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Thursday 13 June 2013
LGBT Pride Month—more than just about street parties
By Patrick King Pascual, VERA Files
Festive street parties, parades and marches usually mark the annual celebration of Pride month in
June by the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community in the country and elsewhere.
“But Pride Month is not just about parties,” Michael David Tan, executive director of Bahaghari Center
for LGBT Research, Education and Advocacy, stressed. “What we want to do in Bahaghari Center, or in
the LGBT community in the Philippines in general, is to change [public] perception and [instead]
look at the conditions and situations of the LGBTs more closely.”
In recent years, LGBT organizations have resorted mainly to plain street parties to celebrate Pride
Month, which do not fully convey the real meaning and message of such celebrations in the country.
This year, Bahaghari Center and the Progressive Organization of Gays in the Philippines (ProGay
Philippines) aim to promote a more thorough LGBT acceptance and education in the coming Pride
celebrations.
“We want everyone to know that LGBTs are not just about being happy-go-lucky or the stereotyped
‘softies’; we are just like everyone else [entitled to equal rights],” Tan said.
The LGBT community is holding the annual Pride celebrations to let everyone know that they are
asking for equal rights (not special rights) in their daily activities--- in schools, offices, public
establishments like malls and restaurants, and many other places.
For instance, early this year a high school teacher in a province brought her girlfriend to one of the
weekend school activities. After a couple of days, the principal asked the teacher to submit her
resignation, saying that the school decided to revoke her employment for fear that she might teach
the students the wrong kind of lifestyle.
Last year, Dr. Andres Gumban, 63 years old from Bacolod City, was bashed and then stabbed to death
35 times by two male sex workers. The worst thing about the crime was the recording of the incident
by one of the teen suspects via his mobile phone, which eventually spread online.
The police said the suspects admitted they were drug users and that they had bad experiences with
gays, which eventually turned them into gay haters.
“People need to know about these things, that LGBT killings and everyday discrimination have been
happening in our country,” Oscar Atadero of ProGay Philippines said. “We (LGBT organizations) have
been monitoring these kinds of instances, and yes there is really indifference when it comes to the
treatment of the LGBT community.”
Pride Month is usually the only time when LGBT killings, discrimination and other issues are given
enough attention. And so in the month of June, LGBT organizations in the country hold awareness
programs in different locations, organize small festivals, and other related activities, which aim to
empower LGBTs aside from merely showcasing their talents.
“We're planning to have more extensive programs and festivals in the coming years, so as when Pride
Month comes, people from all over the country can really learn and experience how diverse the
LGBT community in the Philippines is,” Tan added.
The month of June was chosen by the LGBT community as their Pride Month because of the series of
violent activities against the gay community, leading to demonstrations against the police that
happened in 1969 at the Stonewall Inn in New York City, USA.
In the Philippines, the first Pride celebration was held on June 26, 1994, coinciding with the 25th
anniversary of the Stonewall Riots. LGBTs, led by ProGay Philippines and the Metropolitan
Community Church Manila (MCC), marched and paraded along EDSA to Quezon Memorial Circle in
Quezon City.
Through the years, the celebration of Pride Month in the country has evolved from just holding
marches and parades within Metro Manila or in several provinces, to a more dynamic celebration
involving improved partnerships with the local government (such as Quezon City and Makati). Thus,
the celebration is becoming more and more effective in advancing the equality movement.
In 2003, organizers of the Philippine Pride events decided to move the annual Pride March from June
to December to mark other significant events, namely: World AIDS Day (Dec. 1), Philippine National
Lesbian Day (Dec. 8) and International Human Rights Day (December 10).
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