. He was pronounced dead at 12:53 a.m. on October 12, 1998, nine years ago today.

There is no reason this beautiful young man should be dead. He should be 30 years old, working in the world at something he cares about, in love, calling his mother on Sundays to say hi, learning how to sail, writing bad poetry, watching reruns, and planning his next vacation. He should be above ground, not below it. And no one should die like that—no one. For a country founded on human rights, we don’t seem to allow for the humanity of others too well, do we? What is it that keeps us in fear and ignorance, instead of curiosity and wisdom? Have we excluded whole groups of people from those human rights? Are ours selective human rights, extended to people in whom we can see ourselves? 

It is an awful anniversary, as is June 7, 1998, the anniversary of 49-year-old James Byrd, Jr.’s horrendous killing, a black man beaten, chained by his neck to the back of a pickup truck, and dragged for miles, surviving through most of the experience until his head and right arm were finally severed when his body hit a culvert. Forensic evidence suggests that Byrd had been attempting to keep his head up. In such a world where that is possible, we have not come as far as we would like to believe; no, no, not nearly far enough. I realize this is hard reading. But knowing trumps avoidance. Looking at trumps looking away. The men who killed him dumped his mutilated remains in the town’s segregated black cemetary, and then went to a barbecue.

James Byrd and Matthew Shepard were attacked on June 7, 1998, and October 7, 1998. It is still happening today, every day. That people kill one another over skin color and sexual orientation shakes me to my core. And yet, being shaken doesn’t do a thing to stop it from happening again. I sometimes feel like I don’t belong and can’t live in a world in which people can hate people for who they are, or sometimes–as in the killings of random people who looked Middle Eastern after 9/11–for who we believe they are. And yet, though the loss of James Byrd and Matthew Shepard is horrible beyond words, I can’t help believing that the kind of hate that is more dangerous is not the kind that leaves a young man hanging on a fence, but the more insidious, hidden kind that lives right along beside him year after year after year, telling gay jokes or laughing at the ones told by co-workers, making snide remarks about how gay something is, disparaging the photographs of gay partners in the newspaper.

In the same way, this fight won’t be won by larger-than-life crusaders, but by single individuals who speak up in management meetings when someone tells a racist joke, by mothers who buy diversity friendly books for their toddlers, by  people like Esther who respond to stereotypic statements with "I don’t see the truth in that," by straight teenagers who join Gay/Straight Alliances at their high schools, by joining a book club to read books that challenge and enlarge our view of reality.

I am not sure that I can embrace the kind of ignorance and fear that would lead people to do these things, but I can learn from it. And as someone who espouses to value diversity—isn’t it those people I should walk straight toward? I don’t honor Matthew Shepard’s memory by merely calling them ignorant, after all; I honor his memory by walking toward them, learning from them, trying to teach them.

It occurs to me as I write this that we are racist even in our hierarchies of national awareness, I fear. James Byrd’s name doesn’t ring many bells when I talk about him in speeches, but Matthew Shepard’s does. Why is that? Young women of color go missing in great numbers each year, yet our national attention is riveted on wealthy, white women: Elizabeth Smart the harpist, Chandra Levy the Capitol Hill intern, Jennifer Wilbanks the runaway bride. Why don’t we know the names of Tamika Huston, Tyesha Bell, or Alexis Patterson? They are missing like their white counterparts, but their names and stories are unknown. Why?

The leading cause of death for pregnant women in the U.S.is murder, disproportionately high for mothers of color, yet People magazine focuses on Laci Peterson and Lori Hacking and not their dark-skinned compatriots like Evelyn Hernandez, her pregnant torso also found in the San Francisco Bay.

Is it less important, less newsworthy, less relevant to lose people of color? Are minority victims, in effect, less human? Is their sorrow not as sorrowful, their tragedy not as tragic? Is it that we can’t see ourselves in them, in their stories, that their missing doesn’t strike to our own vulnerability because we are Not Like Them?

This is not to suggest that we invest in measuring the impact of whose death is more important—it is impossible to do so—it cannot and should not be done. But it is something to notice, something to hold our media accountable to. To play the Oppression Olympics is to dishonor Matthew Shepard, James Byrd, Evelyn Hernandez, Tamika Houston, and yet the disparity of acknowledgment troubles me.

We need to take action, stand up, step out, get uncomfortable. Hate crimes won’t end until those of us who are not hated are as outraged as those who are.

Matthew_shepard_baby_2 Matthew Shepard was someone’s baby, toddler, child, young adult child, now dead. Find a way to honor his memory today. Send his mom, Judy, an email to tell her that you remember on this awful anniversary.

Postscript: One in six hate crimes are motivated by the victim’s sexual orientation. The Matthew Shepard Act recently passed in the Senate. Current federal hate crimes law permits the federal prosecution of a hate crime only if the hate crime was motivated by bias based on race, color, religion, or national origin and the assailant intends to prevent the victim from exercising a "federally protected right" such as the right to vote or attend school. If this legislation is signed by the president, the law will be expanded to protect the GLBT community as well as remove the restrictions on what type of acts can be considered applicable under hate crime law. Hate crime legislation was first enacted in 1968 when our country witnessed acts of violent hate focused at the African-American community. When Matthew was brutally murdered in 1998, the current hate crime statutes did not apply to the crime.

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

12 comments to " Go beyond remembering. "
  • Thanks for the link to Judy’s email Patti…I sent off a message to her. Thanks for encouraging us to take the thought an extra step.

  • Amen. Thank you, Patti.

  • As per usual, you’ve gotten my tear ducts working, but I am thankful. I will do something in the victim’s honor today – thank you for the reminder.

  • Thank you so much for posting this. Every summer I teach a diversity class for preservice teachers and I show “The Laramie Project” to my students. It shows the effect of Matthew Shepherd’s murder on the city of Laramie and explores how the supposed “live and let live” attitude of the citizens belied the prejudice that allowed this horrendous crime to take place in this city. I’m also glad you brought up the huge disparity in coverage between the pretty white women who have gone missing and women of color. A couple of years ago, Dr. Phil did a show on racism, and at the end of the show, talked about the disparity in media coverage of missing young women. An African-American university professor came on the show whose daughter had been missing for three years. She begged the networks to cover the story when her daughter first went missing, but they did not. At the time of Dr. Phil’s show, she was still missing. Dr. Phil posted names and pictures of at least 20 women of color who were missing. I had never heard of any of them. WHY NOT? Are these young women’s lives not as valuable as Chandra Levy’s or Laci Peterson’s or Lori Hacking’s? Do we really care so much about a runaway bride that we have 24-hour coverage, but when a 5-year-old African-American girl gets shot and killed, there’s barely a blip on the radar? Out of curiosity, after that Dr. Phil show aired, I went to his website to view comments on his discussion forum. I could not believe some of the hateful things that people were saying that supported some of the racist attitudes on that show. It’s 2007 now and it’s so difficult to believe that people still think this way. Anyway, thank you for providing Judy Shepherd’s email. I will be writing to her today.

  • I linked to this from my journal.

    Good news:
    In 2004, my son’s High School Play was Larramie

    by 1996, My father was no longer homophobic, just the opposite in fact.

    There are support groups for young teens coming out in High School that are having a positive effect.

    Mrs. Cheney expressed her views about equality for GLBT folks on the Daily Show.

    National Television programs are presenting characters and reality show contestants who are gay and have various personalities (not all fit one stereotype after all).

    etc.

    it’s slow, but, it’s change in the right direction…

  • “,,, The leading cause of death for pregnant women in the U.S.is murder …”

    Actually, no. Auto accidents are a slightly higher cause, and medical misadventures are higher still. Further, a pregnant woman reduces her chance of death by homicide by a significant amount over her non pregnant counterpart.

  • Kate I – I’m sure she will appreciate hearing from you…

    Carla – many thanks for that amen.

    Julie – thanks for taking action today.

    Meg – many thanks for reminding me of “The Laramie Project” – we have so, so much work to do, don’t we?

    Grace – what a great list of the progress we’re making – it’s important to remember those things. thanks.

    Voice of Sanity – I’m always interested to see what stands out from an essay for readers – and I appreciate your writing to let me know what it was in this post that stopped you. Your comment was enlightening, and perhaps I should change that line to read “a leading cause of death” rather than “the leading cause of death…” As someone once said, we often use statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts – for support rather than for illumination. So there’s no doubt that statistics can tell us only so much, and are often more important for what they conceal than what they reveal. That said, the American Journal of Public Health (Mar 2005) found that homicide was a leading cause of death among pregnant women in the United States between 1991 and 1999. The Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance System at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the pregnancy- associated homicide ratio was 1.7 per 100,000 live births. The Journal of the American Medical Association (2001) said 20 percent of Maryland women who died during pregnancy were murdered. Researchers found the same trend in New York from 1987-1991 and in the Chicago area from 1986-1989. According to the CDC, approximately 324,000 pregnant women are hurt by an intimate partner or former partner each year. As reported by NOW in 2003, “Nationally, homicide is a leading killer of young women—pregnant or not. In 1999, homicide was the second-leading cause of death among women ages 20 to 24. It was fifth among women ages 25-34.” Whether “the” or “a” leading cause, it’s far too high, as I’m sure you would agree. Thanks for the thought-provoking additional information.

  • Mainstream media’s blatant tendency to obsess over the plight of white women over women of color infuriates me. Isn’t the rampant coverage of Larry Craig’s restroom incident a form of homophobia? We don’t hear news for weeks on end about heterosexuals who pick each other up–and sometimes engage in sex–in public places. We have come such a very short distance…that sometimes it feels to me like we’re traveling in reverse.

  • Becky

    Amen to that, Sister.

    God bless us, EVERY ONE.

  • This is a subject that must be kept in the light. Many people either don’t believe it is still a problem or don’t care. I come from a very diverse family and have raised my sons to be kind, to stand up to wrong wherever it rears it’s head and never to bully anyone or stand by and do nothing while others do. My youngest son came home one day during highschool wearing a rainbow tie-dyed tshirt with a photograph on the back. He told me he had joined the gay-straight alliance at his highschool. I felt really proud of him, but to be honest I also felt a little worry that it might make him a target of the hatefull people in the world who are capable of doing horrific things to another human being. Thank you for addressing such deep subjects on your blog.

  • carrie

    thank you for posting this website, i’m doing a project on america and the tolerance that we do and dont take, and i’m doing gay marrage and laws, and such. and i came across hate crimes and matthew shepard. your page helps me show eveyone in my class just how much they need to pay attention to other people’s differences and how we need to help change the laws we have and include sexual orientation in the hate crime laws. its absolutly crazy to think about. but again thanks, and have a good day :)

    -carrie

  • Patrick

    This blog is SO right — there needs to be more people out there like you who believe in this cause… more people need to be informed.

    Thank you so very much for writing this. I hope that it can inspire some action and change for others as I know it has for me.

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