Purpose Prize

Marc Freedman Portrait

The Latest from CoGenerate

5 Ways to Make Your Collaboration with Teens a Success

5 Ways to Make Your Collaboration with Teens a Success

Our task, as we understood it, was to get teen leaders involved in Citizen University’s Youth Collaboratory excited about working alongside adults to create change — what we call cogeneration. As it turns out, teens in the program were already excited about...

Want to Jumpstart a Conversation About Collaborating With Teens?

Want to Jumpstart a Conversation About Collaborating With Teens?

When CoGenerate and Citizen University launched a project to deepen cogenerational ties, our goal was to get teens excited about working alongside older adults to create change.  What we discovered surprised us. Teens didn’t need convincing to work across generations....

Reinventing the American University for a Multigenerational Future

Reinventing the American University for a Multigenerational Future

In an episode of this season of Hacks, the Emmy-winning intergenerational comedy, the older comedian Deborah Vance returns to her alma mater (UC Berkeley) to receive an honorary degree. Shortly after arriving, a video containing offensive jokes she delivered early in...

*

Wilhelmina Perry

LGBT Faith Leaders of African Descent
Purpose Prize Fellow 2014

She combats homophobia in the African-American community, especially in churches, by promoting LGBT inclusiveness.

Every Sunday, many African American gays worship in churches that preach hate and prejudice against them. We sit in silence in the pews even though we are tithing members of the congregation.

After Antonia Pantoja, my partner and colleague for 30 years, died of cancer in 2002, I came to understand just how much the homophobia in many traditional African American churches has had a negative impact on African American gay lives, including my own – and I decided to do something to change that.

For decades, Antonia and I did social work in low-income minority settings in the U.S. and Puerto Rico. We never hid our relationship, but we never took a public stand for gay rights, either. We were afraid homophobia would jeopardize our work.


  • Sole faith-based organization in New York City exclusively devoted to advocating for LGBT acceptance in traditionally African American churches 

  •  25 members from various faiths and denominations


 

After she died, I fell into a depression so severe that I contemplated suicide. I turned for help to my childhood faith and joined an LGBT ministry at The Riverside Church in Manhattan. As I healed, I became more deeply involved in the ministry, and developed a Task Force for Homeless LGBT Youth, working with churches to utilize unused space to house homeless gay youth.

I was experiencing my own faith in positive ways, but I could see the dangers and hate generated from many houses of worship.

That’s why I co-founded LGBT Faith Leaders of African Descent in 2010. We are 25 openly gay people from various denominations who advocate for LGBT people of color, especially in traditional African American churches.

There are many LGBT organizations in New York City, but little of their work reaches our community . Our target populations are African American gay people, who attend church or have left because of persecution, and African American religious clergy and congregations.

We promote the spiritual values of love and inclusiveness. Our activities include cultural activities by African American artists who support LGBT rights, public education, social media, op-eds, an annual forum and workshops. Attendance at our events continues to grow, and so does our visibility. We have received encouragement from leading religious institutions, theologians and clergy. By addressing African American homophobia directly, we are engaging in bold and innovative work.