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An Open Letter to Rosie
Jones
By
Pat Griffin
Special to
Outsports.com
Dear Rosie,
Thanks for
coming out publicly as a lesbian professional golfer. As you
made clear in your New York Times column, the gap between being out
to close friends and family and coming out publicly to fans and
potential corporate sponsors has been huge. I appreciate the leap
you have made across that chasm, one not many active professional
athletes choose to make. Most gay and lesbian pro athletes who have
chosen to come out did so after or close to retiring from active
competition. You join an elite group--including Martina Navratilova,
Amelie Mauresmo, Rudy Galindo, and Carrie Webb--of lesbian and gay
pro athletes who continue to compete after they come out.
Because lesbian and gay pro athletes have been so closeted, we
celebrate each coming out as another step toward the elimination of
homophobia and heterosexism in athletics. Your coming out forces
opponents of lesbian and gay rights in and out of athletics to face
the contradictions of their own prejudices. Your coming out provides
another role model for young lesbian and gay athletes and for
straight athletes too. Your coming out pulls back the veil of
secrecy and fear that hides the reality of lesbian and gay
participation in sport at all levels and reveals the hypocrisy of
silence from leaders in athletics about lesbian and gay coaches and
athletes.
I appreciate and respect your decision to come out on your own terms
– when, where, and how you chose to tell the world that you are a
lesbian. I believe these decisions should be made by each of us
according to our own sense of readiness. As a professional athlete
this means a readiness for the additional media attention focused on
you as a lesbian golfer rather than just a golfer. Coming out means
you have a readiness to lose some fans who cannot accept you as a
lesbian and winning new respect and admiration from others who
applaud your openness. You might lose some potential corporate
sponsors, but you might also gain others.
You will also learn that being publicly out, being honest and true
to yourself, and shedding that automatic filter you developed to
partition your private life from your public one is wonderful and
freeing. You might even play better golf with the energy this
decision will free up for you! I wish you the best as you start this
journey.
I would like to ask you about one thing you said in your coming out
statement though. You said, “I know that coming out in today’s
politically supercharged environment surrounding gay issues has the
potential to spin into something I do not intend.” You then tell
readers that you have “strong feelings” about gay and lesbian rights
and that you vote, but you tell us, “first and foremost, I am a
proud and blessed member of the LPGA and a professional athlete, not
an activist.”
I am wondering what this means, that you do not intend to be an
activist. What do you think an activist is? And why do you see it as
incompatible with being a professional athlete? This raises
questions about whether or not any lesbian or gay public figure who
comes out in this “politically supercharged environment” can truly
claim that this is merely a personal statement rather an inherently
political act. Is it realistic to expect those of us who proudly
claim the activist label to applaud your coming out and not wish for
you to use your public celebrity in some way to advance the cause of
lesbian and gay civil rights in or out of sports?
I’m wondering, Rosie, what you won’t do as a non-activist. Will you
expect us to never again allude to your being a lesbian now that you
have come out? Having made your coming out declaration will you “in”
yourself by refusing to talk about it in public anymore? You would
have company in this non-activism. Carol Blazejewski, the general
manager of the WNBA N.Y. Liberty, and your own colleague, Patty
Sheehan, have taken this approach to coming out.
Will you decline to speak on behalf of making sports safe for young
lesbian and gay athletes? The emerging movement to make sports safe
and welcoming for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender people needs
out professional athletes like you who now have a forum and can
reach audiences other lesser known activists and educators like me
cannot hope to touch.
If you decline to be an activist, I am wondering if your coming out
is merely a personal statement necessitated by signing on with a gay
travel corporate sponsor? And though I am happy for you and thrilled
that we have one more openly lesbian professional athlete to claim,
we in the LGBT sports movement will miss your presence at our side
in this particular civil rights battle.
So, Rosie, I encourage you to think about redefining your definition
of activism to make it something that will be compatible being a
professional athlete. Be an activist in a way that fits you and your
career. Please don’t turn away from this opportunity. Decide what
you can do with your new status and forum that elevates your coming
out beyond a personal statement. Because you are a public figure you
have a forum. You can help to change perspectives, save lives, end
discrimination, make the world of sport a safer place for the young
athletes who come after you. You have an opportunity so few us
toiling in the LGBT sports movement get – What you choose to do now
makes a difference.
In the end, you can choose when and how to come out, but this act
cannot yet be only a personal statement. You may choose to be a
non-activist, but that is a political choice. One I hope that, as
you get used to being an “openly lesbian” pro athlete, you will
reject.
I wish you the best,
Pat Griffin
Lesbian Educator and Proud Activist
www.lesbianandgaysports.com
Griffin played basketball and field
hockey at the University of Maryland and coached at the high school
level. She is also a prolific author on issues of sexism and
homophobia in sports. Griffin is a professor in Social Justice
Education at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her research
and writing interests focus on heterosexism and homophobia in
education, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender teachers and
students, and heterosexism and homophobia in athletics, with a
particular interest in women's sports.
March 23, 2004 |