June 6, 2003
Picnic, pride and
Svend on the side
Gay and lesbian community
holds annual celebration
Iqaluit Pride and Friends
of Pride is hosting its third annual pride picnic this Sunday at Sylvia Grinnell
Park beginning at 2 p.m.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Allison Brewer, spokesperson
for Iqaluit Pride and Friends of Pride, helped organize the groups third
annual picnic celebration. (PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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Its a celebration
for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community and its supporters.
Peoples involvement in it does indicate support for us, said Allison
Brewer, spokesperson for the Iqaluit group.
For the first time, the
group is also presenting a special guest, Svend Robinson, human rights activist
and openly gay member of parliament.
Robinson and Brewer are
old friends. Last year, a week after Iqaluits annual pride picnic, she
was in Moncton, New Brunswick, for that citys pride celebration where
Robinson was also taking in the festivities.
I told him about
our event here and he said hed love to come up. Invite me next year and
Ill see if Im available, Brewer said.
The first picnic attracted
about a dozen people, a number that more than tripled the second year with close
to 50 people taking part.
Although Brewer isnt
sure what to expect this year, as public discussion on the issue of same-sex
relationships, and especially marriage, has heightened peoples awareness.
There seems to be
a tremendous amount of interest and support. The unions have been really supportive.
Theyve thrown both moral and financial support behind the endeavor,
Brewer said.
The Iqaluit group has lobbied
the Nunavut government to include gender identity as a prohibited grounds for
discrimination in the draft human rights bill introduced in the legislature
late last year.
There are certainly
detractors, and there always will be, but the show of support has been quite
overwhelming, including the show of local support, not just people around the
country.
On the whole, Brewers
impression is that Nunavummiut are pretty laid back about the issue, although
she also acknowledges that some are pretty wound-up about it.
Brewer singled out a recent
letter to the editor in Nunatsiaq News in which a woman from Pangnirtung
expressed her desire for a more accepting human race.
Thats really
much more typical of the attitude of people than the negatives that you hear,
she said.
I dont feel
a negative attitude is at all typical of the way Nunavummiut feel about the
issue.
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