Sunday, December 22, 2013

A Very Utah Christmas

Elenor Heyborne and Marina Gomberg apply for a marriage license on Dec. 20.
Photo by Jim Urquhart
‘Tis the week before Christmas, and all through the state,
Wedding bells are ringing for those who can’t wait.

For a window was opened, and soon it might close
If cold-hearted grinches get what they propose:

A stay on the order that lifted the ban;
And marriages only for a woman and man.

But if ever there was a time and a place
For a state to perform an abrupt about face,

It’s here in a state that was founded by men
Who lived not with just one, but many women;

And here in a place, where our leaders do strive
To keep government rules out of all of our lives;

And here in a world where so many do trust,
That freedom means fairness for ev’ry one of us;

And here in a place with a great history
Of changing our laws when it’s clear it needs be.

For instance, that time in Nineteen-Thirty-Three,
When we were the deciding state to decree,

Prohibition should end in the nation at large,
Even though most the people who were then in charge,

Partook of no liquor, not one single drop.
Repeal did not change that, did not make it stop.

And then there was the year Eighteen-Ninety-Six
We elected a woman into the mix

Of Utah’s state senate; the first woman to be
Serving such a role in the land of the free.

Yes, Utah has had its fair share of regrets,
Banning blacks from the priesthood was bad as it gets.

It wasn’t until Nineteen-Seventy-Eight,
That the Mormons would fix that awful mistake. 

And it wasn’t until just this very year,
The church’s leaders made it perfectly clear,

There was no good reason for the racial ban.
It wasn’t God’s will but the fault of a man,

Who let a few passages from the Good Book
Influence him to blatantly overlook

The teachings of someone who many now say
Was our Lord and Savior, born on Christmas day.

Is it hard to think that today we might have
A law on our books every bit as bad,

Begun with the best of intentions and yet
Will someday be something we’d like to forget?

With this all in mind is it too much to ask,
For one brave and audacious holiday task?

Dear Governor Herbert, please look in your heart,
And think about what our state might just impart,

Upon our great nation if you’d just command
That Utah won’t be where hate makes its last stand.

You don’t have to change any deep-held beliefs
About what a good marriage really should be.

Just let us all have the same rights you enjoy.
To marry our partners, to share all our joy,

Our betters and worses, our deaths to us part.
And simply allow this next New Year to start

With love and compassion, instead of a fight.
A Merry Christmas for all, when we all Choose the Right.