1953 Pasadena Arrest

The Personal Toll of Political Erasure: Walter Naegle on the Legacy of Bayard Rustin

In this conversation, Walter Naegle reflects on the personal cost of Bayard Rustin’s 1953 arrest, describing how homophobia within and outside the movement sidelined the architect of nonviolence and left his career “stymied.” Naegle also speaks to the emotional power of witnessing Rustin’s legacy restored through the Presidential Medal of Freedom and posthumous pardon, emphasizing Rustin’s enduring dignity, resilience, and unwavering commitment to justice even when his own movement failed him.

"The Litmus Paper of Social Change": Bayard Rustin’s Final Reflections on Queer Identity

In a deeply personal interview with Open Hands, Bayard Rustin reflects on the intersections of his identity as a Black, gay, socialist, and conscientious objector, describing an upbringing in West Chester, Pennsylvania that quietly affirmed his dignity. He argues that LGBTQ+ people have become a modern “barometer” of social progress, insisting that a society incapable of accepting difference in private life cannot truly advance in human rights.