Sunday Times

Gay bikers spread their wings on macho turf

- SHELLEY SEID

MEMBERS of the Unapologet­ic Bikers Club do what other riders do — they go on runs, have braais, compare the size of their armour and wear their leathers and club colours with pride.

Their only difference is the criteria to join the club: you must be gay, and unapologet­ically so.

“We are not sorry for who we are,” club president James William Brown said this week.

Theirs is believed to be the only openly gay motorbike club in South Africa. The fledgling club has just five members at this stage, but they are making waves in the butch world of biking.

Brown founded the club in Randburg last year after the young draughtsma­n was kicked out of his former club, a motorcycle ministry that he would prefer not to name, when they learnt of his sexual orientatio­n.

If you think the Unapologet­ics conform to any gay stereotype, Brown has news for you.

“We are not fragile girls in pink dresses. I’m a simple oke. I love bikes. I’m a very technical guy and enjoy working with my hands. My boyfriend is more the arty-farty type. My mother loves him,” said Brown.

The only way to identify them on their breakfast runs is by taking a close look at their club patch, a silhouette of a barefoot boy with oddly-shaped wings. At Pretoria Gay Pride last year, the club members flew this flag, and a rainbow banner, from their bikes as they marshalled the parade.

Brown, who rides a 250kg BMW R1200 GS Adventure, said: “The wings show that even if ours are different, we still are angels, we are not demons.

“I started the group to prove people wrong — to show that we’re still ‘normal’ people, even though we’re gay. When I came out, my father’s response was ‘But, my son, you work in the garage.’”

I’m a simple oke. I love bikes. My boyfriend is more the artyfarty type

Biking is in Brown’s blood. He got his first bike, a 250cc, when he was 16. His dad raced motocross and his mom also got hooked. Both of them still ride.

Club member Rudolph du Plessis has been riding for 12 years, and said the biker world was not always a friendly place.

“It’s quite macho out there, and I am scared to say anything about being gay. If people at rallies or in the club ask me personal questions I kill the conversati­on,” he said.

“You might be riding alongside a gay biker, but how would you know? I think the solution is to hang around with other gay people in clubs like the Unapologet­ics and share our stories,” said Du Plessis.

 ?? Pictures: MOELETSI MABE ?? NOT SORRY: President of the Unapologet­ic Bikers Club James William Brown, middle, and his fellow riders Rudolph du Plessis, left, and George Moulder. Brown founded the club in Randburg last year after the motorcycle ministry he rode with kicked him out...
Pictures: MOELETSI MABE NOT SORRY: President of the Unapologet­ic Bikers Club James William Brown, middle, and his fellow riders Rudolph du Plessis, left, and George Moulder. Brown founded the club in Randburg last year after the motorcycle ministry he rode with kicked him out...
 ??  ?? FREE TO FLY: The club’s emblem shows a barefoot boy sporting ’different’ wings, says Brown
FREE TO FLY: The club’s emblem shows a barefoot boy sporting ’different’ wings, says Brown

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