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Show off your Pride in our all-inclusive, beautiful and safe space. Side dishes and desserts welcome: /smcpcdin2įiloli Pride is coming out and we want you to come out with us. Join the San Mateo County Pride Center for a family friendly Pride Month kickoff event! Swing by the Pride Center for food, games, prizes and fun as we celebrate our community, our volunteers and the Pride Center! Food provided. Here are some local events that are taking place in the community. Social group, build community, and celebrate sexual diversity and gender Self-affirmation, dignity, equality rights, increase their visibility as a Pride month is the positive stanceĪgainst discrimination and violence toward the LGBTQ+ community, to promote Impact LGBTQ+ people have had in the world. Stonewall riots, which occurred at the end of June 1969 and to recognize the Appearing throughout the event via video message will be an array of supporters including Barack Obama, Rufus Wainwright, Adam Lambert, Billy Porter, Conchita Wurst, Tom Daley, Chelsea Clinton, and Dustin Lance Black.Month is celebrated in June to commemorate the In honor of that monumental day, Kesha will be taking the stage in front of the Stonewall Inn in New York City for a special performance, June 24, to mark Pride Month and Stonewall Day 2022.Īlong with Kesha, the event will feature performances from Betty, Mila Jam, and Shea Diamond, as well as choreography by Stonewall Day creative director Kellen Stancil. The Stonewall Riots Anniversary on June 28 is also important to note in commemorating the 1969 Stonewall Uprising. Several calendar days of note bring awareness to the month and important historical milestones in LGBTQ+ history, including HIV Long-Term Survivors Day on June 5, which honors and increases visibility around HIV survivor issues and needs, Pulse Remembrance Day on June 12, a remembrance of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting victims, National HIV Testing Day on June 27 which encourages individuals to be tested for HIV, and Queer Youth of Faith Day on June 30, to celebrate and empower LGBTQ youth of different faiths. Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Detroit, Key West, Los Angeles, Nashville, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Portland, Provincetown, San Francisco and Seattle are just some of the major cities holding Pride Month events throughout the month of June. With much of the country starting to reopen after the pandemic brought things to a standstill there is host of in-person events taking place.Īfter a month-long celebration with various events, New York will host its annual NYC Pride March on Sunday, June 26. There are several other flags in the LGBTQ+ community, including the transgender flag, pansexual flag and more. The different colors are often associated with "diversity" in the gay community, but actually have literal meanings. Hot pink, before it was removed, stood for sex red means life orange means healing yellow means sunlight green means nature turquoise means magic and art indigo (later changed to royal blue) means serenity and violet means spirit. The rainbow flag was popularized as a symbol of the gay community by San Francisco artist Gilbert Baker in 1978. The parade eventually stretched 15 city blocks and encompassed thousands of supporters.Īctivists in other cities, including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston and Chicago, organized Pride celebrations that same year, celebrations that would continue through today. Several hundred people started marching up 6th Avenue, toward Central Park. Gay activists in New York organized the Christopher Street Liberation March to cap off the city’s first Pride Week. On June 28, 1970, on the first anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, the first Pride parade set off from Stonewall. We’re going to create a community where you wouldn’t allow us to have community,’” Segal said. “And it was that night that we said to the police, ‘We are taking our street back. And the New York City Police Department that night, when they violently came into Stonewall and beat people up against the wall and extorted money from people, got us angry,” Segal continued. “We were enraged because, in a sense, 2,000 years of repression built up in us. “That night in June of 1969, we felt rage at the police,” Segal told ET’s Denny Directo, as Pride has become a stark reminder that these modern-day celebrations once started as a protest. Johnson picked up the first brick thrown in rage, kicking off the modern LGBTQ rights movement. Mark Segal was one of the many LGBTQ people outside Stonewall Inn, where a stand was being taken against the latest police raid of one of the community’s few safe spaces to gather in New York City.