Charles Silverstein, who helped declassify homosexuality as illness, dies at 87

Authored by washingtonpost.com and submitted by hellomondays

Charles Silverstein, a psychologist who helped achieve one of the most significant victories of the gay rights movement by persuading the American Psychiatric Association in 1973 to declassify homosexuality as a mental illness, died Jan. 30 at his home in New York City. He was 87. Wp Get the full experience. Choose your plan ArrowRight He had lung cancer, said his executor, Aron Berlinger.

Dr. Silverstein spent decades of his life — as an activist, a psychologist and an author — advancing the cause of gay rights. He had felt the sting of discrimination and the burden of shame as a gay man who came of age at a time when expressions of homosexuality were stigmatized if not outright illegal, and when gay people were treated not only as morally deviant but as mentally ill.

Dr. Silverstein, who felt he had no choice but to conceal his sexuality during his early professional years and into graduate school, came out as the gay rights movement gained momentum in the wake of the Stonewall riots in New York in 1969.

He was nearing completion of a doctoral degree in social psychology and had joined the Gay Activists Alliance, an advocacy group that organized high-profile protests known as “zaps,” when he was invited to speak to the APA’s nomenclature committee on the matter of homosexuality.

At the time, homosexuality was categorized as a mental disorder and “sexual deviation” in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, a reference volume regarded as the authoritative guide to mental health diagnoses. In February 1973, Dr. Silverstein was one of several speakers who appeared before the nomenclature panel to challenge the scientific and clinical basis of that classification.

“Psychoanalysts believed that gay men were doomed to lives of depression and, eventually, suicide because of their shame,” Dr. Silverstein later told the Windy City Times, a Chicago-based LGBTQ publication. “I argued that these men were not ashamed because they were homosexual but because of what these therapists were telling them.”

Ten months later, in December 1973, the APA voted to remove homosexuality from the official list of mental disorders. The association issued a statement declaring that the decision was “not to say that homosexuality is ‘normal,’ or that it is as desirable as heterosexuality.” But among supporters of gay rights, the vote was regarded as a landmark victory.

“As long as we were officially sick, there was no chance that we would be officially equal,” said Charles Kaiser, an author who chronicled American gay life in the book “The Gay Metropolis.” He called the APA vote “the single most important event in the history of gay liberation after the Stonewall riots” and described Dr. Silverstein as “one of the handful of people most important in bringing the change about.”

In his private psychology practice in New York and in his writings, Dr. Silverstein sought to help gay people live without shame, which he likened to a “toxin in the body.” He and author Edmund White wrote the 1977 volume “The Joy of Gay Sex: An Intimate Guide for Gay Men to the Pleasures of a Gay Lifestyle.”

The book included graphic images and language and was, by Dr. Silverstein’s account, “impounded in Canada, shredded in France and burned in England.” Even in stores where the book was sold, copies only were available upon request so they were not displayed to the public.

It nonetheless became a foundational work in gay literature. Subsequent versions, co-authored by Dr. Silverstein and Felice Picano, were released in 1992 and 2003.

“The first time I had sex with a guy was a big learning experience,” Dr. Silverstein told the publication the Advocate in 2021. “I didn’t know what … I was doing. Fortunately, he did.” His book and all his activism, he said, was his way of helping younger generations avoid some of the difficulties he had faced.

Dr. Silverstein was born in Brooklyn on April 23, 1935. His father drove a newspaper delivery truck, and his mother was a homemaker.

Dr. Silverstein, whose family was Jewish, recalled encountering antisemitism as well as homophobia and described his childhood as “not something I would want to relive.”

“I was not good in sports, and that, of course, is a black mark on a boy. I think that also within me were some characteristics that would later come out, in terms of being gay,” he said in a 2019 oral history with Rutgers University. “I just know that I was different than the other kids, and I wasn’t sure why.”

He studied education at the State University of New York at New Paltz before becoming an elementary school teacher in Larchmont, N.Y. He recalled being afraid of revealing his sexuality for fear that he would be fired, and remained in the closet as he began his psychology studies at Rutgers.

“There was a period before I got to college where I wanted to change, and I went into therapy for the purpose of changing,” he told the Advocate. “Obviously, it didn’t work, and it never works, but it was what most people did in those days.”

Dr. Silverstein was the founder of a New York-based counseling center, the Identity House, and the Institute for Human Identity, which describes itself as “the nation’s first and longest-running provider or LGBTQ+-affirming psychotherapy.”

“The amount of damage that has been done by the psychological and psychiatry professions to help people change — I see it every day at my practice,” Dr. Silverstein told the Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide in 2012. “I think aversion therapy is a form of torture. I think that psychiatrists of that period enjoyed setting up a sado-masochist relationship between them and their patients.”

Dr. Silverstein was the author or editor of books including “A Family Matter: A Parents’ Guide to Homosexuality” (1977), “Man to Man: Gay Couples in America” (1981), “Gays, Lesbians and Their Therapists” (1991), “The Initial Psychotherapy Interview: A Gay Man Seeks Treatment” (2011) and the memoir “For the Ferryman: A Personal History” (2011).

His longtime partner William Bory died of complications from AIDS in 1993. Dr. Silverstein’s subsequent marriage to Bill Bartelt ended in divorce. Survivors include a son he adopted last year, Shahrukh Khalique of New York City, and a brother.

In 2011, Dr. Silverstein received the American Psychological Foundation’s gold medal for lifetime achievement. He found fulfillment, he said, as gay rights evolved in recent years to include the freedom of gay couples to marry and build families.

“I’m glad that younger generations are more free,” he said. “That’s what we were fighting for.”

m073 on February 9th, 2023 at 06:28 UTC »

Dr. Silverstein was my therapist while I was in grad school a few years ago. I didn't know who he was at the time; I had a vauge sense that he only took a few clients as a way to keep busy in "retirement." He was so wonderful, he knew I was a student with very little money so he offered an adjusted rate. If he hadn't done that, I wouldn't have been able to afford any therapy at all during a time when I was in a very dark place. He would email occasionally after I graduated and we stopped meeting. Regrettably I forgot to respond to his last email and we stopped communicating.

It wasn't until a couple years later that I found his book and learned what his impact was on the world. I emailed him a couple months ago but didn't hear back, so I assumed the worst.

He was a great therapist and an amazing listener.

Thanks Dr. Silverstein, you'll be missed.

dba1990 on February 9th, 2023 at 01:17 UTC »

And to think, the Reagan administration wanted this guy federally-imprisoned for going against what government guidelines suggested was their own HIV/AIDS disease within the LGBTQ community.

MaximumEffort433 on February 9th, 2023 at 00:56 UTC »

From time to time you'll hear the cynics say things like "Nothing ever changes," cynicism depends on hopelessness, and acknowledging improvements runs counter to their feelings. Meanwhile I'm 38 and I remember thinking as a kid that nationwide marriage equality was still a lifetime away, that the first Black President or the first woman to win the popular vote would be after my time, that weed would forever grown in closets and basements; folks say nothing ever changes, but I'd much rather be here now than at any other time in history.

It was only in 1920 that women won the right to vote, only in 1964 that Blacks won the legal protections they needed in order to cast their vote, only 2013 when we achieved nationwide marriage equality.... If people tell you that things are worse today than they've ever been, ask them when was better.

Today it sounds like medical quackery to claim that homosexuality is an illness, the fact that it always was medical quackery, but for a long time it just wasn't challenged. Removing homosexuality from the DSM didn't necessarily change anybody's opinions on the subject, but it created ripples, and those ripples add up over time. (This is not to diminish what Silverstein accomplished, it's just to say that he's one of many who fought for progress.)

If somebody tells you nothing ever changes, squirt a lemon in their eye.