The following are remarks by Susan Sommer at the “Lambda Legal in DC” event held at the Newseum on June 15.
We come together tonight, as a community, united in sorrow, anger and resolve after the tragedy this past weekend in Orlando, when members of the LGBT community were gunned down, on a night celebrating Latinx culture as well.
Young men and women, transgender and cisgender, joined in pride in themselves; in their exuberance to dance and express who they are; in friendship, camaraderie and perhaps romance, had done what so many here tonight have done as well—and in a sense, what we are doing this very evening: building and enjoying community, reveling in the progress that LGBT Americans have made in this country, taking pride in the LGBT and Latinx experience and identity, and exercising the liberty to stand up as LGBT individuals and allies and to expect the same freedoms, safety and pleasures that others in our country enjoy.
We are devastated to think of so many lives lost, so many injured and suffering, so many grieving families and friends, and the deep psychic scars we all will bear from this senseless violence targeting LGBT people and their friends on a tragic weekend night.
And I am angry. I am angry that LGBT people and those living with HIV in our country continue not to be safe in their jobs, in their families, in their communities, in the places where they congregate and seek refuge, in the places where historically LGBT people could find one another and express their sexuality and pride.
I speak not only of this horrible atrocity, as abominable as it was. No, I am angered as well by the daily acts of discrimination and aggression—and violence—that must galvanize us to carry on and continue our work, to double down on our resolve to secure liberty and equality for all.
While a mass shooting with an assault weapon shocks us, as it should, we are painfully aware that individual LGBT people, and especially transgender people of color, over and over are targeted for violence and murder, and that all these acts of violence must end.