Showing posts with label NYC gay pride. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC gay pride. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2013

NYC PRIDE: A Focus on LGBT Adolescents of Color


New York City PRIDE events are well documented affairs. The parade, costumes, the festival on Hudson street, the pier dance and everything in between are recorded by the million spectators in attendance. So this year, as in years past, I decided to forgo the parade to stay on mission and focus on LGBT teens and adolescents of color who were out among thousands of celebrants displaying their pride. 

Since 2005, I’ve been documenting the many facets of the black LGBT community which touch on themes of protest, love, HIV/AIDS, aging , homophobia, hate crimes, outreach and community celebration to name a few. Recent news stories have brought attention to the devastating effects anti-gay and lesbian bullying can have on teens and adolescents, who in many recent cases turn to suicide to escape the taunting, bullying and other abuse they faced because of their sexual orientation. In fact, preliminary results from a major 2012 survey of black gay youth, conducted by the National Strategy for Black Gay Youth in America, reveals that 43 percent of black gay youth have thought about or attempted suicide as a result of issues related to their sexual orientation. According to the results, over half of those surveyed fear or have experienced family disownment as a result of coming out of the closet. Many black and Latino LGBT youth have found themselves homeless since being “thrown away” by their families.

Young black gay men particularly face a unique challenge when coming out given the deep-rooted anti-gay stigma in the African-american community. In an article published in the 2012 Journal of GLBT Family Studies by Rutgers University School of Social Work’s Michael C. LaSala and Damien T. Frierson from Howard University, LaSala explains some of the unique complicating factors faced by young, gay black men, including a “one more strike against you” mentality that he says makes acceptance difficult for relatives of gay youth: 

“The world already sees you as less than others. By being gay, you’re further hurting the image of African-American men,” LaSala says was a common reaction among the male relatives of the black youth when they learned that their relative was gay. “Parents of African-American gay youth said, ‘You have everything going against you as a black man. This is one more strike against you.’ Conversely, parents of white gay youth stated, ‘You have everything going for you — and now this!’” 

To black and latino LGBT youth I spoke with at NYC PRIDE, many expressed that they simply want to “be” who they are. “My life shouldn’t be threatened just because I love other guys.” 17 year old Trevor said.” I just want to live and love whoever I want.” he affirmed.

In this age of CHANGE, my intention as a photojournalist documenting the LGBT community of color is to provide positive imagery and disseminate information of the issues affecting this marginalized group to filter into our collective consciousness, and realize that we are all ONE. I AM, therefore WE ARE.  
***********Scroll below for more images
 from NYC PRIDE.************



















Monday, June 28, 2010

NYC Gay Pride, 2010

It is unusual to open a photo essay about Gay Pride with a photo of smiling kids. This year I chose to highlight lgbt youth and document how they celebrate PRIDE.


The last Sunday in June is the annual Gay Pride Parade in New York City in which upwards of a million spectators converge on the city to watch the colorful spectacle and participate in events celebrating LGBT life and culture. LGBT pride or gay pride is the concept that lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people should be proud of their sexual orientation and gender identity.The movement has three main premises: that people should be proud of their sexual orientation and gender identity, that diversity is a gift, and that sexual orientation and gender identity are inherent and cannot be intentionally altered. The word PRIDE is used in this case as an antonym for shame, which has been used to control and oppress LGBT persons throughout history. Pride in this sense is an affirmation of ones self and the community as a whole.

This year, I opted to forgo the parade and head straight to the pier in the West Village, where thousands of young LGBT youth of color express their own Pride with festivities, which include lots of frolicking, singing, dancing, posing, playing, coupling, and living out loud all the while making bold statements and expressions about their sexuality. I felt it neccessary to highlight the youth this year because they are so often overlooked in our community and I was struck with the feelings of freedom these young people exuded. "Freedom", in a rare form...

PRIDE is an important and necessary event for LGBT youth particulary. Just ask eighteen year old Constance McMillen who's Mississippi High School cancelled the Prom, simply because she asked officials there if she could wear a tux and bring her girlfriend as a date. Stories of discrimination, or worse, abuse, are not foreign to many LGBT youth who face the daily challenge of living free and open about their sexual orientation. LGBT youth are often ostracized from their families and communities, and bullied in school particularly if living in urban cities. They are forced to assimilate into the street culture, and live life on the DL for fear of isolation, rejection and even death, at the receiving end of homophobia.

It makes sense then, that every last Sunday in June that LGBT youth from inner cities all across this country make a pilgrimage to the pier in the West Village. NYC Pride offers youth (and LGBT people of all ages) a safe space to live out loud, outside the bounds of discrimination and oppression.