Religious school homophobia causes long-term harm. But change is possible.

[Content warning: homophobia; violence; suicidal ideation]

I realised I was same-gender attracted on my first day at a religious boarding school in Brisbane in the 1990s. It was terrible timing, and meant my high school experience there was a living hell.

This was a school that was proud to publish its homophobia in its school rules – homosexuality would not be tolerated because it was not in accordance with god’s will.

It was abundantly clear that ‘coming out’ as gay was simply not an option. To do so would likely be met with punishment. And so I didn’t.

At its worst, I vividly recall a school pastor giving a sermon to a chapel full of 600-or-so year 11 and 12 students, talking about how a child from his former parish had come to see him ‘struggling with confusion’ about who he was. He said the child ultimately committed suicide – before observing this was not the worst thing he could have done.

For many queer kids sitting there that day, like me, the sermon’s underlying message was obvious: much better to be dead than gay.

The school’s overall approach to LGBTQ issues oscillated between that kind of explicit prejudice on one hand, and silence and invisibility on the other (including failing to provide any relevant sex education, which was particularly dangerous at a time when HIV/AIDS was still killing thousands).

Looking back, I think this ‘invisibilisation’ was actually more detrimental in terms of its impact on me, because it meant suffering in silence, completely alone, with the people who were supposed to be looking after me offering no solace.

The climate created by the school’s silence on sexual orientation and gender identity also allowed anti-LGBTQ bigotry to flourish amongst its students.

While I cannot be certain homophobia was a conscious motivator in the multiple physical assaults I experienced in Year 11 (which went unpunished by the school), the fact I was ‘different’ in some fundamental way, left cowered by fear into being withdrawn and isolated, rendered me vulnerable.

I can be more confident homophobia was behind the choice by Year 11 students to bestow on me the ‘Big fat poof’ award at the end of Year 12, in front of both peers and boarding school staff, with the latter doing nothing to respond to it.

Not even to check if I was okay.

That was almost three decades ago, so why I am writing about it now?

Because, with Commonwealth Parliament yet again debating the issue of protections for LGBTQ students and teachers – and yet again looking like letting the LGBTQ community down – there’s two points I want people, and especially politicians, to know.

First, that religious school homophobia, biphobia and transphobia causes serious harm. For me, that meant thinking about committing suicide every single day from the start of Term 2 in Year 8, until the final term of Year 12. Sometimes upwards of twenty times a day.

That is no way for a child to live. And definitely no way to learn, or to grow.

Nor does it suddenly end when the students who are the victims of this prejudice leave the school gates for the final time.

Trust me, I know. Those terrible five years have impacted me for much, much longer than that again.

The hurt and the harm I suffered was a major contributing factor to the lost decade that was my twenties, culminating in my thankfully unsuccessful attempt at suicide around my 29th birthday, more than a decade post-school.

Life got better when I met partner just after I turned 30, but I am not ashamed to admit that even now the trauma from my schooling is something I have discussed with my psychologist multiple times over the past 12 months.

And so, if the Labor Government chooses to break their clear election promise to protect LGBTQ students in religious schools, it won’t just be a betrayal of the students currently enrolled in homophobic, biphobic and transphobic schools – who, as highlighted by Equality Australia’s ‘Dismissed, Denied and Demeaned’ report released on Monday, continue to be vulnerable now.

It will be a betrayal of their futures too, with the impacts continuing to be felt in the 2030s, 40s and 50s.

Second, while it may not initially seem like it, my story is one of hope.

Because those experiences were in Queensland – a state which legislated to protect LGBTQ students in religious schools against discrimination two decades ago, and which is currently consulting on promised reforms to protect LGBTQ teachers too.

Far from causing religious schools to cease to exist, as baseless scare-mongering by groups like Christian Schools Australia assert, the main outcome has simply been that LGBTQ students can finally learn and grow safe from discrimination on the basis of who they are.

And, I’m reliably informed by people whom I trust, that includes at the school I went to. Change is possible.

Sadly, that still has not happened everywhere, with religious schools legally free to discriminate against LGBTQ students under Commonwealth law, and in NSW, WA and SA too.

Commonwealth Parliament can rectify this by immediately implementing the straight-forward recommendations of the ALRC report. If they do, they would be choosing to bestow a brighter future on LGBTQ students right across Australia.

*****

For LGBTIQ people, if this post has raised issues for you, please contact QLife on 1800 184 527, or via webchat: https://qlife.org.au/resources/chat

Or contact Lifeline Australia on 13 11 14.

Five years at a homophobic religious boarding school caused decades of harm.

*****

For an extended account of my experiences at that homophobic and harmful religious boarding school, you can read the following:

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The Year the Commonwealth Government Went MIA on LGBTIQ Issues

[I wrote this piece about 10 days ago, in the lead-up to the anniversary of the horrific events at Victorian Parliament in March last year. Unfortunately, it wasn’t picked up by media outlets – but the past week has made these comments even more urgent, so I am publishing it here.]

One year ago last Monday (on Saturday 18 March 2023), Australians witnessed the horrific sight of neo-Nazis turning up to an anti-trans rally on the steps of Victorian Parliament, holding a banner saying ‘destroy paedo freaks’ and performing Nazi salutes.

It was a chilling reminder of the serious threat posed by right-wing extremism to LGBTIQ communities in general, and trans and gender diverse people in particular.

Rather than being a one-off, that awful anti-LGBTIQ spectacle was just the first in a long line of rallies and related hate speech threatening our communities over the past 12 months.

Within days, so-called ‘Christian Lives Matter’ members engaged in what can only be described as a riot against peaceful LGBTIQ protestors (and NSW Police) in the Sydney suburb of Belfield.

April onwards saw a dramatic rise in threats of violence and intimidation by right-wing extremists across the country, directed to local councils and libraries holding Drag Story Times.

Most recently, the ABC was forced to cancel a Drag Story Time that was to be held in conjunction with the Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras following death threats against their employees.

The attacks on our communities have been terrifying. They have been relentless. And they are part of a disturbing international trend of intolerance.

But where has the Commonwealth Government been when we have needed their leadership? 

They were quick to introduce legislation to ban the display of Nazi hate symbols, later amended to also prohibit the Nazi salute. This was welcome, but addresses only part of the problem.

A group of thugs intimidating trans people with a banner saying ‘destroy paedo freaks’ is a serious issue irrespective of what clothes they wear, flags they fly or salutes they perform.

Sadly, though, we have not seen the Albanese Government respond to the rise in anti-LGBTIQ right-wing extremism with the seriousness it deserves. 

We have not seen or heard clear and consistent condemnation of growing homophobia, biphobia and transphobia, or even of the violent threats against community events.

There has been no commitment to introduce much-needed Commonwealth laws prohibiting anti-LGBTIQ vilification.

And no open engagement with LGBTIQ communities about the threats we face, or additional funds committed to help with our safety.

Instead, it has been left to unfunded groups like Rainbow Community Angels, who attempt to make events like Drag Story Time a safe place for attendees, to stand up against the far-right, unassisted.

It’s possible the Government would say that primary responsibility for these issues lies with states and territories, but these are problems that call for national leadership.

By contrast, faith communities have been actively engaged and largely supported when they have raised concerns about intolerance. 

Government representatives, from Prime Minister Albanese down, have spoken up in recent months against religious hate speech, particularly in the form of anti-semitism. The Government has made repeated promises to introduce religious vilification laws, expected to be tabled within weeks.

[NB Since this piece was written, the Government has confirmed it is pushing ahead with these amendments, separate to the Religious Discrimination Bill and any Sex Discrimination Act changes, meaning it may be the only part of those overall reforms that actually pass.]

And $40 million in Commonwealth funding for the safety of religious organisations was announced by Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus last May (on the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia no less).

The LGBTIQ community can’t even convince the Government to create and appoint a stand-alone LGBTIQ+ Discrimination Commissioner at the Australian Human Rights Commission. LGBTIQ issues remain a part-time, ad hoc responsibility of the Sex Discrimination Commissioner.

Promises to address anti-LGBTIQ vilification, and funding for LGBTIQ community safety, remain nowhere to be seen.

I’m a 45-year old cis gay man. I grew up in Joh Bjelke-Petersen’s Queensland, and survived five years at a deeply homophobic religious boarding school. Coming out of, and coming out after, that environment was tough.

But the rise in overt, targeted, public bigotry over the past 12 months has left me feeling less safe than at any time since the 1990s.

What has made things worse is the silence and inaction of the Albanese Government. This has left me, and many others in our community, feeling forgotten too.

Source: Herald Sun.

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