Sun.Star Pampanga

CSF celebrates LGBT diversity, inclusion

- BY PRINCESS CLEA ARCELLAZ Sun.Star Staff Reporter

CITY OF SAN FERNANDO - Acceptance and inclusion.

These are the two things that are sought by the members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual

and transgende­r (LGBT) community but are usually deprived of. Every day, LGBTs from all over

the world fight discrimina­tion and bullying due to a community’s lack of understand­ing and acceptance on their gender preference.

But in this capital city, the era of discrimina­tion and inequality on members of the LGBT sector is evidently ceasing as more and more of them slowly gain the confidence to go out of the “closet” and express their gender preference­s.

When asked for possible reasons on their confidence to go out, SIWALA President Randy Ocampo pointed at the broader understand­ing and warm acceptance they are getting from their fellow Fernandino­s and the community.

“There is no more discrimina­tion. We can feel the acceptance from our families, from the community and also the strong support of the city government to us.

We can feel that we are included and deserving to be in society where everybody is,” he said.

Ocampo, who is heading the over 400 members of the LGBT-oriented organizati­on, said that the reception of San Fernando to their gender orientatio­n allows its members to “unmask” themselves and showcase their innate talents.

From the almost 300 LGBT individual­s who joined the SIWALA when it was founded in 2015, Ocampo said the organizati­on now has almost 500 members from various sectors and profession­al fields.

“If we feel accepted and understood, we are more comfortabl­e to share our talents and expertise. We can help our communitie­s in the ways that we can and without reservatio­ns because we know that we will not be judged,” he said.

Meanwhile, Ocampo clarified that their organizati­on does not aim to influence or encourage individual­s to become LGBT members too, rather just promote their rights and provide support to their fellow members who have difficulti­es in accepting themselves and expressing their thoughts.

He disclosed that in their group, there are several youngsters aged eight to ten years old who decided to join with the consent of their respective parents in the hope that they can better understand and accept themselves.

He noted of the two eight year-old boys from Barangays Sta. Lucia and San Pedro Cutud who joined the organizati­on earlier this year and are now slowly gaining the confidence of expressing themselves.

“We are not here to influence or encourage those who are not LGBTs. We are here to guide and support those who are. We do not want them to experience discrimina­tion like we did,” he said.

Ocampo also expressed his gratitude to the city government here, particular­ly Mayor Edwin Santiago who initiated the partnershi­p of SIWALA with the city’s Gender and Developmen­t office.

He noted that the support and recognitio­n they are receiving from the city government plays a big role in their journey to be levelled-off in the community.

Santiago, for his part, reiterated his advocacy of inclusiven­ess and oneness and that includes all gender and race.

“LGBT are just like us. They have rights and also responsibi­lities. Let us look at them the same way and promote unity and inclusiven­ess as Fernandino­s,” he said.

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