Elton John & David Furnish Interview Peter Tatchell
Attitude magazine - March
2012
Celebration of 60th birthday & 45 years of human
rights campaigning
London, UK - 27 February 2012
Elton John & David Furnish interview Peter
Tatchell in celebration of his 60th birthday, 45 years of
human rights campaigning and 10 years of his Peter Tatchell
Foundation.
The interview is published in the March 2012 issue of Attitude magazine (UK) - out now.
Here are key excerpts:
David Furnish on Peter
Tatchell:
"During the 80s I was full of self-loathing
and I wasn't out and I couldn't tell my family and I had no
role models... People like Peter made me uncomfortable,
because you were so in people's faces with OutRage! and
there was a part of me that, because I wasn't confronting it
in myself, the fact that someone else was confronting it so
much, was slightly frightening. But, as the years have gone
by and you learn to accept yourself you learn to appreciate
the benefits that we have. I've always followed what you've
(Peter) done in the press and continually said that Peter is
a good man and that we need people like Peter Tatchell in
the world.
Elton John on Peter
Tatchell:
"You've never said anything hateful about
anybody, you've just told the truth. And you never condemned
anybody - well you have - but you haven't done it with hate.
You've just said: Listen, this is unfair, this is not right,
with the Pope, and the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the
thing in Moscow (Peter and Richard Fairbrass of Right Said
Fred were beaten up by anti-gay Russians), and you've never
reacted violently and reacted with hate. You've just been
like Jesus Christ would've been when he forgave all the
people that sinned."
Peter Tatchell on his
inspirations:
"Mahatma Gandhi, Sylvia Pankhurst,
Martin Luther King and, to some extent, Malcolm X and Rosa
Luxemburg."
Elton on the US:
"It's so fucking
homophobic, it's ludicrous."
Peter on what is needed
to stamp out homophobic bullying and
prejudice:
"Education against homophobia and all
prejudice should be a compulsory subject in every school,
from primary level upwards, with no opt-outs for independent
and free schools and no right of parents to withdraw their
kids. There should be exams in tolerance. The results should
go on pupil's records and should have to be declared when
applying for higher education and jobs."
David on
Peter's flat:
"It's a garrison."
Peter on the
current big campaign:
"We've got the Equal Love
campaign, where four gay couples and four straight couples
have filed an application at the European Court of Human
Rights The aim is to end the (UK's) twin bans on same-sex
civil marriages and opposite-sex civil partnerships. We're
guardedly optimistic that when it comes to a judgement,
maybe in three or four years time, we might win.
David
on their son Zachary:
"He's going to be potentially
doubly stigmatised, because one of his parents is extremely
famous, and secondly because he comes from two dads."
Elton on being willing to perform in homophobic countries to
challenge intolerance:
"Like you (Peter) I am not
afraid of going anywhere. I'm not afraid of going to Iran.
I'm not afraid of going to Syria....If they shoot me, they
shoot me"
Peter on retirement:
"I plan to carry
on campaigning for another 30 years."
Elton on
Zachary:
"I can't tell you how brilliant this year
has been and how much love he's bought us....having a child
has been magnificent and I never thought I'd have a
kid."
Peter on the past hate campaigns against him:
"During the 80s and 90s, when I was very outspoken
and very much in the news, it was like living through a mini
civil war. I had attacks on my home: three arson attacks, a
bullet thought the door and bricks through the windows. I
was bashed about 300 times, mostly by homophobes and
neo-Nazis."
Peter on his proudest
campaign:
"The campaign in the early 1990s against
police harassment of the LGBT community. The police refused
to end their homophobia and wouldn't negotiate. So the queer
rights group OutRage!, which I was involved with, began a
high-profile campaign of direct action. We invaded police
stations, interrupted police press conferences and exposed
'pretty police' undercover agents who were luring gay men
into committing criminal acts and then arresting them.
Within three months, the police were pleading with us to
negotiate. Within a year, they agreed to most of our demands
for a non-homophobic policing policy. Within three years,
the number of gay and bisexual men convicted for consenting
behaviour fell by two-thirds - the biggest, fastest fall
ever. We saved thousands of men from arrest and criminal
conviction. I'm really proud of that campaign."
Peter
on not holding grudges:
"I never hold grudges. If
someone has been a homophobe and they change, I am first in
line to welcome and embrace them. When Michael Portillo was
defence minister, gays and lesbians were witch-hunted out of
the armed forces. He voted against LGBT equality in the
House of Commons. So when he stood for Parliament in
Kensington and Chelsea, I harried him wherever he went. Some
years later he confided that it was a horrible experience
but he sort of understood why I did it. He regretted voting
against equality. To which my response was: thank
you."
To find out more about the Peter Tatchell Foundation and support its work visit:http://www.PeterTatchellFoundation.org
ENDS