Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Calls for activism at Pride march

Participan­ts envision ‘more political’ future

- By Arno Pedram

PARIS — Grassroots LGBTQ groups marched through Paris led by activists of color Saturday as part of Global Pride observance­s, protesting police violence and demanding more political actions on behalf of migrants, sex workers and other marginaliz­ed members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer community.

While the French capital’s official Pride parade was postponed until November to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, thousands of people turned out anyway for a festive, politicall­y driven march that echoed the themes of recent internatio­nal protests against racial injustice.

Marchers chanted “It’s my body, it’s my choice!” and “Everyone hates the police!” as the young, ethnically diverse crowd wound peacefully from the Pigalle neighborho­od in northern Paris to Republique plaza in the east. Many of the participan­ts wore face masks.

The virus has forced organizers in cities around the world to cancel, postpone or adapt their Pride parades this year, frustratin­g activists who want to mark the 50th anniversar­y of the first Gay Pride parades and marches in Chicago, Los Angeles,

New York and San Francisco in 1970.

At Saturday’s event in the French capital, marchers wore rainbow flags as capes, waved the yellow and purple flag of the intersex pride movement and carried red umbrellas to represent sex workers. Some held banners calling attention to the challenges faced by LGBTQ migrants or members of minority communitie­s in impoverish­ed neighborho­ods.

“I’m here because I saw myself in this call for a more political, more politicize­d, more radical Pride,” said Douce Dibondo, 26, who hosts a podcast that highlights voices of people of color and the LGBTQ community. “Previous Pride events didn’t resonate with me because I had the feeling I was joining the very sequined, very depolitici­zed side” of the movement.

Some participan­ts criticized the group Inter-LGBT, which organizes the traditiona­l Paris Pride march featuring parade floats from political parties and corporatio­ns, for not pushing hard enough for political change and for allowing a police float at past parades. Inter-LGBT delayed its event this year until November because of the pandemic.

 ?? Benjamin Girette The Associated Press ?? Demonstrat­ors dance at a Gay Pride march Saturday in Paris. The march included protests against police violence and racial injustice and calls for more activism.
Benjamin Girette The Associated Press Demonstrat­ors dance at a Gay Pride march Saturday in Paris. The march included protests against police violence and racial injustice and calls for more activism.

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