Community Corner

Remembering Harvey Milk, George Moscone

The late San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone were assassinated Nov. 27, 1978.

—By Bay City News Service

A broad coalition of community groups and the Harvey Milk Foundation are honoring the 35th anniversary of slain San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone in back-to-back vigil and marches that started Wednesday afternoon.

Thirty-five years after the city's first openly gay supervisor was assassinated at City Hall along with the mayor, a public remembrance was be held at the steps of City Hall.

It was followed by a march to the plaza at Market and Castro streets named for Milk.

The Harvey Milk Foundation held a vigil on the Polk Street steps, with family and friends of Milk and Moscone speaking about the two men who were fatally shot by a disgruntled former city supervisor, Dan White, on Nov. 27, 1978.

As part of an annual tradition, Stuart Milk, Harvey Milk's nephew, along with other family members and elected officials and members of the LGBT community, reflected on the assassinated city leaders' legacies, Harvey Milk Foundation spokeswoman Maggie Weiland said.

The Gay Men's Chorus performed on the steps before a candlelight march proceeds to Harvey Milk Plaza in the Castro.

Once in the Castro, the march combined with a second memorial event spearheaded by community activist Cleve Jones, who worked with Milk in the fight for LGBT civil rights, and organizers from San Francisco's AIDS Housing Alliance.

"What we want to show people," march organizer and AIDS Housing Alliance director Brian Basinger said, "is the things that Harvey Milk cared about are just as relevant today as in his time."

"It's eerily familiar," Basinger said, referring to Milk's own eviction and fight to stop gentrification in the Castro District, where Milk lived and had a camera shop.

Basinger said Milk and Moscone were known for supporting "marginalized, disenfranchised and displaced communities."

"People are feeling hopeless," Basinger said. "They are giving up."

However, Basinger said the march on City Hall on the 35th anniversary was a way for the community to demand city leaders help all residents -- not just those in the tech sector.

"We have a history of success and we have a plan. We have plan that we think Harvey Milk would have thrown himself into," Basinger said.

The vigil and march was expected to include members from a slew of community organizations, including Equality California, Gays Without Borders, the Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club, the Housing Rights Committee, the Latino Democratic Club, the Mission Neighborhood Resource Center, and the National Center for Lesbian Rights.

The march was similar to a spontaneous candlelight vigil that formed the night Milk and Moscone were gunned down 35 years ago, organizers said.

Copyright © 2013 by Bay City News, Inc. -- Republication, Rebroadcast or any other Reuse without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited.


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