La. native promotes gay, lesbian equality

Jody M. Huckaby grew up Catholic, went to Catholic schools and was raised by devout Catholic parents in Eunice.

So when Huckaby, 47, told his parents while he was in college that he is gay, it was “tough” to do, he recalls.

“It’s very hard when your religion tells you something is wrong but then you are talking about your child,” Huckaby said recently.

Still, his parents, who were both raised in Church Point, eventually accepted Huckaby for who he is.

“They started out rejecting it. Then they moved to tolerance and then went to acceptance and finally they celebrated it,” Huckaby said.

The personal journey Huckaby and his parents went through was one of the big reasons Huckaby took a job more than seven years ago as executive director of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays National, also known as PFLAG National.

PFLAG is a family and straight ally organization that helps to advance equality for lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender individuals through support, education and advocacy.

PFLAG, which formed in 1972 in New York City, is celebrating its 40th anniversary with a yearlong campaign assessing what the nonprofit group has achieved so far. There are 350 PFLAG chapters in the United States.

The Baton Rouge chapter of PFLAG, which met for the first time in August, will be a year old when its members meet on Aug. 16.

By coincidence, Huckaby will be the guest speaker at the Baton Rouge chapter meeting in August.

Huckaby said he is excited to speak in Baton Rouge next month not only because of his family ties to Louisiana — he has a sister living in the capital city who is a Catholic nun — but because of the population growth the city has experienced since Hurricane Katrina struck Louisiana in 2005.

The Baton Rouge chapter president, Carol Frazier, said the organization has achieved steady attendance at its monthly meetings at the Unitarian Church on Goodwood Boulevard.

“We have between 25 and 35 attendees each month. I think that’s good compared to other chapters that are only a year old. We do see new people each month,” Frazier said.

The Baton Rouge meetings usually feature a guest speaker as well as breakout sessions enabling small groups of members to talk about “whatever comes up,” Frazier said.

“The parents meet in their own group. They don’t always feel comfortable with the younger people,” Frazier said.

Varied reactions, feelings and emotions frequently arise in those smaller sessions, Frazier said, ranging from tears and laughter to silence, she said.

“You can see an interesting growth in people. I remember a mom who came and she didn’t say a word. She didn’t accept her child’s news. Now she speaks freely and is very accepting,” Frazier said.

Still, PFLAG National is not about preaching, Huckaby said.

“You can’t preach. People will just walk away. A big message we have is you do not have to throw out your faith to be accepting and loving,” Huckaby said.

Although Huckaby and his parents had no experiences with PFLAG when he confided back in college that he is gay, his mother’s turning point to acceptance and understanding of her son came from another, more traditional source.

Huckaby said his mother read the “Dear Abby” column in the Eunice News religiously throughout her life.

One day, she read a letter in the column from the mother of a lesbian who asked how she was supposed to deal with the news.

“The advice was, you still need to love your child just like you did the day before. The second piece of advice was to go find PFLAG and get more information,” Huckaby said.

For more information about the Baton Rouge chapter, call Frazier at (225) 241-8676.

For more information about PFLAG National, visit http://www.pflag.org.


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Comments (26)


1) Comment by DMJ - 23/07/2012

Heh?

2) Comment by gofigger - 23/07/2012

@DMJ - LOL, I would expect that remark from you. I'm the least of his worries.

3) Comment by DMJ - 23/07/2012

"While you can"? is that a threat or something?

4) Comment by gofigger - 23/07/2012

All I can say to Jody is......celebrate while you can.

5) Comment by RationalOne - 23/07/2012

Just curious...when non-human animals engage in "unnatural" homosexual behavior, are they sinning? Do other animals condemn them for it? Does their religion prohibit it? Do the gods of humans look down upon this behavior?

6) Comment by phil - 23/07/2012

I could say that everything humans do are natural functions, like murder, incest etc. So let's just use that argument and make this a "do whatever you feel like" society based on individual rights? Thanks, I will stick to basic religious beliefs which are the basis for most all of our morality laws. Thanks for that list so I can stay away from those churches that CELEBRATE unnatural homosexual acts. In my opinion there is a bid difference between accepting a sinner in a church and in a church accepting an unnatural sex act as being acceptable.

7) Comment by DMJ - 23/07/2012

Whatnow, allow me to answer your question with a question...What does it matter?

8) Comment by Whatnow - 23/07/2012

Isn't anyone going to answer my question? I guess there is no answer for it... Is a person born bi-sexual or does that mean that you go wherever your passion leads you? I guess they are ambidextrous. Right? LOL!

9) Comment by RationalOne - 23/07/2012

ABayouBoy, if you didn't have your bible, you'd be running around killing, stealing, vandalizing, etc., right? Your bible's the only thing that causes you to be decent and respectful? That's a bit terrifying. Also, if we believe in what the bible stands for, we'd all have slaves, multiple wives, never eat seafood, murder our kids for disrespecting us, kill people who have affairs, make burnt offerings, but most importantly, we'd all give up our families and possessions to follow Jesus.

10) Comment by DMJ - 23/07/2012

Phil, the Unitarian Church and the Episcopalian Church both reject the notion of homosexuality as a sin. Keep this list safe, so you don't lose it again.

11) Comment by RationalOne - 23/07/2012

There's no need to celebrate homosexual acts. No church celebrates left handedness. No church celebrates sleeping. No church celebrates farting. Why? Because these are all 100% natural functions.

12) Comment by phil - 23/07/2012

I like that being left-handed comparison with being homosexual. I suppose all left-handed folks are automatically going to use that left hand for evil purposes just because they are born left handed? Also please list all of the religions that celebrate homosexual acts. I seem to have misplaced that list. Also, I believe churches are built for sinners so those sinners can find God and hopefully repent. Church is not a place to go to reinforce the sin, it is a place to help the sinner. We all should already know that we ALL sin.

13) Comment by DMJ - 23/07/2012

Nevermind the bigots, Jody. Good for you! There will always be those who hate and those who justify their hate with the Bible or the supposed superior values of bygone eras. They're on the wrong side of history. Social conservatives always are. Always. Just be yourself, and if some bigot has a problem with it, well....that's their problem.

14) Comment by CountryBoysCanSurvive - 23/07/2012

And then you have the Gay Preachers (check out Baker Pres.) looking people in the eye and preaching morality to folks.

15) Comment by ABayouBoy - 23/07/2012

I have to agree 100% with TommyRucker. The reason that this country of ours is facing the crime wave and breakdown of its moral fabric is a loss of our "moral compass". We need to believe in what the Bible stands for to be decent people and to respect each others feelings. The take all that you can get mentality at any expense will be the downfall of the USA.

16) Comment by RationalOne - 22/07/2012

TommyRucker, since the Christian way is the true way, what happens when, say, a member of the Korubo tribe in South America dies? Does he/her go to hell since Christianity is unknown to that tribe?

17) Comment by MBW - 22/07/2012

A sin is a sin....but so many Christians are perfectly willing to accept adulterers, alcoholics, and other types of sinners into their churches.....yet they get so worked up about gay people. Total hypocrisy and a double standard.

18) Comment by MBW - 22/07/2012

Hate to break it to you, but I have yet to meet a single Christian in this country that ISN"T a cafeteria Christian. Just look through the Old Testament and you find at least 50-100 rules that most Americans don't follow anymore.

19) Comment by RationalOne - 22/07/2012

About 10% of the world's population is left handed. Why they choose to be left handed is beyond me! But it's so unnatural. What disgusting behavior! These people obviously have unhealthy mental problems that need to be corrected before they influence our youth. I don't have a problem with left-handed people; it's their behavior that disgusts me. My religion, where all my morals come from, explicitly says that left handedness is a sin and should not be tolerated. These people need therapy or something so they can switch to being right handed. And don't even get me started on people who are ambidextrous...

20) Comment by jeffsadow - 22/07/2012

@phil, a faith of convenience is no faith at all. If you reject a major tenant of Catholic faith (although the article does not precisely state what is meant by acceptance and celebration of his homosexual behavior by his family), you are under no obligation to claim to follow Catholicism or act as a "cafeteria Catholic." There are plenty of other religions out there to follow that "accept" and "celebrate" homosexual acts.

21) Comment by Whatnow - 22/07/2012

Okay, I have a question. Is a person born bi-sexual or does that mean that you go wherever your passion leads you?

22) Comment by phil - 22/07/2012

It amazes me how one newspaper article seems to support the homosexual lifestyle and another article tells how a large amount of AIDS is spread in the community via homosexual activity. Yes, I can put 2 and 2 together, thank you. In addition I have to add that what I got out of this article is that apparently whatever is taught at Catholic school was not learned very well in this specific instance. Love the sinner but not the sin seems to me to be one good lesson to start with.

23) Comment by TommyRucker - 22/07/2012

We have a lot to worry about in America and we are having more serious things to worry about each day and a lot of it is because we have lost our moral compass and we have abandoned God. We want to make God in our image as we forget that we are made in the image and likeness of God, not the other way around. The deterioration of our moral values is at the heart of our problems. Why do we think we know more than God and think we can dictate to him and have him accept our OPINIONS (for whatever they are worth).

24) Comment by TommyRucker - 22/07/2012

Homosexual behavior is wrong and is unnatural, it is not the homosexual himself or herself that Christians are opposed to, it is the behavior. It is a behavior that is not in accord with Christian teachings and beliefs. Unfortunately we first tolerate these immoral behaviors, then we accept them, and later (seeing it today), we celebrate them. No one should hate homosexuals or child molesters, etc. but we should be opposed to immoral behavior (based on Christian morality). You can't be a cafeteria Christian and be a true Christian. No one has the right to do whatever their passions and desires dictate. We ALL have to have help from God to keep these passions, etc. in check. We ALL need to know what is right and what is wrong and the Christian way is the true way.

25) Comment by lovemykids - 22/07/2012

Nice article.

26) Comment by rockynoggin - 22/07/2012

3% of the population is homosexual, yet media would have us believe that the real number is 10x reality. I'm glad his parents accept and embrace his lifestyle. But it's not as if he proclaimed himself a follow of Islam. Homosexuality is A-OK in America and wildly overrepresented as main stream. We have much more to worry about than gay marriage, can we focus on what is REALLY important? Like the fact that Bobby Jindal is using our state to advance his political career?