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Photo: 1998, Worcester Magazine named Al as a Hometown Hero

 

Straight talk about gay rights in Natick
By Shannon Haley Daggett / News Staff Writer
Thursday, February 26, 2004

NATICK -- When asked if Natick High School is a safe school for those openly gay and lesbian, just one student out of roughly 60 said yes it is. Al Toney, the guest speaker who asked that question yesterday, is far from shocked. " Your school is no different than the other schools I've been to, and I've been in 200 schools," he said, reflecting on his 10 years as a diversity educator.

Toney is a 37-year-old retired Worcester Police officer who plans to marry his boyfriend of five years in July. He has a daughter, now 15, from a marriage when he was in his early 20s. Toney retired from the police force after being shot in the right shoulder while off duty. His boyfriend at the time and another friend died in the 1991 shooting. It was not a hate crime. Toney confronted a belligerent group bullying staff at a Worcester restaurant. Police arrested the suspects, who were later found guilty. Addressing students when they first sat down in a lecture room, he told them he was not there to tell them what they should believe, but rather to talk about their thoughts on homosexuality. Crossings, Natick's chapter of the Gay Straight Alliance, sponsored Toney's visit.

Also, two recent high school graduates, Ashley Shea and Jim Palmer, talked about their experiences as openly gay people who overcame rejection by their parents and peers. Shea graduated from Marlborough High, and Palmer graduated from Waltham High last spring. Recognized as an innovator by Advocate magazine, Toney is co-founder of Safe Homes of Central Massachusetts, an organization that aids homeless youths thrown out of their homes because of their sexual orientation. Thirty percent of all suicides are committed by a gay youth, and 20 percent to 40 percent of homeless youths are gay, lesbian or transgender, Toney said.

Yesterday, Toney asked students what messages they have received on homosexuality. A few students said their parents gave them a positive message, but not all students shared that experience. One student said his church and parents taught him that homosexuality "is a sin and it is wrong," and he continues hearing that message. Asked if a gay or lesbian president would be elected in their lifetime, most said no. " If they are taught it is wrong, why are they going to elect someone who stands for something they don't believe in?" asked one student. Another said it would only cause problems and be "too much of an issue." Should gays be allowed to marry? Most said yes. " Personally, I have neighbors who are gay," said one student. "They should have the same rights as a male and female in a relationship." About two-thirds of the audience said they know someone who is gay, but Toney said it is likely everyone, whether they know it or not, does. No students spoke out against homosexuality, but some expressed their discomfort. " If you want to (be in a homosexual relationship) that is fine, but when it comes to marrying or raising a child, I don't think that is right," said a student.

Nearly all the students said they would still be friends with a person who came out gay. But when next asked if they would be comfortable hanging out with that person's boyfriend or girlfriend, a good portion of the class said no and were reluctant to explain why.

When Toney came out as gay at age 24 to one of his closest friends, he said his friend's response was the typical, "Don't hit on me." Toney told him not to worry, he was not his type. " The rest of the evening we talked about his issue with why I'm not attracted to him, and that is the typical response, too," he said to a laughing audience. Gay slurs are heard on a daily basis, according to about 80 percent of the students Toney informally polled.

Shea, a 2003 Waltham High graduate, was resilient in the face of gay comments thrown at her her in school. " This girl came into the bathroom and said 'Hey, faggot,' and I said 'Hey, what's going on.' I'm used to it," she recalled with a shrug. That girl and her friends ended up beating her up, Shea said, leaving her passed out and bloody in the bathroom. At the time, Shea was switching between being a lesbian and a bisexual. She later admitted she was gay. " I thought being bisexual would be a lot easier, but it turned out it wasn't. When I told everyone that I'm a lesbian, everyone in the school accepted it," she said. "I decided to be myself, and I got 100 friends." Her parents, however, have not accepted her orientation, and the only time she has seen them in the last three years is in court. She is living with her uncle in Natick.

Al Toney can be contacted at akconsulting@charter.net. AK Consulting provides diversity training and consultations.

( Shannon Haley Daggett can be reached at 508-626-4449 or at sdaggett@cnc.com. )