In her speech
about hate crimes at the United We Stand Summit, Vice President Kamala Harris
invited Pulse
Nightclub shooting survivor Brandon Wolf to open as her keynote
speaker.
The United We
Stand summit began on Thursday as an effort by President Joe Biden to counter
the devastating effects of hate-related violence. The summit’s website describes the
conference as a “bipartisan conversation on countering hate-fueled violence,
preventing mobilization to violence, and fostering unity.”
In her
statement to the summit covered
by the Advocate Channel, Harris was introduced by nationally
recognized LGBTQ+ civil rights advocate and anti-gun violence proponent,
Brandon Wolf.
Wolf is a
survivor of the Orlando,
Fla., Pulse Nightclub shooting. He currently works with the LGBTQ+ rights
group Equality Florida.
On June 12,
2016, 49 people were killed and 53 were injured at Pulse, a gay nightclub, in
Orlando during its “Latin Night.” Nearly all of the victims were LGBTQ+ and
Latinx. It was the deadliest attack on queer people in U.S. history.
Wolf began his
address by acknowledging his fellow survivors, and the courage they’ve shown in
years since the massacre.
“It takes
tremendous courage to get up and face the world every day,” he said. “I will
never forget the night that hate-fueled violence turned my life upside down.
The moment an ordinary night with friends became an extraordinary tragedy that rocked
the entire globe.”
Wolf recounted
the night of the tragedy, recalling how he was in the bathroom washing his
hands when he first heard gunshots. While Wolf made it to an emergency exit, he
shared that he lost two of his closest friends that day.
“My best
friends -- our stolen loved ones – they’re not just numbers or statistics.
They’re missing faces at birthday parties. They’re empty seats at dinner
tables. They are the human cost of hate violence. Rejecting extremism,
combating violence – those things are not partisan issues. They’re American
issues,” he stated.
Since 2020,
hate crimes in the United States have increased to their highest rate in over a
decade. FBI
statistics for the year show that 20 percent of hate crimes nationally
were motivated by sexual orientation. Crimes motivated by gender identity were
at 2.7 percent, up from 0.5 percent in previous years.
In her speech,
Harris told Wolf: “Your courage, born out of such a violent tragedy, has been
consistent and enduring. Long after the cameras left the scene of that horrific
crime, you have used your voice to represent the voices of so many.
Consistently you have been doing this work. You inspire so many of us,
and I thank you for your leadership.”
Harris also
invited Sarah Collins Rudolph, a survivor of the 16th Street Baptist Church
bombing in Birmingham, Ala., which occurred on the same day as Harris’ address
59 years prior.
Harris
announced a federal government response to the national increase in hate crimes
where they will reach out to recently affected communities, such as Oak Creek,
Orlando, Victoria, Pittsburgh, El Paso, Atlanta, Buffalo.
“I strongly
believe no one should ever be made to fight alone — not on this,” Harris said.
“We must stand together — students, parents, educators, faith leaders, business
leaders, and law enforcement officials. And we must clearly say that a harm
against any one of us is a harm against all of us. We are at an inflection
point in our history and, indeed, in our democracy.”
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
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