Frank Ocean Publishes Personal Statement in the Wake of Orlando

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Just over a week after the Pulse Night Club massacre in Orlando, Frank Ocean has joined other queer artists in publicly confronting the tragedy, acknowledging how this kind of hate has affected him on both a personal and political level.

This morning, in a powerfully penned note to Tumblr, Ocean addressed the excessive hate members of the community receive in various, appalling ways. With both empathy and disbelief, the young artist recounts his own personal anecdotes surrounding his demonized sexuality as a means of fathoming the culture in which the Orlando shooting was wrought. He even recalls one of the last times he saw his father, who dragged him out of a dinner because he thought their transgender waitress was “dirty.” Ocean’s note addresses some of the intersectional issues surrounding the shooting: transphobia, persecution within religion, mental health and more. Ocean writes:

I read in the paper that my brothers are being thrown from rooftops blindfolded with their hands tied behind their backs for violating sharia law. I heard the crowds stone these fallen men if they move after they hit the ground. I heard it’s in the name of God. I heard my pastor speak for God too, quoting scripture from his book. Words like abomination popped off my skin like hot grease as he went on to describe a lake of fire that God wanted me in. I heard on the news that the aftermath of a hate crime left piles of bodies on a dance floor this month. I heard the gunman feigned dead among all the people he killed. I heard the news say he was one of us. I was six years old when I heard my dad call our transgender waitress a faggot as he dragged me out a neighborhood diner saying we wouldn’t be served because she was dirty. That was the last afternoon I saw my father and the first time I heard that word, I think, although it wouldn’t shock me if it wasn’t. Many hate us and wish we didn’t exist. Many are annoyed by our wanting to be married like everyone else or use the correct restroom like everyone else. Many don’t see anything wrong with passing down the same old values that send thousands of kids into suicidal depression each year. So we say pride and we express love for who and what we are. Because who else will in earnest? I daydream on the idea that maybe all this barbarism and all these transgressions against ourselves is an equal and opposite reaction to something better happening in this world, some great swelling wave of openness and wakefulness out here. Reality by comparison looks grey, as in neither black nor white but also bleak. We are all God’s children, I heard. I left my siblings out of it and spoke with my maker directly and I think he sounds a lot like myself. If I being myself were more awesome at being detached from my own story in a way I being myself never could be. I wanna know what others hear, I’m scared to know but I wanna know what everyone hears when they talk to God. Do the insane hear the voice distorted? Do the indoctrinated hear another voice entirely?

[Via the Fader]