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Frente de Liberación Homosexual

The Frente de Liberación Homosexual (Homosexual Liberation Front, sometimes abbreviated FLH) was a gay rights organization in Argentina.[1] Formed at a meeting of Nuestro Mundo in August 1971, the FLH eventually dissolved in 1976 as a result of severe repression after the 1976 Argentine coup d'état.

Frente de Liberación Homosexual
Two hooded FLH members pose for a photo published in an August 1972 magazine article.
AbbreviationFLH
FormationAugust 1971 (1971-08)
Founded atBuenos Aires, Argentina
DissolvedJune 1976; 47 years ago (1976-06)
Merger of

The FLH was made up of a variety of semi-autonomous groups that operated individually but maintained contact with one another through a non-hierarchical organizational structure, enabling coordination and collaboration on actions and documents. Many of these groups were on the far left, and expressed anti-imperialism and anti-capitalism along with their advocacy for LGBT rights, women's rights, and labor rights; a view of all forms of oppression as interconnected was a key aspect of the FLH overall.

In 1973 and 1974, a large section of the FLH led by Néstor Perlongher became involved in Peronism, over the objections of other FLH members who noted Juan Perón's past involvement in repression of homosexuals. Members of the group were present at the inauguration of Héctor José Cámpora in May 1973, and at the Ezeiza massacre in June of the same year. By the end of 1974, the FLH had entirely separated itself from Peronism after Perón once again became president and reinstated the "Morality Brigade" tasked with state repression of sexuality.

In September 1973, the FLH published 5,000 copies of a one-off newspaper titled Homosexuales. They subsequently published six issues of an underground magazine called Somos from December 1973 through January 1976. Somos included criticism of capitalism, patriarchy, and heteronormativity as well as utopian messaging about sexual freedom; as time passed it became less journalistic and more cultural, and began to include art and poetry.

After the death of Juan Perón in 1974, attacks on gay people by right-wing paramilitary groups became more frequent, causing FLH membership to drop from about a hundred to roughly a dozen people. José López Rega called for homosexuals to be exterminated, and police officers were ordered to "scare [them] off the streets". The FLH eventually dissolved in June 1976 as a result of severe political repression. Some members fled to Europe and to other countries in Latin America, and many others were tortured, disappeared, or murdered during the Dirty War.

Formation edit

According to Héctor Anabitarte, the FLH began during an afternoon meeting in August 1971 at the home of Pepe Bianco, an intellectual who disagreed with the idea of a movement for homosexual rights but nevertheless allowed his home to be used for meetings of Nuestro Mundo and translated their articles to English so they could be read by groups in North America. In the book Historia de la homosexualidad en Argentina, Osvaldo Bazán wrote that Bianco lived with his mother and that the meeting actually took place in the apartment of Blas Matamoro in Once [es]. In the meeting, the group of Nuestro Mundo members was joined by a group of others, many of them university students who were studying the social sciences[2] at the University of Buenos Aires.[3] People who were present and would go on to be members of the FLH when it was created include Héctor Anabitarte, Blas Matamoro, Juan José Sebreli, Manuel Puig, and Juan José Hernández.[2] Néstor Perlongher, another member who joined the FLH by way of the student organization Eros,[4] would quickly become a core figure in the FLH.[5]

Structure and ideology edit

Soon after the formation of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual, the members removed their initial leadership, deciding instead on a non-hierarchical organization to avoid authoritarianism and have a structure that was not reminiscent of a patriarchical family.[2] Different groups within the FLH were semi-autonomous from each other,[6] operating individually but remaining in contact to facilitate the organization of joint actions and agree on the content of documents. Large informational meetings were held in private residences to provide information about the FLH; after a general explanation of the organization's political platform, people who became interested could join an "awareness group" called Alborada from which they could transfer to one of the other factions that made up the FLH.[7]

All groups in the FLH agreed to the Puntos Básicos de acuerdo del Frente de Liberación Homosexual ("Basic Points of Agreement of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual),[8] an agreement created in May 1972[9] which had an advanced view of homosexuality for its time.[8] The stipulations of the agreement included that "homosexuals are socially, culturally, morally and legally oppressed. They are ridiculed and marginalized, severely suffering the brutally imposed absurdity of the monogamous heterosexual society"[a] and that "this oppression comes from a social system that considers reproduction as the sole objective of sex".[b][8] Many FLH factions were on the far left, holding radical positions and espousing anti-imperialism and anti-capitalism along with their advocacy for LGBT rights, women's rights, and labor rights;[10] this view of all forms of oppression as interconnected was a key aspect of the FLH.[8][11] Marxism and feminism were core aspects of the political analysis of the FLH,[12] and homosexuality was therefore understood as subversive because it challenged patriarchy.[13] The Black Panther Party was among the inspirations of the FLH;[2] member Juan José Hernández provided the group with a publication by the Black Panthers which he had been sent by a friend in the United States, and the text was translated to Spanish by Pepe Bianco.[14]

The Frente de Liberación Homosexual was clandestine throughout its existence.[15] When the magazine Panorama interviewed two of its members in 1972, the two men wore ski masks that covered their faces[16] and explained that this and other secretive practices were due to the persecution they faced.[17]

Member groups edit

The Frente de Liberación Homosexual would come to include more than ten groups.[9] Nuestro Mundo, Eros, and Alborada were involved early, as were the Profesionales, a group of well-known writers.[7] Safo, which was made up of lesbians, joined after the FLH was created, as did Emmanuel, a group of Christians.[9] Two other religious groups joined, for a total of three: one Catholic, one Protestant, and one centered around Third-Worldism. Bandera Negra ("Black Flag") separated from Eros due to disagreement about anarchism and became an anarchist group within the FLH.[7]

There was tension between intellectualism and militantism within the FLH, particularly between the Profesionales and Eros. The Profesionales were older and more moderate, and members of that faction were publicly known due to their writing; member Juan José Sebreli argued that Eros' desire to take action was a disruption from the discussion of theory and ideas.[7]

Relationship with Peronism edit

Despite the anti-authoritarianism of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual, many members of the group became interested in the left wing of Peronism[18] during its rise in 1973. A large group of the younger FLH members, including Eros[19] and led by Nestor Perlongher, believed that a connection between Peronism and the FLH was a desirable possibility.[18] Another large faction within the FLH was distrustful of Peronism, in part because the first and second governments under Juan Perón had repressed homosexuals with more arrests and police raids than any other government in Argentine history.[19] Juan José Sebreli, a member of an FLH group called Triángulo Rosa ("pink triangle"), left the FLH because he did not agree that the FLH should form a connection with Peronism.[20]

 
Members of the FLH in the Plaza de Mayo during the inauguration of Héctor José Cámpora on May 25, 1973

There was an FLH presence at the inauguration of Héctor José Cámpora in May 1973, where the group held a large banner with a slogan based on a lyric from the Peronist March: Para que reine en el pueblo el amor y la igualdad – Libertad a los presos políticos ("So that love and equality may reign among the people – freedom to the political prisoners").[18] After Cámpora became president, police repression of homosexuals essentially ceased for a two-month period, during which Peronism became more popular within the FLH and the pro-Peronist faction of the group gained more power. As a result, the FLH began dialogues with Peronist leaders and the government; the main focus of the FLH during this period was lobbying in an attempt to influence public policy.[19]

A group of FLH members was also present when Perón returned to Argentina on June 20, 1973, an event that would come to be known as the Ezeiza massacre; they handed out pamphlets signed by the FLH and Eros,[21] and carried a banner that proclaimed FLH support for both Peronism and Perón himself. However, there was not a full consensus within the FLH in favor of Peronism, nor was there one that members should be present in Ezeiza for the event.[22]

Left-wing Peronism and the revolutionary left as a whole were somewhat inaccessible to the FLH due to homophobia;[23] the left-wing consensus was that homosexuality was a counterrevolutionary product of moral degeneration under capitalism, and would fade away after the revolution along with issues like illiteracy and unemployment.[24] Marginalization by other left-wing organizations was a common complaint within the group,[12] and at both the Cámpora inauguration and the return of Perón, other groups that attended remained a few meters away from the FLH demonstrators on all sides.[21] Antonio Cafiero acknowledged in 2009 that gay people had not been wanted as part of the Justicialist Party during the time of the FLH, and FLH activists reported having met with advisers of Héctor José Cámpora who told them that homosexuals could be cured in rehabilitation camps when Cámpora took power.[23][24]

Members of the FLH expressed affinity with left-wing Peronism in an interview with the magazine Así, which was published in the July 1973 issue. Colonel Jorge Osinde used this association to discredit the left-wing Peronist organizations Peronist Youth and Montoneros, putting up posters that accused both groups of being drug addicts and homosexuals. The response from both the Montoneros and the Youth was homophobic; they began using a chant at marches in which they denied being putos (literally "man-whores", used as a pejorative term for gay men) and faloperos (a pejorative slang term for people addicted to drugs).[c][24]

In 1974, four months after reentering office, Perón reinstated the "Morality Brigade" tasked with state repression of sexuality. Repression of homosexuals exceeded historical levels, and the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance became active. By the end of 1974, the FLH had entirely separated itself from Peronism.[24]

In the media edit

 
FLH members are interviewed for the July 1973 issue of Así. Néstor Perlongher is on the right.[5]

In August 1972, the first interview with the Frente de Liberación Homosexual was published by the magazine Panorama in an article titled Homosexualidad, las voces clandestinas ("Homosexuality, clandestine voices"). The interview was with two FLH members who wore ski masks[16] that covered their faces.[25] In the interview, the two denounced the political repression that was ongoing at the time, debunked multiple pseudoscientific beliefs about homosexuality, and expressed that the FLH was interested in working with other left-wing groups.[16] They additionally compared machismo to fascism, describing it as "the fascism of the home".[d][26] The Panorama article sensationalized the FLH and emphasized the similarities between it and the guerrilla groups in Argentina at the time.[16]

In September 1972, the FLH issued a press release after members were attacked by police officers while graffitiing the phrase Lesbiana no estás sola ("Lesbian you are not alone"). The statement denounced the aggression of the police, and was republished by many news outlets including Crónica and La Opinión.[16]

Members of the FLH were interviewed for the July 1973 issue of the magazine Así, which was titled Temores y deseos del homosexual argentino ("Fears and desires of the Argentine homosexual").[5] In the interview, they identified the FLH as connected to the Peronist left. On the front page of the September 1973 issue, the FLH endorsed the Justicialist Party.[24]

The final public appearance of the FLH was in an article published in Crónica on February 11, 1976, and titled Extraña protesta: Homosexuales se quejan de persecución ("Strange protest: Homosexuals complain of persecution"). The group effectively disbanded shortly afterward due to political repression.[27]

Publications edit

"The same system that oppresses and exploits you is the one that discriminates against us"

– Slogan used on FLH flyers from 1972[e][16]

In 1972, in an effort to take advantage of public dissatisfaction with the government, the Frente de Liberación Homosexual began a propaganda campaign in which flyers on colored paper were thrown into public spaces. Each flyer was cut into an eye-catching shape and bore the image of a raised fist along with a slogan. The goal of the campaign was to foster empathy for gay people by equating the repression of homosexuals with political repression as a whole.[16]

Banners, flyers, and other communications by the group characteristically used non-uniform capitalization styles, as seen on the banner carried by FLH members at the inauguration of Héctor José Cámpora in May 1973.[28]

Homosexuales edit

In September 1973, the Frente de Liberación Homosexual published 5,000 copies of a one-off newspaper titled Homosexuales. Intended for public consumption, the newspaper was circulated among government officials and activists, and additionally sold at some newsstands; copies were sent to some international organizations as well. The articles were intended to appeal to political factions with which the FLH was interested in collaborating, and to respond to the most popular homophobic rhetoric of the time.[29]

The newspaper opened with a description of the FLH. Two articles were written by the Profesionales, with one discussing the history of homosexuality in Mesopotamia and arguing that it was not repressed, and the other drawing a connection between machismo and capitalism. A section discussed the Kinsey Report and argued that homosexuality was both inevitable and natural throughout human history. Also included were a reproduction of the leaflets distributed in Ezeiza at the return of Juan Perón, a petition to the Ministry of the Interior to repeal anti-homosexuality rules, and three articles by North American groups. One, written by a group of Catholic homosexuals, both defended the Catholic Church against common criticisms and attempted to appeal to progressive sections of the Church. The other two were both by Black groups in the United States, and included a letter from the Black Panthers as well as a leaflet from a group of Black homosexuals which rebuked revolutionaries who did not defend or support homosexuality.[29]

Somos edit

The Frente de Liberación Homosexual published an underground magazine titled Somos ("We Are")[9] from December 1973 through January 1976,[24] reaching a print circulation of 500 copies.[9] Mimeographed covertly in an office of the Workers' Socialist Party,[11] Somos took the form of 50-page issues published quarterly, though the two final issues in December 1975 and January 1976 were shorter.[30] In contrast to Homosexuales, which was intended to be read by non-homosexuals, the target audience of Somos was homosexuals themselves. Additionally, where previous publications by the FLH had included only text, Somos had illustrations.[30]

The first issue of Somos included the following message:[f][9]

Once some of us dreamed of a place. It was an open, spacious place. There was an avenue called FREEDOM. Instead of exploiting each other, the people loved each other. Nobody attacked anyone, because everyone made love with whoever they wanted. [...] Nobody kept what the others had produced.

In addition to utopian messaging about sexual freedom, Somos included criticism of capitalism, patriarchy, heteronormativity, and the treatment of gay people in Cuba.[9] It also published messages from outside groups that were aligned with the FLH, including the Unión Feminista Argentina.[9] Articles included news from foreign homosexual groups, and recounted historical events including a major Buenos Aires police raid in 1954 and four legal actions against people accused of sodomy during the Middle Ages.[30] The FLH and Somos did not suggest that homosexuality in ancient Greece was accepted or encouraged, in contrast to many other homosexual movements which constructed founding myths involving the concept.[31]

The third issue of Somos, published in 1974, argued for pride in shared homosexual identity:[g][30]

Like any oppressed group, homosexuals typically lack a satisfactory identity. [...] We must therefore construct a homosexual identity, first claiming our condition as human beings with the same rights as anyone else, free from the notions of disease or inferiority or abnormality. And secondly, we must proudly vindicate ourselves as homosexuals, throwing away once and for all the tremendous weight of shame and guilt that we have been made to feel.

It additionally included a section on methods of treatment for sexually transmitted infections.[32] Subsequent issues became less journalistic and more cultural, with articles telling stories of arrests and prison experiences in the first person, and included poetry and art. Many articles began using slang from within the community. Issue 4 included a list of hundreds of ways to refer to fellatio and anal sex, including hacer el frufrú ("to do the rustling") and tirar del fideo ("to pull the noodle").[30]

The sixth and final issue of Somos was published in January 1976, with its shorter number of pages reflecting the deterioration of the FLH under political repression. The group would dissolve shortly after.[27]

Dissolution edit

After the 1974 death of Juan Perón and during the presidency of Isabel Perón, Frente de Liberación Homosexual membership dropped from about a hundred to roughly a dozen people due to an increase in attacks on gay people by right-wing paramilitary groups.[33] José López Rega called for homosexuals to be exterminated, and stated that their increased visibility had been due to "international Marxism", causing the FLH to increase its secrecy. A few months later, in March 1976, police officers were ordered to "scare the homosexuals off the streets"[h] as preparation began for the 1978 FIFA World Cup to be held in Argentina.[23] The FLH eventually dissolved in June 1976 as a result of severe political repression following the 1976 Argentine coup d'état.[33] Many members were tortured, disappeared, or murdered during the Dirty War, while others fled to Europe and to other countries in Latin America.[34]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Original quote in Spanish: "los homosexuales son oprimidos social, cultural, moral y legalmente. Son ridiculizados y marginados, sufriendo duramente el absurdo impuesto brutalmente de la sociedad heterosexual monogámica"
  2. ^ Original quote: "esta opresión proviene de un sistema social que considera a la reproducción como objetivo único del sexo"
  3. ^ The full chant in the original Spanish was "No somos putos, no somos faloperos: somos soldados de Perón y Montoneros."
  4. ^ Original quote: "El Machismo es el fascismo de entrecasa"
  5. ^ Original quote: "El mismo sistema que te oprime y explota es el que nos discrimina a nosotros"
  6. ^ Original quote: "Una vez, alguno de nosotros soñó con un lugar. Era un lugar abierto, espaciado. Había una avenida que se llamaba LIBERTAD. En lugar de explotarse los unos a los otros, la gente se amaba. Nadie agredía a nadie, porque todos hacían el amor con quien querían. (…) Nadie se quedaba con lo que habían producido los demás."
  7. ^ Original quote: "Los homosexuales típicamente carecemos, como cualquier grupo oprimido, de una identidad satisfactoria. (...) Debemos pues construir una identidad homosexual, reivindicando en primer término nuestra condición de seres humanos con los mismos derechos de cualquier otro, exenta de noción de enfermedad o inferioridad o anormalidad. Y en segundo lugar, debemos reivindicaron orgullosamente como homosexuales, tirando de una vez por la borda el tremendo peso de la vergüenza y la culpa que nos han hecho sentir."
  8. ^ Original quote: "espantar a los homosexuales de las calles"

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Encarnación 2011, p. 106.
  2. ^ a b c d Bazán 2010, p. 340.
  3. ^ Encarnación 2016, p. 57.
  4. ^ Bazán 2010, p. 353.
  5. ^ a b c Bazán 2010, p. 341.
  6. ^ Shaffer 2012, p. 66.
  7. ^ a b c d Insausti 2019, p. 6.
  8. ^ a b c d Bazán 2010, p. 342.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h González 2015.
  10. ^ Ben & Insausti 2017, p. 299.
  11. ^ a b Moscoso Cadavid 2011, p. 6.
  12. ^ a b Domínguez Ruvalcaba 2016, p. 96.
  13. ^ Domínguez Ruvalcaba 2016, p. 97.
  14. ^ Bazán 2010, p. 340–341.
  15. ^ Brown 2002, p. 120.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Insausti 2019, p. 7.
  17. ^ Bazán 2010, p. 344.
  18. ^ a b c Bazán 2010, p. 354.
  19. ^ a b c Insausti 2019, p. 8.
  20. ^ Simonetto 2014, p. 2.
  21. ^ a b Bazán 2010, p. 354–355.
  22. ^ Insausti 2019, pp. 8–9.
  23. ^ a b c Modarelli 2009.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Insausti 2019, p. 10.
  25. ^ Bazán 2010, p. 343.
  26. ^ Moscoso Cadavid 2011, p. 5.
  27. ^ a b Insausti 2019, p. 13.
  28. ^ Bazán 2010, p. 355.
  29. ^ a b Insausti 2019, p. 9.
  30. ^ a b c d e Insausti 2019, p. 11.
  31. ^ Moscoso Cadavid 2011, p. 14.
  32. ^ Moscoso Cadavid 2011, p. 10.
  33. ^ a b Brown 2002, p. 121.
  34. ^ Encarnación 2018, p. 199.

Works cited edit

  • Bazán, Osvaldo (2010). Historia de la homosexualidad en la Argentina: de la conquista de América al siglo XXI [History of homosexuality in Argentina: from the conquering of America to the 21st century] (Second ed.). Buenos Aires: Marea Editorial. pp. 340–355. ISBN 978-987-1307-35-7. OCLC 173722078.
  • Ben, Pablo; Insausti, Santiago Joaquin (27 April 2017). "Dictatorial Rule and Sexual Politics in Argentina: The Case of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual, 1967–1976". Hispanic American Historical Review. 97 (2): 297–325. doi:10.1215/00182168-3824077. ISSN 0018-2168. S2CID 85560297.
  • Brown, Stephen (2002). ""Con discriminación y represión no hay democracia": The Lesbian Gay Movement in Argentina". Latin American Perspectives. 29 (2): 119–138. doi:10.1177/0094582X0202900207. ISSN 0094-582X. JSTOR 3185130. S2CID 9046161.
  • Domínguez Ruvalcaba, Héctor (2016). Translating the Queer: Body Politics and Transnational Conversations. London: Zed Books. ISBN 978-1-78360-293-3. OCLC 944087265.
  • Encarnación, Omar G. (2011). "Latin America's Gay Rights Revolution". Journal of Democracy. 22 (2): 104–118. doi:10.1353/jod.2011.0029. ISSN 1086-3214. S2CID 145221692 – via Project MUSE.
  • Encarnación, Omar (2016). Out in the Periphery: Latin America's Gay Rights Revolution. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190469726.
  • Encarnación, Omar G. (2018). "A Latin American Puzzle: Gay Rights Landscapes in Argentina and Brazil". Human Rights Quarterly. 40 (1): 194–218. doi:10.1353/hrq.2018.0007. ISSN 1085-794X. S2CID 149302648 – via Project MUSE.
  • González, Miguel (2015). "Sexo y Revolución. El Frente de Liberación Homosexual y la moral burguesa" [Sex and Revolution. The Homosexual Liberation Front and bourgeois morality.]. Jornada Interescuelas de Historia (in Spanish) – via Academia.edu.
  • Insausti, Santiago Joaquin (2019). "Una historia del Frente de Liberación Homosexual y la izquierda en Argentina" [A history of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual and the left in Argentina]. Revista Estudos Feministas (in Spanish). 27 (2). doi:10.1590/1806-9584-2019v27n254280. ISSN 1806-9584. S2CID 199172795 – via SciELO.
  • Modarelli, Alejandro (20 March 2009). "Víctimas sin nombre" [Nameless victims]. Página/12 (in Spanish). Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  • Moscoso Cadavid, Javier Martín (2011). "Somos: representaciones de "nosotros" y "ellos" en la revista del F.L.H" [Somos: representations of "us" and "them" in the magazine of the F.L.H.]. Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores (in Spanish). Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani, University of Buenos Aires – via Acta Académica.
  • Shaffer, Andrew (14 December 2012). The Lavender Tide: LGBTQ Activism in Neoliberal Argentina (Thesis). University of San Francisco.
  • Simonetto, Patricio (30 June 2014). "Imagen, estética y producción de sentido del Frente de Liberación Homosexual (1967–1976)" [Image, aesthetics and production of meaning of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual (1967-1976)]. Corpus (in Spanish). 4 (1). doi:10.4000/corpusarchivos.709. ISSN 1853-8037. S2CID 160892560.

Further reading edit

  • Simonetto, Patricio (2014). "Imagen, estética y producción de sentido del Frente de Liberación Homosexual (1967–1976)" [Image, aesthetics and production of meaning of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual (1967-1976)]. Corpus (in Spanish). 4 (1). doi:10.4000/corpusarchivos.709. ISSN 1853-8037. S2CID 160892560.
  • Simonetto, Patricio (12 June 2020). "La otra internacional. Prácticas globales y anclajes nacionales de la liberación homosexual en Argentina y México (1967–1984)" [The Other Internationale. Global Practices and National Anchors of Homosexual Liberation in Argentina and Mexico (1967-1984)]. Secuencia (in Spanish) (107). doi:10.18234/secuencia.v0i107.1697. ISSN 2395-8464. S2CID 226491548.
  • Simonetto, Patricio (2017). Entre la injuria y la revolución: El Frente de Liberación Homosexual. Argentina, 1967–1976 [Between Injury and Revolution: The Frente de Liberación Homosexual. Argentina, 1967-1976] (PDF) (in Spanish). Bernal: Universidad Nacional de Quilmes. ISBN 978-987-558-419-8.
  • Cid, Jorge (2020). "Formulación poética de la persecución y el activismo: Néstor Perlongher en el Frente de Liberación Homosexual argentino" [Poetic formulation of persecution and activism: Nestor Perlongher in the Argentine Frente de Liberación Homosexual]. Nomadías (in European Spanish) (29): 155–180. doi:10.5354/0719-0905.2021.61060 (inactive 1 August 2023). ISSN 0719-0905.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of August 2023 (link)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Frente de Liberación Homosexual at Wikimedia Commons

frente, liberación, homosexual, homosexual, liberation, front, redirects, here, confused, with, liberation, front, this, article, about, argentine, group, mexican, group, mexico, homosexual, liberation, front, sometimes, abbreviated, rights, organization, arge. Homosexual Liberation Front redirects here Not to be confused with Gay Liberation Front This article is about the Argentine group For the Mexican group see Frente de Liberacion Homosexual Mexico The Frente de Liberacion Homosexual Homosexual Liberation Front sometimes abbreviated FLH was a gay rights organization in Argentina 1 Formed at a meeting of Nuestro Mundo in August 1971 the FLH eventually dissolved in 1976 as a result of severe repression after the 1976 Argentine coup d etat Frente de Liberacion HomosexualTwo hooded FLH members pose for a photo published in an August 1972 magazine article AbbreviationFLHFormationAugust 1971 1971 08 Founded atBuenos Aires ArgentinaDissolvedJune 1976 47 years ago 1976 06 Merger ofNuestro MundoSafoErosBandera NegraThe FLH was made up of a variety of semi autonomous groups that operated individually but maintained contact with one another through a non hierarchical organizational structure enabling coordination and collaboration on actions and documents Many of these groups were on the far left and expressed anti imperialism and anti capitalism along with their advocacy for LGBT rights women s rights and labor rights a view of all forms of oppression as interconnected was a key aspect of the FLH overall In 1973 and 1974 a large section of the FLH led by Nestor Perlongher became involved in Peronism over the objections of other FLH members who noted Juan Peron s past involvement in repression of homosexuals Members of the group were present at the inauguration of Hector Jose Campora in May 1973 and at the Ezeiza massacre in June of the same year By the end of 1974 the FLH had entirely separated itself from Peronism after Peron once again became president and reinstated the Morality Brigade tasked with state repression of sexuality In September 1973 the FLH published 5 000 copies of a one off newspaper titled Homosexuales They subsequently published six issues of an underground magazine called Somos from December 1973 through January 1976 Somos included criticism of capitalism patriarchy and heteronormativity as well as utopian messaging about sexual freedom as time passed it became less journalistic and more cultural and began to include art and poetry After the death of Juan Peron in 1974 attacks on gay people by right wing paramilitary groups became more frequent causing FLH membership to drop from about a hundred to roughly a dozen people Jose Lopez Rega called for homosexuals to be exterminated and police officers were ordered to scare them off the streets The FLH eventually dissolved in June 1976 as a result of severe political repression Some members fled to Europe and to other countries in Latin America and many others were tortured disappeared or murdered during the Dirty War Contents 1 Formation 2 Structure and ideology 2 1 Member groups 3 Relationship with Peronism 4 In the media 5 Publications 5 1 Homosexuales 5 2 Somos 6 Dissolution 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksFormation editAccording to Hector Anabitarte the FLH began during an afternoon meeting in August 1971 at the home of Pepe Bianco an intellectual who disagreed with the idea of a movement for homosexual rights but nevertheless allowed his home to be used for meetings of Nuestro Mundo and translated their articles to English so they could be read by groups in North America In the book Historia de la homosexualidad en Argentina Osvaldo Bazan wrote that Bianco lived with his mother and that the meeting actually took place in the apartment of Blas Matamoro in Once es In the meeting the group of Nuestro Mundo members was joined by a group of others many of them university students who were studying the social sciences 2 at the University of Buenos Aires 3 People who were present and would go on to be members of the FLH when it was created include Hector Anabitarte Blas Matamoro Juan Jose Sebreli Manuel Puig and Juan Jose Hernandez 2 Nestor Perlongher another member who joined the FLH by way of the student organization Eros 4 would quickly become a core figure in the FLH 5 Structure and ideology editSoon after the formation of the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual the members removed their initial leadership deciding instead on a non hierarchical organization to avoid authoritarianism and have a structure that was not reminiscent of a patriarchical family 2 Different groups within the FLH were semi autonomous from each other 6 operating individually but remaining in contact to facilitate the organization of joint actions and agree on the content of documents Large informational meetings were held in private residences to provide information about the FLH after a general explanation of the organization s political platform people who became interested could join an awareness group called Alborada from which they could transfer to one of the other factions that made up the FLH 7 All groups in the FLH agreed to the Puntos Basicos de acuerdo del Frente de Liberacion Homosexual Basic Points of Agreement of the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual 8 an agreement created in May 1972 9 which had an advanced view of homosexuality for its time 8 The stipulations of the agreement included that homosexuals are socially culturally morally and legally oppressed They are ridiculed and marginalized severely suffering the brutally imposed absurdity of the monogamous heterosexual society a and that this oppression comes from a social system that considers reproduction as the sole objective of sex b 8 Many FLH factions were on the far left holding radical positions and espousing anti imperialism and anti capitalism along with their advocacy for LGBT rights women s rights and labor rights 10 this view of all forms of oppression as interconnected was a key aspect of the FLH 8 11 Marxism and feminism were core aspects of the political analysis of the FLH 12 and homosexuality was therefore understood as subversive because it challenged patriarchy 13 The Black Panther Party was among the inspirations of the FLH 2 member Juan Jose Hernandez provided the group with a publication by the Black Panthers which he had been sent by a friend in the United States and the text was translated to Spanish by Pepe Bianco 14 The Frente de Liberacion Homosexual was clandestine throughout its existence 15 When the magazine Panorama interviewed two of its members in 1972 the two men wore ski masks that covered their faces 16 and explained that this and other secretive practices were due to the persecution they faced 17 Member groups edit The Frente de Liberacion Homosexual would come to include more than ten groups 9 Nuestro Mundo Eros and Alborada were involved early as were the Profesionales a group of well known writers 7 Safo which was made up of lesbians joined after the FLH was created as did Emmanuel a group of Christians 9 Two other religious groups joined for a total of three one Catholic one Protestant and one centered around Third Worldism Bandera Negra Black Flag separated from Eros due to disagreement about anarchism and became an anarchist group within the FLH 7 There was tension between intellectualism and militantism within the FLH particularly between the Profesionales and Eros The Profesionales were older and more moderate and members of that faction were publicly known due to their writing member Juan Jose Sebreli argued that Eros desire to take action was a disruption from the discussion of theory and ideas 7 Relationship with Peronism editDespite the anti authoritarianism of the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual many members of the group became interested in the left wing of Peronism 18 during its rise in 1973 A large group of the younger FLH members including Eros 19 and led by Nestor Perlongher believed that a connection between Peronism and the FLH was a desirable possibility 18 Another large faction within the FLH was distrustful of Peronism in part because the first and second governments under Juan Peron had repressed homosexuals with more arrests and police raids than any other government in Argentine history 19 Juan Jose Sebreli a member of an FLH group called Triangulo Rosa pink triangle left the FLH because he did not agree that the FLH should form a connection with Peronism 20 nbsp Members of the FLH in the Plaza de Mayo during the inauguration of Hector Jose Campora on May 25 1973There was an FLH presence at the inauguration of Hector Jose Campora in May 1973 where the group held a large banner with a slogan based on a lyric from the Peronist March Para que reine en el pueblo el amor y la igualdad Libertad a los presos politicos So that love and equality may reign among the people freedom to the political prisoners 18 After Campora became president police repression of homosexuals essentially ceased for a two month period during which Peronism became more popular within the FLH and the pro Peronist faction of the group gained more power As a result the FLH began dialogues with Peronist leaders and the government the main focus of the FLH during this period was lobbying in an attempt to influence public policy 19 A group of FLH members was also present when Peron returned to Argentina on June 20 1973 an event that would come to be known as the Ezeiza massacre they handed out pamphlets signed by the FLH and Eros 21 and carried a banner that proclaimed FLH support for both Peronism and Peron himself However there was not a full consensus within the FLH in favor of Peronism nor was there one that members should be present in Ezeiza for the event 22 Left wing Peronism and the revolutionary left as a whole were somewhat inaccessible to the FLH due to homophobia 23 the left wing consensus was that homosexuality was a counterrevolutionary product of moral degeneration under capitalism and would fade away after the revolution along with issues like illiteracy and unemployment 24 Marginalization by other left wing organizations was a common complaint within the group 12 and at both the Campora inauguration and the return of Peron other groups that attended remained a few meters away from the FLH demonstrators on all sides 21 Antonio Cafiero acknowledged in 2009 that gay people had not been wanted as part of the Justicialist Party during the time of the FLH and FLH activists reported having met with advisers of Hector Jose Campora who told them that homosexuals could be cured in rehabilitation camps when Campora took power 23 24 Members of the FLH expressed affinity with left wing Peronism in an interview with the magazine Asi which was published in the July 1973 issue Colonel Jorge Osinde used this association to discredit the left wing Peronist organizations Peronist Youth and Montoneros putting up posters that accused both groups of being drug addicts and homosexuals The response from both the Montoneros and the Youth was homophobic they began using a chant at marches in which they denied being putos literally man whores used as a pejorative term for gay men and faloperos a pejorative slang term for people addicted to drugs c 24 In 1974 four months after reentering office Peron reinstated the Morality Brigade tasked with state repression of sexuality Repression of homosexuals exceeded historical levels and the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance became active By the end of 1974 the FLH had entirely separated itself from Peronism 24 In the media edit nbsp FLH members are interviewed for the July 1973 issue of Asi Nestor Perlongher is on the right 5 In August 1972 the first interview with the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual was published by the magazine Panorama in an article titled Homosexualidad las voces clandestinas Homosexuality clandestine voices The interview was with two FLH members who wore ski masks 16 that covered their faces 25 In the interview the two denounced the political repression that was ongoing at the time debunked multiple pseudoscientific beliefs about homosexuality and expressed that the FLH was interested in working with other left wing groups 16 They additionally compared machismo to fascism describing it as the fascism of the home d 26 The Panorama article sensationalized the FLH and emphasized the similarities between it and the guerrilla groups in Argentina at the time 16 In September 1972 the FLH issued a press release after members were attacked by police officers while graffitiing the phrase Lesbiana no estas sola Lesbian you are not alone The statement denounced the aggression of the police and was republished by many news outlets including Cronica and La Opinion 16 Members of the FLH were interviewed for the July 1973 issue of the magazine Asi which was titled Temores y deseos del homosexual argentino Fears and desires of the Argentine homosexual 5 In the interview they identified the FLH as connected to the Peronist left On the front page of the September 1973 issue the FLH endorsed the Justicialist Party 24 The final public appearance of the FLH was in an article published in Cronica on February 11 1976 and titled Extrana protesta Homosexuales se quejan de persecucion Strange protest Homosexuals complain of persecution The group effectively disbanded shortly afterward due to political repression 27 Publications edit The same system that oppresses and exploits you is the one that discriminates against us Slogan used on FLH flyers from 1972 e 16 In 1972 in an effort to take advantage of public dissatisfaction with the government the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual began a propaganda campaign in which flyers on colored paper were thrown into public spaces Each flyer was cut into an eye catching shape and bore the image of a raised fist along with a slogan The goal of the campaign was to foster empathy for gay people by equating the repression of homosexuals with political repression as a whole 16 Banners flyers and other communications by the group characteristically used non uniform capitalization styles as seen on the banner carried by FLH members at the inauguration of Hector Jose Campora in May 1973 28 Homosexuales edit In September 1973 the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual published 5 000 copies of a one off newspaper titled Homosexuales Intended for public consumption the newspaper was circulated among government officials and activists and additionally sold at some newsstands copies were sent to some international organizations as well The articles were intended to appeal to political factions with which the FLH was interested in collaborating and to respond to the most popular homophobic rhetoric of the time 29 The newspaper opened with a description of the FLH Two articles were written by the Profesionales with one discussing the history of homosexuality in Mesopotamia and arguing that it was not repressed and the other drawing a connection between machismo and capitalism A section discussed the Kinsey Report and argued that homosexuality was both inevitable and natural throughout human history Also included were a reproduction of the leaflets distributed in Ezeiza at the return of Juan Peron a petition to the Ministry of the Interior to repeal anti homosexuality rules and three articles by North American groups One written by a group of Catholic homosexuals both defended the Catholic Church against common criticisms and attempted to appeal to progressive sections of the Church The other two were both by Black groups in the United States and included a letter from the Black Panthers as well as a leaflet from a group of Black homosexuals which rebuked revolutionaries who did not defend or support homosexuality 29 Somos edit The Frente de Liberacion Homosexual published an underground magazine titled Somos We Are 9 from December 1973 through January 1976 24 reaching a print circulation of 500 copies 9 Mimeographed covertly in an office of the Workers Socialist Party 11 Somos took the form of 50 page issues published quarterly though the two final issues in December 1975 and January 1976 were shorter 30 In contrast to Homosexuales which was intended to be read by non homosexuals the target audience of Somos was homosexuals themselves Additionally where previous publications by the FLH had included only text Somos had illustrations 30 The first issue of Somos included the following message f 9 Once some of us dreamed of a place It was an open spacious place There was an avenue called FREEDOM Instead of exploiting each other the people loved each other Nobody attacked anyone because everyone made love with whoever they wanted Nobody kept what the others had produced In addition to utopian messaging about sexual freedom Somos included criticism of capitalism patriarchy heteronormativity and the treatment of gay people in Cuba 9 It also published messages from outside groups that were aligned with the FLH including the Union Feminista Argentina 9 Articles included news from foreign homosexual groups and recounted historical events including a major Buenos Aires police raid in 1954 and four legal actions against people accused of sodomy during the Middle Ages 30 The FLH and Somos did not suggest that homosexuality in ancient Greece was accepted or encouraged in contrast to many other homosexual movements which constructed founding myths involving the concept 31 The third issue of Somos published in 1974 argued for pride in shared homosexual identity g 30 Like any oppressed group homosexuals typically lack a satisfactory identity We must therefore construct a homosexual identity first claiming our condition as human beings with the same rights as anyone else free from the notions of disease or inferiority or abnormality And secondly we must proudly vindicate ourselves as homosexuals throwing away once and for all the tremendous weight of shame and guilt that we have been made to feel It additionally included a section on methods of treatment for sexually transmitted infections 32 Subsequent issues became less journalistic and more cultural with articles telling stories of arrests and prison experiences in the first person and included poetry and art Many articles began using slang from within the community Issue 4 included a list of hundreds of ways to refer to fellatio and anal sex including hacer el frufru to do the rustling and tirar del fideo to pull the noodle 30 The sixth and final issue of Somos was published in January 1976 with its shorter number of pages reflecting the deterioration of the FLH under political repression The group would dissolve shortly after 27 Dissolution editAfter the 1974 death of Juan Peron and during the presidency of Isabel Peron Frente de Liberacion Homosexual membership dropped from about a hundred to roughly a dozen people due to an increase in attacks on gay people by right wing paramilitary groups 33 Jose Lopez Rega called for homosexuals to be exterminated and stated that their increased visibility had been due to international Marxism causing the FLH to increase its secrecy A few months later in March 1976 police officers were ordered to scare the homosexuals off the streets h as preparation began for the 1978 FIFA World Cup to be held in Argentina 23 The FLH eventually dissolved in June 1976 as a result of severe political repression following the 1976 Argentine coup d etat 33 Many members were tortured disappeared or murdered during the Dirty War while others fled to Europe and to other countries in Latin America 34 Notes edit Original quote in Spanish los homosexuales son oprimidos social cultural moral y legalmente Son ridiculizados y marginados sufriendo duramente el absurdo impuesto brutalmente de la sociedad heterosexual monogamica Original quote esta opresion proviene de un sistema social que considera a la reproduccion como objetivo unico del sexo The full chant in the original Spanish was No somos putos no somos faloperos somos soldados de Peron y Montoneros Original quote El Machismo es el fascismo de entrecasa Original quote El mismo sistema que te oprime y explota es el que nos discrimina a nosotros Original quote Una vez alguno de nosotros sono con un lugar Era un lugar abierto espaciado Habia una avenida que se llamaba LIBERTAD En lugar de explotarse los unos a los otros la gente se amaba Nadie agredia a nadie porque todos hacian el amor con quien querian Nadie se quedaba con lo que habian producido los demas Original quote Los homosexuales tipicamente carecemos como cualquier grupo oprimido de una identidad satisfactoria Debemos pues construir una identidad homosexual reivindicando en primer termino nuestra condicion de seres humanos con los mismos derechos de cualquier otro exenta de nocion de enfermedad o inferioridad o anormalidad Y en segundo lugar debemos reivindicaron orgullosamente como homosexuales tirando de una vez por la borda el tremendo peso de la verguenza y la culpa que nos han hecho sentir Original quote espantar a los homosexuales de las calles References editCitations edit Encarnacion 2011 p 106 a b c d Bazan 2010 p 340 Encarnacion 2016 p 57 Bazan 2010 p 353 a b c Bazan 2010 p 341 Shaffer 2012 p 66 a b c d Insausti 2019 p 6 a b c d Bazan 2010 p 342 a b c d e f g h Gonzalez 2015 Ben amp Insausti 2017 p 299 a b Moscoso Cadavid 2011 p 6 a b Dominguez Ruvalcaba 2016 p 96 Dominguez Ruvalcaba 2016 p 97 Bazan 2010 p 340 341 Brown 2002 p 120 a b c d e f g Insausti 2019 p 7 Bazan 2010 p 344 a b c Bazan 2010 p 354 a b c Insausti 2019 p 8 Simonetto 2014 p 2 a b Bazan 2010 p 354 355 Insausti 2019 pp 8 9 a b c Modarelli 2009 a b c d e f Insausti 2019 p 10 Bazan 2010 p 343 Moscoso Cadavid 2011 p 5 a b Insausti 2019 p 13 Bazan 2010 p 355 a b Insausti 2019 p 9 a b c d e Insausti 2019 p 11 Moscoso Cadavid 2011 p 14 Moscoso Cadavid 2011 p 10 a b Brown 2002 p 121 Encarnacion 2018 p 199 Works cited edit Bazan Osvaldo 2010 Historia de la homosexualidad en la Argentina de la conquista de America al siglo XXI History of homosexuality in Argentina from the conquering of America to the 21st century Second ed Buenos Aires Marea Editorial pp 340 355 ISBN 978 987 1307 35 7 OCLC 173722078 Ben Pablo Insausti Santiago Joaquin 27 April 2017 Dictatorial Rule and Sexual Politics in Argentina The Case of the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual 1967 1976 Hispanic American Historical Review 97 2 297 325 doi 10 1215 00182168 3824077 ISSN 0018 2168 S2CID 85560297 Brown Stephen 2002 Con discriminacion y represion no hay democracia The Lesbian Gay Movement in Argentina Latin American Perspectives 29 2 119 138 doi 10 1177 0094582X0202900207 ISSN 0094 582X JSTOR 3185130 S2CID 9046161 Dominguez Ruvalcaba Hector 2016 Translating the Queer Body Politics and Transnational Conversations London Zed Books ISBN 978 1 78360 293 3 OCLC 944087265 Encarnacion Omar G 2011 Latin America s Gay Rights Revolution Journal of Democracy 22 2 104 118 doi 10 1353 jod 2011 0029 ISSN 1086 3214 S2CID 145221692 via Project MUSE Encarnacion Omar 2016 Out in the Periphery Latin America s Gay Rights Revolution Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190469726 Encarnacion Omar G 2018 A Latin American Puzzle Gay Rights Landscapes in Argentina and Brazil Human Rights Quarterly 40 1 194 218 doi 10 1353 hrq 2018 0007 ISSN 1085 794X S2CID 149302648 via Project MUSE Gonzalez Miguel 2015 Sexo y Revolucion El Frente de Liberacion Homosexual y la moral burguesa Sex and Revolution The Homosexual Liberation Front and bourgeois morality Jornada Interescuelas de Historia in Spanish via Academia edu Insausti Santiago Joaquin 2019 Una historia del Frente de Liberacion Homosexual y la izquierda en Argentina A history of the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual and the left in Argentina Revista Estudos Feministas in Spanish 27 2 doi 10 1590 1806 9584 2019v27n254280 ISSN 1806 9584 S2CID 199172795 via SciELO Modarelli Alejandro 20 March 2009 Victimas sin nombre Nameless victims Pagina 12 in Spanish Retrieved 25 September 2021 Moscoso Cadavid Javier Martin 2011 Somos representaciones de nosotros y ellos en la revista del F L H Somos representations of us and them in the magazine of the F L H Jornadas de Jovenes Investigadores in Spanish Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani University of Buenos Aires via Acta Academica Shaffer Andrew 14 December 2012 The Lavender Tide LGBTQ Activism in Neoliberal Argentina Thesis University of San Francisco Simonetto Patricio 30 June 2014 Imagen estetica y produccion de sentido del Frente de Liberacion Homosexual 1967 1976 Image aesthetics and production of meaning of the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual 1967 1976 Corpus in Spanish 4 1 doi 10 4000 corpusarchivos 709 ISSN 1853 8037 S2CID 160892560 Further reading editSimonetto Patricio 2014 Imagen estetica y produccion de sentido del Frente de Liberacion Homosexual 1967 1976 Image aesthetics and production of meaning of the Frente de Liberacion Homosexual 1967 1976 Corpus in Spanish 4 1 doi 10 4000 corpusarchivos 709 ISSN 1853 8037 S2CID 160892560 Simonetto Patricio 12 June 2020 La otra internacional Practicas globales y anclajes nacionales de la liberacion homosexual en Argentina y Mexico 1967 1984 The Other Internationale Global Practices and National Anchors of Homosexual Liberation in Argentina and Mexico 1967 1984 Secuencia in Spanish 107 doi 10 18234 secuencia v0i107 1697 ISSN 2395 8464 S2CID 226491548 Simonetto Patricio 2017 Entre la injuria y la revolucion El Frente de Liberacion Homosexual Argentina 1967 1976 Between Injury and Revolution The Frente de Liberacion Homosexual Argentina 1967 1976 PDF in Spanish Bernal Universidad Nacional de Quilmes ISBN 978 987 558 419 8 Cid Jorge 2020 Formulacion poetica de la persecucion y el activismo Nestor Perlongher en el Frente de Liberacion Homosexual argentino Poetic formulation of persecution and activism Nestor Perlongher in the Argentine Frente de Liberacion Homosexual Nomadias in European Spanish 29 155 180 doi 10 5354 0719 0905 2021 61060 inactive 1 August 2023 ISSN 0719 0905 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of August 2023 link External links edit nbsp Media related to Frente de Liberacion Homosexual at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frente de Liberacion Homosexual amp oldid 1189365931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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