Senior Year: APs, College Prep, and Coming Out in My Orthodox High School
When I tell my friends who are not Orthodox that Im out of the closet and attending a Modern Orthodox high school, many of them do a double take. Why would I subject myself to that, they ask. One even asked why I hadnt left and fled to the comforts of public school. Why would I choose to stay in a community where, my friends thought, I wasnt accepted?
Those were the very same questions that I asked myself when I first realized that being openly gay was something that I wanted to do. To be fair, though, it wasnt quite a realization that I wanted to be completely out, but rather, something that happened almost accidentally and that I realized ex post facto. I knew that my closest friends, the ones whom I had come out to first, wouldnt have a problem with my being gay, nor would they out me to anyone with the intent to hurt me. I knew that the friends whom I had told at first had other friends who were LGBT, and who could and would be supportive of me as I proceeded to come out to my parents and more friends.
I had known that these friends would be there for me, but as I started coming out to people with whom I wasnt particularly close, I headed into uncharted territory: outside of my circle of friends. How would I know that they wouldnt run off, screaming at the top of their lungs? How could I know that my telling them that I am gay wouldnt make them feel uncomfortable? After all, going to a Modern Orthodox school where I was the second student in the history of the school to have been out of the closet, there was little to no precedent for how people would respond. (The other out student graduated before my grade even entered high school.) For many people, I would learn later, I was the first out person they met.
http://www.myjewishlearning.com/blog/keshet/2012/09/05/senior-year-aps-college-prep-and-coming-out-in-my-orthodox-high-school/
Maybe someday soon he can be married within his movement. Stories like this give me hope.