Lethbridge Herald

LGBTQ Pride at 50

Focus shifts amid pandemic, racial unrest

- Jeff McMillan

LGBTQ Pride is turning 50 this year a little short on its signature fanfare, after the coronaviru­s pandemic drove it to the internet and after calls for racial equality sparked by the killing of George Floyd further overtook it.

Activists and organizers are using the intersecti­on of holiday and history in the making — including the Supreme Court’s decision giving LGBT people workplace protection­s — to uplift the people of colour already among them and by making Black Lives Matter the centerpiec­e of Global Pride events Saturday.

“Pride was born of protest,” said Cathy Renna, communicat­ions director of the National LGBTQ Task Force, seeing analogies in the pandemic and in common threads of the Black and LGBTQ rights movements.

“Trans women of colour have been targeted in what has been called an epidemic, and the Stonewall uprising happened in response to police harassment and brutality,” Renna said in an email.

The first Pride march took place June

28, 1970, a year after the 1969 uprisings at the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York, which were led by trans women of colour.

A few other commemorat­ions took place that year and later spread until 50 years on, there’s scarcely a patch on Earth that doesn’t host some type of Pride event.

New York’s is among the largest, but social distancing measures to check the spread of COVID-19 everywhere from Scranton to Sao Paulo made cancellati­on or postponeme­nt a certainty.

Global Pride is billed as a 24-hour stream of music, performanc­es, speeches and messages of support. It is being hosted Saturday by Todrick Hall on his YouTube channel, on iHeartRadi­o’s YouTube channel and on the Global Pride website.

It will feature activists and politician­s, including Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and entertaine­rs such as Betty Who, Deborah Cox, Laverne Cox, Jake Shears and Martha Wash.

“Trans folks, particular­ly the LGBTQ-I folks of colour, have gotten discrimina­tion from the larger systems of white supremacy and on racist terms, and then also have experience­d transphobi­a and homophobia within our own communitie­s,” Laverne Cox, the pioneering trans actor who starred in “Orange Is the New Black,” told The Associated Press in an interview this month.

“And so, part of what the Black Trans Lives Matter movement ... is acknowledg­ing that communitie­s of colour still have a lot of work to do to fully reconcile our history of transphobi­a, specifical­ly, and homophobia as well,”

Cox said.

In Minnesota, where Floyd died last month at the hands of Minneapoli­s police, it was immediatel­y clear that Pride as usual — one of the nation’s largest — would be inappropri­ate, said Twin Cities Pride board member Felix Foster.

Instead, Pride will include a virtual march of recorded videos, a stretch of silence in honour of Floyd, and solidarity with a march for Jamar Clark, a Black man killed by Minneapoli­s police in 2015, Foster said.

In northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, the group Queer NEPA is hosting online events and supporting others held by Black activists after rallying in previous years in nearby Wilkes-Barre and raising a rainbow flag at Scranton City Hall.

“Some people would say Pride is cancelled, but I would say it has evolved,” said board co-chair Em Maloney. “This year is different because more people have a better consciousn­ess of white privilege and of the problems surroundin­g racial justice.”

Maloney was heartened to see a big turnout at a recent Black Lives Matter protest in Scranton, describing it as “everyone coming together because of the belief that nobody will be free until everyone is free.”

The Pride website for Philadelph­ia, a two-hour drive south, notes that events planned earlier in June were cancelled — and it shouts BLACK LIVES MATTER! before advising of online alternativ­es.

Philadelph­ia in 2017 introduced a new rainbow flag that featured a black and a brown stripe above the usual colours of the spectrum, to highlight people of colour. It was instantly polarizing, but critics have largely come around and the design is now common around the world.

“Our flag helped start a global conversati­on and it’s brought me to tears to see it everywhere during this pivotal time in our country’s history,” Amber Hikes — who worked for the mayor’s office when she revealed the design and who is now the American Civil Liberties Union’s first chief equity and inclusion officer — said in a Facebook post.

“We’re never going to stop letting ourselves, each other, and the whole damn world know that our liberation has always been led by BIPOC queer and trans folks — and when we do get free, when we get free together, it will be with Black and brown queer & trans folks at the front.”

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? In this June 30, 2019, file photo, marchers carry signs with historical LGBTQ figures during the Queer Liberation March in New York.
Associated Press photo In this June 30, 2019, file photo, marchers carry signs with historical LGBTQ figures during the Queer Liberation March in New York.

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