Hotlanta Gets Ready for Black Gay Pride
August 29, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
Atlanta’s Black Gay Pride will be in full swing this weekend with plenty of celebrities, including Danity Kane and Bobby Blake. An estimated 75,000 people are expected to pack city for the annual event. Atlanta’s Black Gay Pride is considered to be the largest Black GLBT event in the world.
During the daytime, there will be lots of community and cultural events including summits and workshops and of course the clubs will keep the evenings hopping.
You can find out more about it at sovo.com.
St. Louis Black Gay Pride - A Growing Community
August 8, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
Erise Williams Jr. has been a part of St. Louis Black Pride since it emerged eight years ago from the B Boy Blues Festival, an intervention program sponsored by Williams and the now defunct BABAA (Blacks Assisting Blacks Against AIDS).
Williams, who serves as the president of the St. Louis Black Gay and Lesbian Pride Committee, admits he couldn’t have envisioned the success of Black Pride, which serves as a resource for the metropolitan African American gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) community. Black Pride will host the eighth annual St. Louis Black Pride celebration, which culminates on Aug. 17 with a festival at Kiener Plaza downtown.
“It’s a real good tool in terms of bringing the African American GLBT community together,” Williams said of the Aug. 15-17 celebration. “It has also served as a venue or opportunity for the non-African American GLBT community to work with the African American GLBT community.”
“We’re constantly looking for other ways to do community mobilization within the African American community beyond the whole pride weekend,” Williams said. “We welcome any input, assistance and involvement not only from the black GLBT community but from the GLBT community overall. I think we all should understand that those issues that we all face as GLBT people are issues we have to face together, not separately.”
One of the purposes of Black Pride is combating homophobia through visibility. Williams points out that while homophobia remains a problem for the entire GLBT community, the impact within the African American community is magnified, in part, due to cultural issues.
“There are some real deep ramifications within our own community in terms of coming out or in terms of identifying oneself as GLBT,” said Williams. “Some of those ramifications can result in ostracism not only from one’s individual family but from the community as a whole.”
Muriel “Blue” Jones, executive director of the LGBT Community Center of Metropolitan St. Louis, echoed Williams’ sentiment.
“Homophobia in the African American community is definitively an issue that is problematic,” Jones said. “Visibility in itself for LGBT people in the African American community is an issue. Unfortunately, religion has been used as a tool to make that even more problematic within the African American community, which is really sad—it’s a beautiful, healing entity, and it’s been used in a negative way.”
Williams pointed to the “down low” phenomenon of married men having sex with other men on the sneak and while not unique to African American men, it has become the subject of much debate.
“Guys on the DL are driven by homophobia because they wouldn’t dare identify themselves as gay because of the stigma associated with it,” said Williams. “And it’s even worse because then you have folks in the media saying that the rise of infection among African American women is a result of black men on the DL. So then they’re demonizing black men again … so it makes it hard for someone to actually come to terms with who they are and celebrate it.”
“I just hope that everyone comes to Black Pride,” Jones continued. “[To] enjoy themselves, learn their culture and that as an entire LGBT community we have to always remember that all of it is our culture and we need to celebrate it all, regardless of our ethnic background.”
Get the full story at thevitalvoice.com.
NYC’s Black Gay Pride to Get Underway Next Week
July 25, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
NYC’s Black LGBT Pride (formerly called “Black Pride”, the annual event is now called “Pride in the City”) begins next week (July 31st - August 3rd). When you look at the events listed, please keep in mind that ALL the events at area clubs are sponsored by local entrepreneurs. Those events are NOT official Pride in the City events. If you’re need the ‘whole bump and grind’ scene to get your party on, though, it doesn’t mean you can’t have a lot of fun at those events.
Get the details at pocc.org.
First Buffalo Black Gay Pride This Weekend
July 23, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
This weekend, hundreds of people will come from all over to the first annual Buffalo Black Pride. A weekend full of events developed for Buffalo’s black LGBT communities will take place as part of a celebration of the diversity within our local LGBT community. This year’s Buffalo Black Gay Pride is sponsored by three local LGBT community service providers—Pride Center of Western New York (PCWNY), AIDS Community Services of WNY (ACS), and Men of Color Health Awareness (MOCHA) Project—along with two community groups, the House of Paciotti and the House of Boyette. This is the first event of its kind in Western New York and has been largely organized by volunteers and staff of Life Changes, a collaborative project of the three community service agencies funded by ACS.
For more information on events, please visitartvoice.com or aidscommunityservices.com or call 847-0315

