Toronto Star

Gayborhood cracks along race lines

Black gays and lesbians say video slur shows bigotry faced in Philadelph­ia ‘sanctuary’

- ERRIN HAINES WHACK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHILADELPH­IA— Long-simmering racial tensions in one of America’s iconic gay neighbourh­oods have reached a boil after the release of a video clip in which a club owner repeatedly utters a racial slur, leading to calls for action, including the replacemen­t of Philadelph­ia’s liaison to LGBT residents.

Black gays and lesbians in the city say they are carded at clubs in the area known as the Gayborhood while they watch white patrons stroll in.

At bars, they say, they wait longer for drinks and are subjected to dress codes that ban athletic gear, Timberland boots and hooded sweatshirt­s, rules they say are meant to exclude them.

Now, they say, the video finally provides tangible evidence of their concerns.

It has sparked outrage among many in the city’s LGBT community, bolstered by the Black Lives Matter movement and support for gay safe spaces in the wake of the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando.

“The minute you walk into the Gayborhood as a black or brown person, you feel it,” said Shani Akilah Robin, creator of the Black and Brown Workers Collective, which held protests after the video release.

“They play our music and target us for the very blackness they’re making money off of.

“This is the reality of being black and queer in America.”

The collective protested outside the bars ICandy and Woody’s on Sept. 23 to highlight practices they say are racist, including ICandy’s “No Timberland boots” policy and the ban at Woody’s on athletic wear.

An anonymous video was posted Sept. 27 in the comments section of a story about the protest on Philadelph­ia Magazine’s website.

The video features the voice, but not the face, of Darryl DePiano, the owner of ICandy, repeatedly using a racial slur, saying they’re the only patrons who ask for free drink tickets.

In a Facebook post last month, DePiano said his comments were made out of frustratio­n.

“As everyone is aware, there is a video circulatin­g that was recorded about three years ago of me using some very hurtful and racist language in a time of frustratio­n,” DePiano said in the Sept. 29 post.

“This was an extremely poor choice I made on my own many years ago and I definitely learned and continue to learn each day. I sincerely and truthfully apologize to all my friends, valued customers, and everyone that I hurt and offended.”

DePiano did not respond to an interview request for this article.

Rickey Peterson, who worked briefly as a bartender at ICandy in 2010 and was referenced in the video with a racial slur, said he is happy the video came out.

“You hear stuff being voiced, or people assuming racism in the Gayborhood,” said Peterson, 29, who is black. “I think it’s important that people can actually see proof of how the community is.”

The Black and Brown Workers Collective has issued a list of demands to the city, including additional representa­tives within the administra­tion’s Office of LGBT Affairs. They have also called for the resignatio­n of that department’s director, Nellie Fitzpatric­k, and for her replacemen­t to be a black transgende­r woman — someone they believe would better represent LGBT people of colour.

Fitzpatric­k, a white lesbian who was appointed in 2015, said she is committed to resolving the issues highlighte­d by the video. The office has planned a public meeting Oct. 25 to discuss racism in the Gayborhood.

“The video . . . is every bit as repulsive as the practices we are seeing and the experience­s people are having,” Fitzpatric­k said in a phone interview. “If there’s one place that should be a sanctuary, it’s the Gayborhood . . . and it isn’t right now.”

Located downtown, the Gayborhood, Philadelph­ia’s version of New York’s Greenwich Village, is the main social hub for LGBT residents. But the city, as a whole, is often cited as being gay-friendly, a reputation the latest dust-up threatens.

“There is no denying that racism and discrimina­tion is an issue within the LGBT community,” Mayor Jim Kenney said in a statement Sunday. “The Gayborhood should be a sanctuary for all in the LGBT community, but, sadly, not everyone is welcome at some of its institutio­ns.”

“They play our music and target us for the very blackness they’re making money off of.” SHANI AKILAH ROBIN BLACK AND BROWN WORKERS COLLECTIVE

 ?? JEFF MCMILLAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The owner of Philadelph­ia’s ICandy club was recorded using a racial slur, sparking outrage.
JEFF MCMILLAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The owner of Philadelph­ia’s ICandy club was recorded using a racial slur, sparking outrage.

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