What started out in 1990 in Washington, D.C., as the only Black Gay Pride event in the country has grown to more than 35 gatherings nationwide.

Starting in April and going through October of each year, LGBTQ people of African descent rev up for a weekend of social and cultural events. Just last year, more than 350,000 people attended Black Gay Pride events throughout the U.S. The largest events were held in Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and Atlanta, and smaller Black Pride events like those in Boston, Charlotte and Columbia are providing an equally important sense of identity and cultural heritage.

Check out the schedules for S.C. Black Pride and Charlotte NC Black Pride!
Click here.

Sunday gospel brunches, Saturday night poetry slams, Friday fashion shows, bid whist tournaments, house parties, soul food, Caribbean cuisine and beautiful displays of African art and clothing are just some of the cultural markers that make Black Pride distinct.

But cultural exclusion was just one of a few things gay revelers of African descent experienced in Pride events. Racism is the other. And so after decades of Pride events where many gays of African descent tried to be included and were rejected, Black Gay Pride was born.

“We are not seeing ourselves culturally represented at Pride. We want to show not only ourselves, but the larger LGBT community we are out here and taking control of our lives. Black Gay Pride New England speaks to who we are, and it represents the substance that pertains to our lives,” teacher and community activist Philip Robinson told me in June 2001.

Seven years later that sentiment remains. Subsequently, as we ready ourselves for Pride each year so, too, unfortunately, do the fault lines of race and class.

The growing gulf between whites and blacks and the rich and poor can be seen in the HIV/AIDS epidemic. What was once a community-wide problem for LGBTQ people is now predominately a black one.

Another example of our division can be seen in the white gay ghettos that have developed and thrived safely in neighborhoods throughout the country. With the homophobia that emanates out of black communities, where most of us reside, we cannot carve out black queer ghettos while realistically expecting to remain safe.

But many LGBTQ people of African decent and Latinos argue that the gulf between whites and them is so dominant that it can be traced back to the very beginning of the movement.

The queer community rewrote and continues to control the history of Stonewall. The Stonewall Riot of June 27-29, 1969, in Greenwich Village started on the backs of working-class African-American and Latino queers who patronized that bar. Those brown and black LGBTQ people are not only absent from the photos of that night, but they are also bleached from its written history.

Dr. Gerri Outlaw, an openly lesbian, African-American professor of social work at Governors State University, just outside of Chicago, says that the dominant racial prejudice of the time certainly had an impact on the events at Stonewall. “Had those patrons been white the cops would have harassed them, but there would not have been a riot,” she says.

Because of the bleaching of the Stonewall Riots, the beginnings of LGBTQ movement post-Stonewall is an appropriation of a black and brown queer liberation narrative absent of black and brown people. And it is the visible absence of these black, brown and yellow LGBTQ people that makes it harder for white queers to confront their racism.

Our themes for Black Pride events are different from the larger Pride events. Black Pride focuses on issues not solely pertaining to gays, but rather on social, economic and health issues impacting the entire black community. For example, where the primary focus and themes in mainstream Prides have been on marriage equality, gay people of African descent have used Pride events to focus on HIV/AIDS, other health issues, gang violence and youth homelessness, to name only a few.

By 1999, Black Pride events had grown into the International Federation of Black Prides, Inc. (IFBP). The IFBP is a coalition of 29 Black Pride organizations across the country. It formed to promote an African multicultural and multinational network of LGBTQ/Same-Gender-Loving Pride events and community-based organizations dedicated to building solidarity, health and wellness and promoting unity throughout our communities.

In recognizing the need to network and build coalitions beyond its immediate communities, IFBP announced in April the formation of the Black/Brown Coalition.

“The purpose of the National Black and Brown Summit is to identify areas for potential collaboration between African-American and Latino LGBT communities, leaders, organizations and grassroots movements,” said Earl Fowlkes, president of the IFBP.

Black Pride is an invitation for the community to connect its political activism with its celebratory acts of song and dance in the fight for LGBTQ justice.

The Bible is replete with examples of oppressed groups parading in the streets while struggling for their freedom. For example, “the Song of Mariam” in Exodus 15:19-21 celebrates the Israelites crossing the Red Sea while they still journeyed in the wilderness toward the Promised Land.

The Promised Land for all LGBTQ citizens is full acceptance into society and Black Pride plays an important role in fulfilling that promise.

Black Pride contributes to the multicultural aspect of joy and celebration that symbolizes not only our uniqueness as individuals and communities, but also affirms our varied expressions of LGBTQ life in
America.

Happy Pride!