Competing events make their marks on LGBTQ+ Pride Day in New York
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[June 28, 2021]
By Peter Szekely
NEW YORK (Reuters) -For the second
consecutive year, the lingering pandemic consigned New York's annual
Pride march to the virtual world on Sunday, even as its alter-ego, the
Queer Liberation March, took its edgier message through the streets of
Manhattan.
The NYC Pride march, the city's marquee LGBTQ+ event now in its 51st
year, became a made-for-TV production as a cautionary measure to prevent
coronavirus infections, which have dropped sharply as the number of
people vaccinated has grown.
Only a small number of guests were invited to the group's three-block
areas where floats and musical acts paraded for the cameras, but
organizer Sue Doster said "something in the millions" of viewers were
expected to tune in.
Guests included Brandon Wolf, a survivor of the June 2016 mass shooting
at the Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, who has since become
an advocate for LGBTQ rights legislation.
“Six days after the shooting, we had a funeral service for my best
friend and I made a promise to him that day that I would never stop
fighting for a world that he would be proud of,” he told ABC, which
aired the event.
“We've made incredible progress in equality across the country, but
trans people are under attack,” he added.
HIV/AIDS expert Dr Demetre Daskalakis, one of the event's grand
marshals, urged all LGBTQ+ community members to get tested frequently
for the virus.
“At the end of the day, HIV is just a virus, and we have the ability to
prevent it and to treat it,” said Daskalakis, who is director of the
Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
MARCHING FOR 'LIBERATION AND JUSTICE'
Meanwhile, thousands of people organized by the Reclaim Pride Coalition,
whose parade began as a protest to the Pride march two years ago,
marched more than 30 blocks down New York's Seventh Avenue with rainbow
flags and signs that included "Liberation and Justice."
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People take part in the Queer Liberation March in New York City, New
York, U.S., June 27, 2021. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Coalition cofounder Jay W. Walker said the group was
hoping to draw up to 70,000 marchers.
Under sunny skies with muggy conditions that felt like 90 degrees
Fahrenheit (32 degrees Celsius), a racially mixed crowd of men and
women chanted "No Justice, No Peace," and other slogans, some
critical of the New York Police Department.
After linking last year's message to the Black Lives Matter
movement, Walker said this year's theme is returning to the
coalition's standard: "None of us are free until all of us are
free."
Although the group had urged marchers to wear masks, few did. Last
year's march produced no discernable spike in new coronavirus cases,
he said.
Both events commemorate the June 28, 1969, uprising at the Stonewall
Inn, a gay bar in Manhattan's Greenwich Village, when patrons fought
back during a police raid. The defiant stand gave birth to the
modern LGBTQ rights movement.
The two groups have differed over their policies on police
participation in their events, which the Reclaim Pride Coalition
opposes. But Heritage of Pride last month also decided to bar
uniformed police officers from its future parades. Doster said many
of its Black, brown and trans members feel threatened by their
presence.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely in New YorkEditing by Grant McCool and
Matthew Lewis)
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