What’s
it like, being the daughter of a FGP?
Many times, interviews are with the adults who are affected by being both gay and orthodox, and yet there is a significant population of children whose parents or siblings are FGPs. For the first time, we'd like to take a look at that experience from the inside. Today, we'll be interviewing C, a girl who attends a chassidic day school in the United States, and whose mother is a FGP.
If you don’t mind me asking, how old are you right now?
C: 13
How do you identify yourself religiously?
C: Orthodox
If you don’t mind me asking, how old are you right now?
C: 13
How do you identify yourself religiously?
C: Orthodox
C: I’ve always gone to
this school. It’s a very good school if you fit into their mold of who they
want you to be, but if you don’t, then they try to make you fit. It is a very
frum Chassidic school that focuses on raising girls to be wonderful wives. My
school pretends my mother doesn’t exist and that there’s no such thing as gay.
If I want to have friends over, they make up an excuse, like, “Oh, I can’t do
it today.” But that’s every day.
C: The kids don’t give me a
hard time at all. In fact, when we are in a private space and we are talking
about the things that the community doesn’t want us to know, and we talk about
my Mum being gay, they are completely supportive about it. But that’s in
private. In class, they don’t talk about it, but I wouldn’t bring it up either,
because it’s not what you say. Once, in Chumash, there was a word for being
gay, and my teacher got really confused and embarrassed when she tried to
explain what it means. My teacher got very red, and she said, “That’s not what
the Torah wants you to think about” and then she skipped to the next subject.
C: It’s awkward because
it’s like having an elephant in the room all the time, and whenever we have a
shabbos get-together, and they ask which house we should go to, they make
excuses about why they can’t come to my house. If my mother wasn’t gay, we
would always have friends over at the house and there would be events at our
house and also, I would have more friends. It would be much easier and less
isolated for me.
What’s the best thing about having a frum gay mother?
C: I
am opened up to so many things like human rights issues, or deciding on things
for myself and not going with the crowd. I often know a lot more about the
world than my classmates, and I am much more tolerant of people than they are.
I also really love having a big chosen family (Shabbos, Yontiff, of FGPs) because
everyone is so fun and they all come over for Shabbos and Yomtov and they are
very loving and joking. I get to know a lot about what a real relationship
looks like, because most of the FGPs have very solid, kind and
respectful, loving relationships, and that’s a big plus to have that kind of
role model.
C: Sometimes I am confused
about what is right and what is wrong, because at school there seems to be a
very black and white right and wrong and punishments for every little thing, but at home, we try to think about how to
treat people, and what Rabbi Akiva meant by loving everyone, at the same time as doing what the Torah says.
If you could change one thing about the way the
Orthodox community treats your family, what would it be?
C: I wish they were more
open-minded, and thought about being considerate to people as part of the
religion.
What is your greatest fear?
C: I’m afraid that I will
be ordinary.
What is your idea of perfect happiness?
C: Having friends that accept every part of me, having someone who loves me and dancing every day!
C: Being told to do things
when I’m not ready to do them.
What would you like the frum community to do for you?
C: I would like the frum
community to be open to the idea that there is more than one kind of frum
family and more than one way to be frum and that they won’t be hurt by that acceptance.
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