Group of Christian lesbians and gays
In early 1974, the working group on church information was set up in Utrecht by some people from the general working group on information of the COC Utrecht and from Contact groups for homophiles (later De Kringen). It became an official working group of both. Its purpose was described as "to bring about a change of opinion regarding homophily among various churches". The working group existed for over 13 years.
The first year was mainly spent on internal training and knowledge exchange with support from Ben van der Wilt, active for many years in the national COC training of information officers. This taught members to look for the why of certain questions, sometimes answering them with a counter-question. Members exchanged literature information based on the report On people being homophile (Over mensen die homofiel zijn) of the 1972 Synod of the Reformed Churches. In the beginning, the working group consisted almost exclusively of women. This was quite exceptional for that time because most visible 'homosexuals' at the time were men.
In late 1974, the working group sought contact with various Utrecht and Amersfoort church groups such as sections of the Dutch Christian Women's Union (NCVB), the Catholic Women's Guild and youth groups.
Contacts with churches
The preparation of an information meeting followed a set pattern. Two members of the working group had a preliminary discussion with board members or group leaders of an organisation or group, tried to get an impression of them and then proposed an information programme.
The introduction usually consisted of three parts: a factual account (5 % of the population is gay, lesbian or bisexual, etc.) followed by two personal stories: from a man and from a woman.
If it was a small group, two or three working group members would go there; in the case of larger groups, all members of the working group. They sat spread out between the members of the group being educated so that they could easily talk to each other during the break. Information material was also viewed and handed out during the break.
In the city of Utrecht, the working group organised five 'theme nights' each time for all members of the church councils and parish boards within a certain part of the city. This was done in cooperation with the pastors of the respective churches who were asked to recommend the invitation to the theme evening to their church council or board.
Those evenings sometimes had surprising outcomes. In Utrecht-Noordoost, a pastor took the floor and condemned the homosexual lifestyle on the basis of some Bible texts. This was met by a reaction from a progressive Roman Catholic priest of the former Biltstraat church who did not agree with him at all.
First experiences in the classroom
In 1977, two members of the working group, Hellen de Wit and Gea Zijlstra, gave information to a class at the Utrecht Christian Gymnasium. In XL, the COC magazine of February-March 2002, a short report by the teacher of that class appeared 25 years later: 'The tone in the class then was: we will teach those faggots a lesson. Then two very sweet girls stepped into the classroom. The whole thing was upside down. Two boys threw a table upside down and angrily walked out of the classroom. Parents called me angrily because I was advertising gay people.'
Apart from that curious beginning, the women did think it was a meaningful meeting. Later, they learned from this teacher why things had gone so wrong in the beginning: a group of boys from that class had devised a plan in advance to ridicule the visiting gays. But ... so two lesbians stepped in! Then their plan completely fell apart! Well, at that time, homosexuality was still mainly seen as something for boys or men!
Against prejudice
The working group soon abolished the use of the term 'homophily' because it was obscuring and led some people to think away the sexual side of a relationship: 'Can't you just be friends, without sex?' That question was especially addressed to women, who - especially at the time - were often hardly seen as sexual beings. On one topic the group refused to discuss at an information session: possible causes of homosexuality; surely they were not talking about possible causes of heterosexuality either? And when the possibility of being cured of homosexuality was mentioned, their response was: 'why are you asking about that? (No, we don't need a cure, we feel fine.)'
Sometimes, after such an information meeting, a follow-up conversation with a church council ensued. In it, one pastor invoked the creation story: in a marriage, children can be born, therefore a relationship between two men or two women can never be of the same order. He was called to order by a woman who was an elder there: 'But pastor, you don't have children, and neither do I - so are our marriages second-class?'
At an information meeting, the working group members never raised texts from the Bible themselves, but did respond to questions about them. They primarily wanted to combat prejudice and sometimes got the impression that Bible texts were being used to disguise civil prejudices.
End of the working group
In the late 1980s, the working group dissolved. Earlier, some members had quit and others had joined, such as Geertje Mak who took over the coordinatorship from Gea Zijlstra. Some members became active nationally within the COC, for instance in the ‘working group dykes and theology’ founded in 1984, in which several lesbian theologians, theology students and a few more lesbians interested in theology also participated. There, the terms ‘dyke’ and ‘faggot’ were never seen as a swear word, but as a name of honor.
Gea Zijlstra
'About people who are homophile; report to the General Synod of Dordrecht 1971/1972' - detail from a 1973 report with articles on homophily and church
Group photo Working Group on Information Churches, September 22, 1977
From left to right, back row: Alp Buitelaar, Astrid Sakkers, Chienus Schokker and Nel Aleman, Front row: Truus Hortensius, Gea Zijlstra, Hellen de Wit and Joke Stroes.
Sources
Gea Zijlstra, ‘Voorlichting in de jaren ‘70’, Vroom&Vrolijk 7:6 (1996) 6-7
Over mensen die homofiel zijn; rapport aan de Generale Synode van Dordrecht 1971/1972
Illustrations
About people who are homophile; report to the General Synod of Dordrecht 1971/1972 - detail from a 1973 report with articles on homophily and church.
Group photo Working Group Information Churches, September 22, 1977: from left to right, back row: Alp Buitelaar, Astrid Sakkers, Chienus Schokker and Nel Aleman, Front row: Truus Hortensius, Gea Zijlstra, Hellen de Wit and Joke Stroes.
Round photo above: Bible moralisée (1220s); Manuscript (Codex Vindobonensis 2554); Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna, Wikimedia Commons.