As I was posting photos of
my long ago (1955-1956) Navy service aboard the Ti—as
the aircraft carrier USS Ticonderoga was
known to those who served aboard her—to my “Once
Upon a Life—Whitehat Days” board on www.pinterest/doriengrey, I
thought with a combination of awe, anger, frustration, pride, and
sorrow of how far our society has come in regards to our reactions to
being gay in America. And I cannot think of that subject without
thinking of one of my shipmates, North. (We weren't big on first
names in the Navy. I was “Margason,” he was “North.”) We both
worked in the commissary department, charged with feeding the ship's
3,000-plus crew members—all men; women were not allowed to serve on
warships.
I was a 22-year-old gay man
with any 22-year-old's active libido. Yet, unlike my shipmates who
were free to exercise theirs every time we pulled into port, and
usually brag about it later, I dared not act upon mine for fear of
having my homosexuality discovered and being kicked out of the
military in disgrace.
I knew North was gay from
the moment I saw him. Everyone new North was gay, as I'm sure most
knew I was gay, but as long as you remained under the radar, as it
were, other than the occasional snide comment, nothing was said.
Everyone simply accepted North, and because he was a genuinely sweet
kid, everyone liked him. The ship's personnel officer was also
obviously gay; an unpleasant little weasel of a man with a small
pencil-thin mustache and the perpetual glint of a predator in his
eye.
And one morning, while we
were at sea, North did not show up for work. No one knew where he was
or what had happened to him. He was simply gone. Rumors swept through
the commissary department and beyond. Was he hiding somewhere aboard?
If so, why? Had he fallen overboard? Or jumped? The thing was he was
gone without a trace.
Several days later, we
pulled into Naples, and...there was North! He came aboard to pack up
his things, and the mystery of his disappearance was solved. To this
day, I can feel the fury I felt then.
He had been summoned to the
Personnel office and told that a report had been received that a
sailor in Norfolk had “confessed” to being a homosexual, and had
given North's name as someone he had had sex with. The personnel
officer assured North they had no intention of doing anything against
him, but merely needed his signature on a piece of paper verifying
the Norfolk sailor's story. And North...dear, sweet, innocent
North...signed the paper! He was flown off the ship in the
middle of the Mediterranean within an hour, lest he contaminate the
rest of the crew.
North's story was not
unique. There were thousands of stories like his. Thousands of
honest, decent, good people who had volunteered to serve and possibly
give their lives for their country. Treated with contempt, stripped
of dignity, shamed and humiliated before their friends and families.
How could we do this to our own people? It was
incomprehensible to me then. It is incomprehensible to me now.
I knew...as every gay man
and woman who ever served in our country's military knew...not only
how wrong our government's attitudes and policies were, but that it
was inevitable that they would—they had to—change. We were all
Cassandras, seeing the future but not being believed.
Anyone who did not go
through what I and millions of others like me did have no real way of
comprehending what it feels like to realize that society finally
recognizes that Cassandra was right.
I see photos, now, of
service men and women in uniform openly embracing and I cannot find
the words to adequately describe my reaction, other than, possibly
“vindication.”
But mostly, I think of
North.
Dorien's
blogs are posted by 10 a.m. Central time every Monday, Wednesday, and
Friday. Please take a moment to visit his website
(http://www.doriengrey.com)
and, if you enjoy these blogs, you might want to check out Short
Circuits: a Life in Blogs (http://bit.ly/m8CSO1).
3 comments:
You know what I'm going to ask, but I'll ask it anyway. Have you ever tried to find him online? It would be interesting to see where his life took him since then and for the two of you to have the opportunity to compare notes of your travels.
Posts like this always make me wonder about the possibilities and the unanswered questions of what happened to people.
I have indeed often wondered what became of North but thefact is that, as I said in the blog, it was customary aboard ship to never refer to anyone by their first name and, sadly, I do not remember his.
Too bad you never knew North's name, Dorien. I,like Kage and you, would love to know what became of him.
Sorry you and so many others endured this. Not only in the military, but in your everyday lives as well.
Love you, my friend. You, as you already know, inspire me.
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