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Mel Boozer

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Education
  
Died
  
March 6, 1987

Name
  
Mel Boozer

Nationality
  
American


Mel Boozer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen44cBoo

Born
  
June 21, 1945 (
1945-06-21
)
Washington, D.C.

Occupation
  
Professor of sociologyLGBT rights activistPresident, Gay Activists Alliance of Washington, D.C.

Known for
  
The first openly gay candidate for Vice President of the United States

Cause of death
  
AIDS-related illness

Mel boozer s 1980 democratic national convention sppech


Melvin "Mel" Boozer (June 21, 1945 – March 6, 1987) was a university professor and activist for African American, LGBT and HIV/AIDS issues. He was active in both the Democratic Party and Socialist Party USA.

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Mel Boozer Black Kudos Mel Boozer Melvin Mel Boozer June 21 1945 to

Biography

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Boozer grew up in Washington, D.C. where he graduated as salutatorian of his class at Dunbar High School. Boozer attended Dartmouth College on a scholarship; he entered the university in 1963, one of only three African Americans admitted that year. Following his graduation he studied for a Ph.D. at Yale University, before becoming a professor of sociology at the University of Maryland.

In 1979, Boozer was elected president of the Gay Activists Alliance of Washington, D.C., in which office he served for two one-year terms. He was the first African American to serve as GAA president and became "a leading moderate voice among black gays nationally". While president of the GAA, the organization won unanimous passage of the Sexual Assault Reform Act by the D.C. Council, which decriminalized sodomy and repealed solicitation laws for consenting adults. Under pressure from the Moral Majority, a Christian right lobbying group, Congress exercized its power to overturn DC acts for only the second time to repeal this change. During his leadership, the GAA also saw established the right for the GAA to lay a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns in Arlington National Cemetery and won a court battle with the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority for the right to place Metrobus posters reading "Someone in Your Life is Gay."

Boozer also wrote for BlackLight, the first national black gay periodical, founded by Sidney Brinkley.

Boozer was nominated in 1980 for the office of Vice President of the United States by the Socialist Party USA and, by petition at the convention, by the Democratic Party. He was the first openly gay person ever nominated for the office. Boozer spoke to the Democratic convention in a speech televised in prime time, calling on the party to support equality for LGBT people:

Would you ask me how I dare to compare the civil rights struggle with the struggle for lesbian and gay rights? I can compare them and I do compare them, because I know what it means to be called a 'nigger' and I know what it means to be called a 'faggot,' and I understand the differences in the marrow of my bones. And I can sum up that difference in one word: none.

Boozer received 49 votes before the balloting was suspended and then-Vice President Walter Mondale was renominated by acclamation.

In 1981, Boozer was hired by the National Gay Task Force as district director and a lobbyist. NGTF executive director Virginia Apuzzo fired him in 1983, replacing him with then-GAA president Jeff Levi. This had the effect of "leav[ing] the nation's oldest gay organization even whiter" and drew protests from other gay African Americans.

In 1982, he co-founded the Langston HughesEleanor Roosevelt Democratic Club to advocate for black LGBT people in D.C., leading the club in 1983 and 1984.

Boozer died of an AIDS-related illness in March 1987 at the age of 41 in Washington, D.C. Boozer is featured in a panel of the AIDS Memorial Quilt.

References

Mel Boozer Wikipedia