December 16, 2010

Warhol Foundation to withhold Smithsonian money



The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, a major funder of the “Hide/Seek” exhibit about the presence of same-sex desire in American art, has decided to withhold all future funding for all Smithsonian Institution museums in the wake of the decision by Smithsonian Secretary G. Wayne Clough to pull down a video about AIDS from the exhibit.
The decision was announced on Monday in a letter from Joel Wachs, the foundation’s president, in a letter to Clough demanding that “you restore the censored work immediately,” an action that Wachs said was decided unanimously by the foundation board of directors last week.
In the letter, made public by Wachs, he told Clough that the action to remove a video artwork from the exhibit, a four-minute video titled “A Fire in the Belly,” by painter, filmmaker and performance artist David Wojnarowicz, was “blatant censorship” and “unconscionable” and “inimical to everything the Smithsonian Institution should stand for.”
After noting that the foundation has previously donated more than $375.000 over the past three years  to fund several exhibits at various Smithsonian museums, including $100,000 to help stage “Hide/Seek,” Wachs told Clough:  “we cannot stand by and watch the Smithsonian bow to the demands of bigots who have attacked the exhibition out of ignorance, hatred and fear.”
In early December, the Catholic League complained over several seconds in the short silent video which ants are shown crawling on a crucifix — a familiar use of the insects in the artist’s work, in this case to represent the agony of HIV/AIDS. Wojnarowicz, prominent in the New York City art world in the 1980s, died of AIDS-related complications in 1992 at the age of 37.  But the Catholic League claimed the work to be offensive to Roman Catholics and was anti-Catholic “hate speech,” a theme quickly taken up by two Republican House leaders including incoming Speaker John Boehner.
After these complaints, Clough consulted with National Portrait Gallery director Martin Sullivan and Smithsonian art historian David Ward, co-curator of the exhibit, but not with the other curator, Jonathan D. Katz, who was then in London lecturing at the Tate Modern. The decision to remove the video was made by Clough over the objections of Ward and late also from Katz.
Ward told the Washington Post that the video “is not anti-religion or sacriligious.  It is a powerful use of imagery.”  He said the action was reminiscent of the Corcoran gallery of Art decision in 1989 to cancel an exhibit of Robert Maplethorpe’s photography — ironically, Maplethorpe is featured in the current NPG exhibit.  “Once again,” said Ward, that same weapon” — to halt federal funding of the arts — “is being brandished, and once again we cower.”
Katz also denounced the decision, adding that it’s unfortunate that “the exhibition itself is being lost in the mudslinging” and that “homophobia and raw politics” were at the root of the action.” However, said Katz, the show itself, “by remaining up, continues to resist the politics.”
On Dec. 9, NPG commissioner James T. Bartlett resigned in protest.  Earlier, on Dec. 2, activists marched from the Transformer Gallery, which showed the video briefly following its removal from the exhibit, to the Portrait Gallery, and on Dec. 5 two protesters were detained by police and barred from the gallery for holding leaflets while one of men, Mike Blasenstein, was wearing an iPad running the Wojnarowicz video, an action forbidden by Smithsonian policy.
Wachs told Clough that the Warhol Foundation action was necessary because “the decision to censor this important work” put the donors in this position.

Alone & Sleeping on the Street: Happy Holidays!


3,800 runaway and homeless youths are without shelter every night in New York City. (IMAGE: NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE ON FAMILIES AND YOUTH)

Alone & Sleeping on the Street: Happy Holidays

With 3,800 NYC runaway, homeless youth, Bloomberg cuts shelter bed funding

 
BY CITY COUNCILMAN LEW FIDLER
I want you to close your eyes. Picture a 15-year-old child, out on the streets of New York City, late at night with no place to go. Some horrible situation has made living at home impossible. Unable to go home, the child finds whatever comfort one can possibly find in a bus shelter. Hungry and needing food and a place to stay, this young tender creature considers the options — couch surfing, sex work, an act of criminal desperation, or starvation and exposure.

Now, before you open your eyes, pretend that it’s your child.

As melodramatic as all of that may sound, that is the story for approximately 3,800 runaway and homeless youth in our city on the average night. That’s a shocking number, especially in this day and age in a city that prides itself as one of the world’s most civilized places.

Yet this Thanksgiving, in one of the cruelest actions imaginable, the Bloomberg administration cut funding for our youth shelter bed programs by $1.5 million. Ho ho ho and happy holidays.

Over my nine years chairing the New York Council’s Youth Services Committee, we have held 18 hearings on issues related to runaway and homeless children. Partnering with the Department for Youth and Community Development, we have increased the number of shelter beds and their diversity. For me, the goal is a moral imperative — to find a hospitable and appropriate shelter bed for every child who needs one.

We are miles and miles from that end.


Today, despite having added capacity to the program, there are still far too few shelter programs. There are a scant 114 emergency or “crisis” shelter beds. Most programs have 100 or more kids on their waiting list, kids who have come in from the cold in the hope of getting their lives together, returning to school, or getting some vocational training, only to be told that there is no room at the inn.

Who are these kids? Many are fleeing a home environment where they have been physically, sexually, or emotionally abused. Some have a parent or parents who are drug abusers. Many have “aged out” of the foster care system. They come from diverse ethnic backgrounds. One-third to forty percent identify as LGBTQ. Some are pregnant. Hard times? No doubt. Bad choices? Sometimes.

Still, each is a child, a child almost always without proper parental guidance, love, and support… and every one of them is one of God’s children.

As a parent, I cannot fathom anyone who cannot feel the pain of a child who has been denied love and support in the one place that every child should be entitled to it, in their family home.

But if you can’t wrap your mind around the sheer human tragedy and find compassion in your heart, then as a taxpayer, look at your wallet. Left on the street, every one of these kids is more likely to develop a mental disability, become HIV-positive, or end up a burden to the criminal justice system. And the cost of dealing with any one of those things is more than the cost of a shelter bed program.


I am not one of those elected officials who think we can spend money we don’t have. Nor am I willing to raise the only tax over which the Council has control — the property tax — and drive more families into home foreclosure. So, cutting spending is a must.

But doing it on the backs of our very most vulnerable population — children who are without their families, sleeping on subway grates at night — is morally wrong.

In a budget of more than $60 billion, there’s got to be a better choice to make.

Feel the pain of a child. Multiply it by 3,800. Then go home and hug your child. But first, let City Hall know that in the most civilized city in the most civilized country in the year 2010, letting 3,800 children sleep on the streets every night is just not acceptable.

Call it the holiday spirit. Call it simple human decency. Just call City Hall.

Lew Fidler, a Brooklyn Democrat, is the City Council’s assistant majority leader and has been the chair of the Council’s Youth Services Committee since January 2002. He has held 18 hearings on the subject of runaway and homeless youth (RHY) and has championed the cause of expanding the capacity and diversity of the RHY shelter bed system in New York.

His work in this area has been honored by RHY organizations such as the Ali Forney Center, Rachel’s Place, and Inwood House.

For further information, contact Fidler’s City Hall office at 212-788-2182 or his Brooklyn district office at 718-241-9330.

by www.gaycitynews.com

Guilty: The teenage girl who smiled as she kicked gay civil servant to death


The court heard Ruby Thomas, 18, screamed 'f***ing faggots' before kicking the victim as he lay on the floor. She is pictured in April this year
The court heard Ruby Thomas, 18, screamed 'f***ing faggots' before kicking the victim as he lay on the floor. She is pictured in April this year
A former public schoolgirl who hurled homophobic abuse at a gay civil servant before kicking and stamping on him during a deadly attack was facing jail today.
Ruby Thomas, 18, was found guilty of the manslaughter of 62-year-old Ian Baynham, who died 18 days after the drink-fuelled assault in London's Trafalgar Square.
Police later found his blood smeared on her handbag and the ballet pumps she was wearing as she kicked him.
The court heard she smiled as she 'put the boot into' Mr Baynham after he was knocked to the ground by another teenager, Joel Alexander.
Thomas's ex-boyfriend told the Old Bailey that the blonde teenager, of Anerley, south east London, was 'not the type of girl' to have done it.
But jurors did not agree and convicted her of manslaughter, along with Alexander, 20, of Thornton Heath, south east London.
A third defendant, 18-year-old Rachael Burke, of Upper Norwood, south east London, was found guilty of affray at an earlier trial.
Thomas, a former pupil at £12,000-a-year Sydenham High School for Girls, had a previous record for violence.
She was just 15 when she assaulted a bus driver in Northumberland Avenue in December 2007, a short walk from where the attack on Mr Baynham took place.
On the night Mr Baynham was attacked in September last year Thomas was said to have been 'off her face', acting in a 'lairy, mouthy' way, and flirting with random men.
The court heard that Thomas screamed 'f******faggots' at the victim and his friend Philip Brown.
When Mr Baynham confronted her, there was a scuffle during which she hit him with her handbag and he grabbed it.
Alexander then ran up and knocked him to the ground, causing a severe brain injury as his head struck the pavement.
Brian Altman QC, prosecuting, said: 'That did not suffice. There is evidence that the female defendants then began putting the boot into Mr Baynham, who was still prone on his back, clearly unconscious and in distress.'
He said the girls were 'fuelled by copious amounts of alcohol' and one witness likened the attack to a scene from the film A Clockwork Orange.
'Shocked onlookers saw repeated stamping to his chest and forceful kicks to his head,' said Mr Altman.
Thomas looked distraught as the verdicts were returned and put her head in her hands.
Both defendants will be sentenced in the new year.
Mr Baynham was in the first week of a new job as a team leader in border control at the Home Office when he was killed.
The day before the attack, he had phoned his sister Jenny Baynham and told her how much he was enjoying the new role.
She was at his bedside when he died from a brain injury sustained during the assault, together with Mr Baynham's friend George Richardson.
Mr Richardson described the victim as 'a perfectly normal man who just happened to be gay'.
The court heard that the teenagers who attacked him had been drinking before they set upon him outside South Africa House on September 25 last year.
One witness overheard the group talking about two other men walking past them earlier holding hands, with one of the girls saying 'We can do them' and a youth replying 'Of course we can'.
Ian Baynham, 62, who suffered fatal head injuries in an assault close to the South African High Commission, in Trafalgar Square
Ian Baynham, 62, who suffered fatal head injuries
 in an assault close to the South African High
 Commission, in Trafalgar Square
Guilty: Joel Alexander, 19, arriving at the Old Bailey in London. He was found guilty of Mr Baynham's manslaughter
Rachael Burke, 18, of Three Oaks, East Sussex, arriving at the Old Bailey in London. She was found guilty of affray
Guilty: Joel Alexander, 19, arriving at the Old Bailey
 in London. He was found guilty of Mr Baynham's
manslaughter. Rachael Burke, 18, of Three Oaks,
East Sussex, convicted of affray
10.58pm: Ian Baynham bleeds from a head injury as a paramedic administers treatment (his face is pixelated). He died 18 days later
10.58pm: Ian Baynham bleeds from a head injury as a paramedic administers treatment (his face is pixelated). He died 18 days after the attack
When Mr Baynham and Mr Brown appeared, Thomas began making homophobic comments.
Mr Baynham was heard to say to her 'No, I don't want to sleep with you' and a comment that began 'I may be gay but...'.
A scuffle broke out and Alexander, who had been with Thomas's group, ran up and punched the victim to the ground.
Mr Brown said his friend 'fell like a corpse', hitting his head on the pavement with a 'crunching noise'.
Alexander, a sports science student at the University of East London, later explained that he felt he 'had to act' because 'a grown man shouldn't hit a girl'.
His punch knocked Mr Baynham out, leaving him lying on the pavement making a snoring noise and with blood pouring from his ear, nose and mouth.
Jamie Devlin, another teenager who was there, saw Thomas stamp on his stomach and kick him in the head while calling him a 'dickhead' and saying 'f you'.
A further witness, Jill Shukla, and her husband tried to shield their teenage daughter and her friends from the scenes of violence as they walked by after a night out at the Palladium to celebrate her 16th birthday.
She said: 'I saw the girl stamping on him repeatedly with force, probably four or five times. She was smiling.'
The attackers ran off. In a Facebook chat the next day, Thomas joked about her row with 'some c   ' who pulled her bag, adding: 'Ha, ha, ha.'
dailymail.co.uk By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

'Mel Gibson called me an oven-dodger', Says Winona Ryder


Winona Ryder claims she was ahead of the times when it comes to Mel Gibson and his habit of spouting controversial and offensive slurs and jibes.
In fact, the 39-year-old actress says she had a disturbing run in with the veteran Mad Max actor way back in the mid-nineties.
And long before his infamous crazed and drunken 'sugar tits' anti-Semitic rant and the release of voicemails of him allegedly screaming the 'N - word', Winona says she had Gibson's card well and truly marked.
Winona
Run-in: Winona Ryder, at the New York Black Swan premiere on November 31, reveals in GQ that she had a nasty encounter with Mel Gibson 15 years ago
'I remember, like, fifteen years ago, I was at one of those big Hollywood parties. And [Gibson] was really drunk,' Ryder, 39, tells the January issue of GQ about the controversial actor, 54.
 
 
'I was with my friend, who's gay. [Gibson] made a really horrible gay joke. And somehow it came up that I was Jewish. 
'He said something about "oven dodgers," but I didn't get it,' Ryder admits of the slur, an ugly reference to the gas chambers employed to murder millions of Jewish prisoners at the camps during the Holocaust.

Courting controversy: When it comes to scandal Mel Gibson is the gift that just keeps on giving
Courting controversy: When it comes to scandal Mel Gibson is the gift that just keeps on giving
'I'd never heard that before. It was just this weird, weird moment. I was like, "He's anti-Semitic and he's homophobic." No one believed me!'
Ryder , whose fame was tarnished by a scandal herself, following a shoplifting conviction in 2002 at the height of her career, is back in the spotlight thanks to her role in the critically acclaimed drama Black Swan.
Winona plays a washed-up ageing ballerina in Darren Aronofsky's dark and edgy psycho-thriller.
Ryder admits she could relate to the part of a women struggling to hang on to her prime and her career as she ages in the cut throat, backstabbing world of ballet. 
'Being replaced by the young thing --- I know that definitely happens in Hollywood,' the one-time It girl said.
'It's harder to find good roles, and suddenly there's new girls. I'm at that age I've been warned my whole life about.'
Ryder, born Winona Horowitz, is half Jewish and in the past has revealed that many of her relatives died in the Holocaust.

Career reprisal Winona plays the part of an ageing ballerina at the end of her career in the edgy, dark psycho thriller Black Swan
Career reprisal Winona plays the part of an ageing ballerina at the end of her career in the edgy, dark psycho thriller Black Swan
Gibson has a track record of racist and homophobic outbursts and was this year heard hurling abuse at his former girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva in a vicious assault taped by the Russian singer.
He was heard screaming: ‘You look like a f****** pig in heat, and if you get raped by a pack of n******, it will be your fault.’
The Oscar-winning star was also arrested in California in 2006 after he was caught drink driving.
The devout Roman Catholic was alleged to have told the police officer that stopped him: ‘F****** Jews. The Jews are responsible for all the wars in the world.’
He is then said to have challenged officer James Mee: ‘Are you a Jew?’
In addition, The Passion of the Christ, the 2004 film he directed about the last hours of Jesus’ life, was widely criticised for being anti-Semitic.
Ryder’s comments will be a further blow to Gibson, who is again battling to save his career.
Earlier this year he was axed from the upcoming film The Hangover 2 in favour of Liam Neeson.
It is thought Gibson’s casting triggered a backlash among the cast and crew following the damaging revelations about his private life.
A spokesman for the star refused to comment on the allegations last night.
Back in the day: Winona Ryder was a fresh faced teen when she shot to fame in the 1989 film Heathers
Back in the day: Winona Ryder was a fresh faced teen when she shot to fame in the 1989 film Heathers


 http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Michael Vick Wants a Dog. Remember Him and Dogs?


Among the conditions imposed on quarterback Michael Vick for his conviction on dog fighting 
charges was a liftetime ban on owning a dog. He wants that changed.
“I would love to get another dog in the future,” he told theGrio. “I think it would be a big step for me in the rehabilitation process. I think just to have a pet in my household and to show people that I genuinely care, and my love, and my passion for animals.”
Too bad. I think Vick has forfeited forever his right to own a pet. Especially when he gave this answer to the question of whether anyone told him that dog fighting was wrong:
“There was nothing that ever told me it wasn’t right,” Vick said. “No one ever told me it was the wrong thing to do.”
Anyone with a shred of humanity could have told him it was wrong to torture and kill animals and he should have known it was wrong; he knew it was wrong, which is why he went to great lengths to keep his operation hidden. I would never allow Vick to have a dog. He can always demonstrate his newfound love of animals by volunteering at an animal shelter, where he can show as much love as he wants for pets under supervision.
outsports.com/jocktalkblog

To Kevin Spacey: “We gay men have always proudly claimed you as a member of our tribe, and yet you don’t proudly claim us back. Why?”


The actor has fiercely protected his private life and has denied that he is gay for years.
Speaking to interviewer Kevin Sessums for the Daily Beast website, Spacey equated the interest in Kevin Spacey said sexuality was used as a his personal life to the bullying suffered by gay teenagers who attempt suicide.
Sessums said: “We gay men have always proudly claimed you as a member of our tribe, and yet you don’t proudly claim us back. Why?”
In response, Spacey said: “Look, I might have lived in England for the last several years but I’m still an American citizen and I have not given up my right to privacy.”
After Sessums argued that heterosexuality was not considered private, the actor continued: “I think what we have seen in terms of gay teenagers committing suicide because of bullying is anguishing. I think young people, if they are feeling like they are confused, need to know that there are people to talk to and that there are places they can go and not feel alone.
“But I feel that they have just as many rights as I do to not be bullied. And I don’t understand people who say, ‘Well, this is a terrible thing that is happening to this young person whose life is being exposed,’ and then turn around and do it to another person.
“People have different reasons for the way they live their lives. You cannot put everyone’s reasons in the same box. It’s just a line I’ve never crossed and never will.”
Sessums responded that he did not consider the line of questioning to be bullying and asked whether the actor would make an ‘It Gets Better’ video.
Spacey said: “Yeah. Absolutely. I’d do one of those. But why is it in this country that kids might think it’s okay to bully and make fun of somebody?
“I’ll tell you why, because what do they see in the media happening all the time? In the media they seem to think that’s okay. So if we stop using sexuality as a weapon against people maybe everyone will eventually get cool with it.”

December 15, 2010

Rent boy quizzed by police over claims that husband of honeymoon murder victim paid him for sex sessions


British police have quizzed a German rent boy over claims murder suspect Shrien Dewani had gay sex sessions with him.
The startling revelations - denied by Mr Dewani - come as the father of murdered honeymoon bride Anni Dewani made an impassioned plea for his son-in-law to return to South Africa to face the allegations he was involved in her murder.
The rent boy claims he was paid by the care home tycoon for sex three times.
'Go back': The father of murdered Anni Dewani has appealed to her husband Shrien to return to South Africa and face justice
'Go back': The father of murdered Anni Dewani has appealed to her husband Shrien to return to South Africa and face justice
Vinod Hindocha appealed to millionaire businessman Shrien Dewani to abandon plans to fight extradition over claims he hired two hitmen to kill his wife in a staged carjacking during their Cape Town honeymoon.
Scotland Yard sources said they had spoken to a 39-year-old escort about his alledged relationship with Dewani.
Although police won't officially speak about the interview sources said the German man contacted investigators after seeing Mr Dewani's picture in the media.
But last night a lawyer for Mr Dewani told The Sun the allegations were 'completely false and ridiculous'. Mr Dewani's spokesman, Max Clifford, also rubbished the claims saying his client had never had a homosexual relationship. 
In a direct appeal to his son-in-law, Mr Hindocha said: ‘Go to South Africa. Let the world know what happened.
‘Give us justice. That’s what I ask for. Justice for my daughter, who was so lively and innocent. 
‘If he says proudly that he did not do it, then just go back. Clear the doubts.’ 
Mr Dewani returned to his Bristol home a few days after his 28-year-old wife was shot dead after their taxi was ambushed in a township outside Cape Town on November 13. 
The taxi driver, Zola Tongo, was jailed for a reduced sentence of 18 years after admitting organising the murder but claiming Mr Dewani asked him to arrange the two ‘assassins’. 
Three days after the killing, Mr Dewani, 30, allegedly broke off from a meeting with his grieving father-in-law in South Africa to hand a packet of cash to Tongo. 
Heart-breaking: Vinod Hindocha, second from left, in the High Court in Cape Town, South Africa, where he watched the trial of her killers
Heart-breaking: Vinod Hindocha, second from left, in the High Court in Cape Town, South Africa, where he watched the trial of her killers
Mr Clifford said Mr Dewani was simply handing over the fare.
Mr Hindocha has signed an affidavit confirming his son-in-law left after receiving a call. 
The money exchange was captured on CCTV, the High Court in London was told last week. 
Speaking from his home in Mariestad, Sweden, Mr Hindocha said he had not had further contact with his son-in-law. 
The 61-year-old, who runs an electrical equipment company in Scandinavia, said he and his family were struggling with Anni’s death. 
‘It’s terrible. Things are not getting better. I can’t go to work. I can’t do anything,’ he told South Africa’s Cape Times newspaper.
‘We just walk round and round. We can’t get peace of mind.’
On bail: Shrien Dewani leaves Southmead Police Station, in Bristol, where he must report
On bail: Shrien Dewani leaves Southmead Police Station, in Bristol, where he must report
Mr Dewani’s lawyer, Clare Montgomery QC, told Westminster Magistrates’ Court last week he does not ‘consent’ to returning to South Africa, where the authorities want to investigate him on suspicion of conspiracy to murder. 
He is at home in Westbury-on-Trym on £250,000 bail ahead of next month’s extradition hearing. He denies any involvement in the murder.
The two men accused of killing Mrs Dewani are to stand trial in Cape Town in February.


 http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Thanks for wrecking my life - but I forgive you! Rugby legend Gareth Thomas and his ex-wife


These days conversations between Welsh rugby legend Gareth Thomas and his ex-wife Jemma are few and far between.
Invariably, they take the form of the odd text message — which begin with the words ‘Hello stranger, how are things?’ — but rarely stray beyond polite pleasantries.
But this is the way, Jemma insists, it has to be if they are to cut the emotional bonds which still exist between them and finally ‘move on’.
Torment: Gareth Thomas struggled with his sexuality for years before admitting to wife Jemma he was gay
Torment: Gareth Thomas struggled with his sexuality for years before admitting to wife Jemma he was gay
It is one year since Gareth — former Wales and British Lions captain — publicly announced he was gay. He was the first top sportsman in Britain to do so while still playing.
In an exclusive interview with the Mail last December, Gareth, 36, spoke movingly of how he’d tried to suppress his true sexuality for 20 years and throughout his five-year marriage to his childhood sweetheart, Jemma.
Tormented by the guilt which almost drove him to suicide, he confessed to Jemma in 2006 — three years before he found the courage to go public.
Jemma, 34, supported his announcement and spoke at the time of her forgiveness and continuing love for Gareth: ‘I don’t regret a day I spent as his wife. We will always be the best of friends.’
 
But are they still the best of friends? It seems it has not been an easy journey for them.
Gareth, who shortly after coming out switched from playing rugby union with the Cardiff Blues to rugby league with the Crusaders in North Wales, has had to contend — on occasion — with homophobic abuse from away match crowds.
He is now rumoured to be considering returning to rugby union, possibly with the London Welsh. He reportedly sees London as the best place to reshape his life.
But with the divorce from Jemma finalised in March and their beautiful home in St Brides Major is now sold, he reportedly remains guilt-ridden over how he broke his wife’s heart and has yet to meet a new partner.
Meanwhile, Jemma felt compelled to leave South Wales for Spain to escape the gossip surrounding the breakdown of their marriage, all the while having to cope with the devastating loss of a husband whom she adored.
Moved on: Jemma is now happy in a new relationship
Moved on: Jemma is now happy in a new relationship
Emotional self-preservation means that Jemma has effectively had to, slowly but surely, become a stranger to her ex-husband.
Besides, today she reveals she is in love with a new man, a 37-year-old London-based solicitor she met in Spain, where she was working for a furniture company.
They met last April and in August she returned to Britain to start a new life with him in Surrey. She says after all the turmoil and heartache, she is finally ready to put the past behind her.
‘I haven’t been this happy with anybody since Gareth,’ says Jemma, who prefers not to name her new partner, as she wants their relationship to remain private. ‘When we first met, we talked about everything that had happened between me and Gareth. I’m very open about it, because Gareth was a huge part of my life.
‘My new partner is a great listener, he’s a lovely, caring guy. He doesn’t judge. It’s a part of my life that will always be there, but it belongs to the past.
‘When Gareth told me he was gay, it felt like a complete catastrophe, as if my whole world had caved in. But I will always be grateful to him for telling me the truth when he did.
‘I was 30 then, but he could have waited until I was 50 or 60, when it would have been very hard for me to start over on my own again. But he loved me so much he wanted me to have a second chance, while I was still young enough to take it.’
Has she told Gareth about her new love?
‘To be honest, I don’t really speak to Gareth, apart from the odd text,’ she says. ‘I haven’t seen him since before I went to Spain, which is more than two years ago. I do think about him from time to time — that’s inevitable, as we spent so much time together.
‘But whether he knows I’m with someone else, I don’t know. 
On their wedding day: Jemma does not regret marrying Gareth and said they had a great life together
On their wedding day: Jemma does not regret marrying Gareth and said they had a great life together
‘I don’t think Gareth would tell me if he’d met someone new, as he would not want to hurt or upset me. But if he did, I would be thrilled for him, as we have both moved on so much.
‘There is enough emotional distance now that it wouldn’t be hard for me to see Gareth with someone new. Hand on heart. I would be happy for him — thrilled for him — because he will have found someone he wants to be with.
‘My only hope is that he is happy. I wouldn’t want him to be regretting what he’s done. That’s him, that is who he is, he shouldn’t regret it.’
When Gareth came out a year ago, he received widespread praise for his courage. He spoke out as he wanted the next generation of gay people to feel their sexuality was nothing to be ashamed of — even in the highest echelons of the most macho sports.
The only criticism he attracted centred on his deception of Jemma, who married Gareth in 2001.
How, readers asked, could he have married her knowing in his heart of hearts that he was gay?
The fact he genuinely loved her and tried to suppress his true sexuality — which he’d become aware of when he was 17 — hoping it would go away, cut little ice with some. 
Jemma, however, does not want people to feel angry or on her behalf. Only she knows how much Gareth suffered and she says he has punished himself more than enough.
Brave decision: Gareth was the first international sportsman to announce he was gay while still playing for club and country
Brave decision: Gareth was the first international sportsman to announce he was gay while still playing for club and country
‘Gareth isn’t a bad person for what he’s done and I’m not a bad person for ending our marriage,’ says Jemma. ‘It’s just unfortunate that we were two people who were in a marriage destroyed by something that couldn’t be controlled.
‘Of course, there were times when I felt angry and thought: “Thanks for wrecking my life.” But I am a forgiving person — and I know Gareth loved me to pieces,’ says Jemma, a farmer’s daughter who met Gareth when they were teenagers and he worked as her ­postman in Bridgend. 
‘We had a great marriage. We had wonderful friends, we didn’t fight, we had money, we both worked, we both earned good salaries. It was ideal.
‘At internationals, all the other wives would ask: “How come your marriage is so perfect?”
‘We would have been together for ever if he hadn’t been gay, but if he hadn’t been gay he would have been a different person. He wouldn’t have been the Gareth I knew and loved.’
It was while living in France, where Gareth then played for Toulouse, that he broke the news to Jemma and confessed he’d visited gay bars and clubs behind her back.
Jemma, who’d recently suffered her third miscarriage, was devastated. She ended the marriage, but Gareth would have preferred to have continued with it.
‘If I’d said I wanted to stay with him, allowing him the freedom to explore his sexuality, I think he would have preferred that,’ says Jemma.
‘In the beginning we said: “We can get through this.” We tried to think of the best solution, as we absolutely adored each other. But you can’t live in a relationship where one cannot provide adequately for another. I wanted all of him, not 90 per cent.
‘Perhaps it would have been different if we’d have children.’
Jemma left Toulouse, moved back to South Wales and confided in her parents and closest friends. There were many tearful conversations between her and Gareth.
‘It was hard to explain, as he hadn’t told anybody and I wanted to protect him,’ says Jemma. ‘We’d split up and it was no one else’s business, but Gareth was such a high profile character there was no escape.
‘In the beginning, Gareth suggested I tell people he’d left me for another woman, but I told him: “Gareth we can’t fib to our closest friends.”
‘And it did cost us friends, people who couldn’t accept Gareth was gay. He is an icon among rugby fans and some blamed me for leaving him.’
For months after their separation, Jemma and Gareth continued to meet every Friday for lunch and the occasional dinner — finding it impossible to make a permanent break.
‘We’d try to laugh and joke, never talking about deeper things. It was as if we were still together but leading parallel lives,’ says Jemma, who took the decision shortly afterwards to join her mother Judi, 62, in Spain.
‘Gareth had been part of my whole adult life. Everywhere I went in Wales we had a shared memory or mutual friends — it all felt so raw.
‘I thought: “We can’t go forward like this.” I needed to close the book, as it wasn’t a normal divorce situation. There was no going back, nothing to discuss, it was all cut and dried.’
When Gareth told Jemma last year he was planning to go public about his sexuality, she was pleased.
‘Being gay is not as taboo as it used to be,’ says Jemma. ‘I’m proud of him for being man enough to go public, because there’s nothing worse than people talking about you continually behind your back. Now they haven’t anything to say.’
As for Jemma, she loved being Mrs Thomas and will never regret her marriage, but she’s put the past to rest. She loves someone else now.
‘It’s a lovely feeling and, thankfully, I have the second chance for it. I wouldn’t change anything for the world at the moment,’ she says.
‘Forgive, forget and get on with it. That’s my philosophy. Life’s too short.
‘You only get one go. Be happy.’


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