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Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel Kennebec Journal Morning Sentinel
Mainers turn out for equal rights
By KEITH EDWARDS
Staff Writer
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel 10/08/2007

AUGUSTA -- Gay and straight people together make up the fabric of small-town communities across Maine, Rep. Elizabeth Miller, D-Somerville, said Sunday.

They serve on the same school boards and town committees. They hold bake sales to raise funds for the same local library together.

So they deserve, Miller said, to have the same, equal, rights.

Miller was part of a crowd of straight and gay Mainers who gathered together on the steps of the Statehouse Sunday to rally for equal rights for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered Americans.

The event, according to the Rev. Mark Doty of Bangor, was the first event in the country this week organized as part of the nationwide "Seven Straight Nights for Equal Rights." Across the country this week, straight Americans are being asked to stand up and assert their respect and support for the gay community.

Mark Hanks and his wife Mary Jude, of Orrington, did just that -- standing, proudly as a family on the Statehouse steps with Hank's ex-wife, Elise Senecal, and her partner, Rindy Fogler, with Hanks' and Senecal's teenage children, Becca and Daniel Hanks, at their sides to speak out for equal rights.

The four adults share parenting responsibilities, they said.

"We came together as a team, with a common goal to raise these children," Mark Hanks said. "A family, no matter how you define it, is built on two things -- love and respect."

Betsy Smith, executive director of Equality Maine, said Maine is better than many states in its protections for gay, lesbian and transgendered people.

But she said those protections need to be extended to include the protections that come with marriage, which she said is a right that should not be restricted to opposite-sex couples.

"One thousand, four hundred protections are automatically bestowed on people who are married," Smith said to the crowd of about 65 people gathered on a blustery Sunday afternoon. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people, "need marriage. We need the same 1,400 protections married people have. Marriage is one of the most honored and respected institutions in this country. It's recognized everywhere. Marriage is an equal right."

Doty said he came to Maine after he was forced out of his leadership of a congregation of 3,200 people in Texas when he was "outed," even though he had never actually been with a man. He lost his wife, his home and his job.

"I've come to Maine and found a different life," said Doty of Hammond Street Congregational Church, UCC, in Bangor. "It really is the way life should be in so many ways. But we still have a ways to go."

Sandra Walker of Bangor said she was kicked out of her church of many years when church officials found out she is a lesbian. She now attends Doty's church, which she said has been great.

"It would be even greater, for me, if the young ones growing up have something more to look forward to than what I had to go through," she said Sunday.

U.S. Rep. Tom Allen, D-1st District, encouraged participants in their fight for equal rights.

"Sometimes it takes a long time to make good things happen," Allen said. "I urge you to keep on fighting for civil rights for all."

Keith Edwards -- 621-5647

kedwards@centralmaine.com

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Aaron White of Winthrop, ME
Oct 8, 2007 11:27 PM
Oh please, the sanctity of marriage was destroyed along time ago by all the "straight" adults getting a divorce. There is absolutely no basis what so ever to say that its between one man and women. If you don't like the idea then don't get married to the same sex... simple isn't it? But stop pestering other people about something that isn't even your business, just because your insecure or uncomfortable with the idea/thought of it. And it is a moral issue, if you think gays shouldn't marry and you think its just your beliefs, but you like gay people and their your neighbors, get down off your horse and see that your not fooling anyone, because it makes you just as ignorant, thats right.. Ignorant as the person who said interracial marriage should be illegal. I've never been so ashamed/pissed off at people I know because they think its not right that a gay couple can get married.. Who in the hell do you think you are telling me what's right and wrong.. Why don't you go to Africa and fix the poor and sick with all your moral authority. Your just a bunch of Jerks. Period. report abuse
RicknVA of Alexandria, VA
Oct 8, 2007 7:53 PM
Every citizen of this country should be afforded the same rights and people should stay out of other people's business. Live your lives and let others live theirs. None of us are perfect in every way and none of us has the right to judge others.report abuse
carol connors of allagash, ME
Oct 8, 2007 5:47 PM
Brian of West Gardiner, I agree with you 100%...report abuse
Joe of Topsham, ME
Oct 8, 2007 4:15 PM
Look this isn't a fight of religious beliefs. This is just for equal rights. We want the same rights as our neighbors, families and friends. Look at how we see it: A straight man/woman can marry any woman/man he/she loves, A gay man/woman can't marry the man/woman he/she loves. In a straight marrige a death of the husband/wife the other has rights to everything they had such as Home, Money, insurance and personal items. A gay couple have no rights to anything unles we have 6 tons of paperwork done to leave it to our partners so it's not taken from them. If it was a choice to be gay do you think anyone in their right mind would choose to live a life that has so much hatred towards them. I know I wouldn't have chose this battle. So tell me how this is fair. We all feel love the same, have the same color of blood, hurt the same, eat the same, we work at the same jobs. There are many of us "GAYS" that the "STRAIGHT" (if I need to put titles on people) pepole can't even tell that we are gay unless we tell them. So why can't we have the same rights? Like I said the is not about religion cause every persons idea or beliefs of religion are different. It all comes down to one thing WE JUST WANT TO BE EQUALS UNDER THE LAW.report abuse

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