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Two-Spirit


by Susan Stryker, Director, GLBT Historical Society


In honor of American Indian Heritage month, it seems only fitting to point out the inspiration that the GLBT movement has drawn from the native "two-spirit" tradition for more than 30 years. Pictured here is Harry Hay, a Euro-American man who founded the pioneering "homophile" organization, the Mattachine Society, in Los Angeles in 1950.

As a child on his relative's western Nevada ranch, Hay had had a life-altering encounter with Wovoka, the legendary Indian spiritual leader credited with originating the Ghost Dance religion in the late 19th-century. According to Hay's biographer, Stuart Timmons, the conceptual framework Hay developed for understanding homosexuality was patterned on the American Indian "berdache" institution, in which individuals in some tribes adopted social gender roles that contradicted European cultural expectations for people of their particular biological sex.

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    About Susan Stryker


  • Hay later became directly involved in the Native American political movement, helping establish the Committee for Traditional Indian Land and Life in 1967. He spent several years in the 1970s living in the pueblos of New Mexico, an experience that deepened his long-held conviction that saner, healthier, life-affirming alternatives to modern capitalist society cold be found in traditional Native American cultures.

    Native American and white gay influences spread in both directions. Building on ties with the national gay liberation and feminist movements that Hay had helped forge, Randy Burns and Barbara Cameron founded Gay American Indians in San Francisco in 1975. Hay became involved with the Radical Faeries, a gay men's spiritual movement that drew its inspiration in part from Indian ideas about humanity's relationship to the natural environment, as well as from anti-patriarchal Goddess worship. In the accompanying photo by Walter "Butterfly" Blumoff, Hay wears a sacred Faerie shawl.



     
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