D.C., MD. & VA.
Perspective
A teacher fired years ago for being gay watches it all happen again
By Petula Dvorak
Columnist
Yesterday at 6:32 p.m. EDT
Joseph Acanfora, 71, was fired from his teaching job in Montgomery County 50 years ago because he is gay. (Hai Ngoc Lam/Joe Acanfora)
The kids in Rockville, Md., liked their middle schools new science teacher. ... He acted like he was a kid once, too, you know? one eighth-grader said. Like, you know, he treated us like people not, you know, just like little kids.
The students at Parkland Middle School told
60 Minutes in a 1973 broadcast that they didnt know much about Joseph Acanfora until he was called to the principals office in the middle of the day after news surfaced of his involvement in a
landmark civil rights case on gay rights. ... It was the last time I was in the classroom, said Acanfora, now 71 and living in California, where he has watched as a Republican-led backlash to making schools safer for LGBTQ youths has fomented outrage with the same harmful consequences he endured.
Teachers across America are being disciplined, fired and sued for being gay, talking about gay, saying gay. ... Theyre being targeted for online harassment by a vigilante mob of conservatives, their information fueled by toxic social media campaigns and laws like Floridas legislation restricting LGBTQ discussion that critics have dubbed the
dont say gay bill. ... Theyve twisted any conversation about sexual orientation or gender expression, mislabeling it as grooming as though by acknowledging that Jaden has two dads, teachers are somehow preparing children to be the quivering victims of pedophiles or candidates for sex trafficking. ... Its totally strange. And sad, he said. Sad that were having this conversation 50 years later.
{snip}
The biggest positive to come out of the whole experience for me? It was the support of my students, he said. There they were, 12-, 13- and 14-year-olds who were speaking at the court hearing, taking petitions around to get me reinstated. ... It was an inspiration that young people who hadnt been fed hate had compassion, he said. ... He believes youths will be the moral compass today, too, because they are organized and have experienced inclusion and equality. ... The younger generation, the gay generation that has been free, the ones who have been accepted by their friends and families, theyve had a taste of freedom, he said. And they wont go back.
By Petula Dvorak
Petula is a columnist for The Post's local team who writes about homeless shelters, gun control, high heels, high school choirs, the politics of parenting, jails, abortion clinics, mayors, modern families, strip clubs and gas prices, among other things. Before coming to The Post, she covered social issues, crime and courts. Twitter
https://twitter.com/petulad