Courtney Blanchard is 30 years old and hails from the small town of Raceland, Louisiana, about an hour southwest of New Orleans.
Blanchard and her wife have recently joined the first federal lawsuit against the State of Louisiana, fighting for marriage equality in the Deep South. Blanchard has decided to take on this fight because, for her, the person is also political.
“On Aug. 30, 2013, in a short ceremony at a law office in Clinton County, Iowa, I promised my wife a second time. This time was different but just as meaningful as the first. In front of our parents, family and friends, I made that promise for the first time at our commitment ceremony in May of 2012. The difference this time was that finally, although hundreds of miles from home, we were legally married in the eyes of the law—at least under the laws of Iowa and the Federal Government. That joy was short-lived as we returned home to Louisiana, and the reality hit us. That piece of paper meant absolutely nothing in our home state.”
Blanchard met her wife, Nadine, right before Christmas in 2009. “Little did I know that she would become my wife, my soul mate, and the mother of our child in just a few short years,” recalls Blanchard. “We quickly realised that our hopes, dreams, and goals were all the same. I had always dreamed of having children but never really thought it would happen, but in November 2011, we decided to have a child together.” And so the couple investigated Vitro fertilisation, using Courtney’s eggs, an anonymous sperm donor and Nadine carrying the child. “We found this is the route best suited both of us,” Courtney says. “It both played a very connected role in our child’s birth.”
On May 2, Courtenay and Nadine felt elated as they left their doctor’s office in New Orleans, knowing they would be parents. Despite their worries—being good parents, being accepted as a lesbian family—they were determined to raise the child with complete commitment. They would “stop at nothing to ensure he was raised with great values and compassion for others.”
Five days after Christmas in 2012, they were blessed with “a beautiful, perfect, baby boy. We fell in love instantly, and our lives changed completely the second he was born. Suddenly, it wasn’t about just my wife and me. We had a child, a real live person, to protect from this sometimes cruel world. He was our miracle, our blessing, and our baby boy!”
But they soon found out how this cruel world could be. Even though biologically he was tied by blood to Courtney, she had absolutely no rights to him. Nadine’s name was the only one allowed on the birth certificate in Louisiana—in that state; only one mother can be listed on a birth certificate.
“Some people ask me why we are fighting for our rights here in Louisiana. The answer is simple: My family is no different than yours. We make decisions together, we live together, and we love together. We want our marriage recognised so that we have the option of joint adoptions and plenty of other benefits that heterosexual couples receive in their marriages. So when people tell us that the South is not ready for this, I ask them, Will they ever be ‘ready’ for change?”
For more information on the case of Courtney Blanchard and her wife Nadine, follow them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/robicheauxequalitylouisiana or on their website at www.robicheauxvscaldwell.com.