June 17, 2005
Iqalummiut show their support for gays and lesbians
Iqaluit
Pride will march in Toronto Gay Pride parade
JIM BELL
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Wearable principles:
Letti Eastwood, Betsy Munick, Penny Qitsualik and Tina Rose use their clothing
to show support for Iqaluit's gay, lesbian and transgendered community. (PHOTOS
BY JIM BELL)
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About 200 Iqaluit residents nibbled hamburgers, chatted with friends and renewed
their support for gay, lesbian and transgendered people in Nunavut this past
Sunday at the annual Pride and Friends of Pride Picnic.
"This event is growing every year," said Stephanie Hawkins, the president
of Iqaluit Pride, as a loud cheer erupted from a delighted audience of Inuit
and non-Inuit, straight and gay adults, teens, toddlers and elders gathered
under a cloudless blue sky near the pavilion at Sylvia Grinnell park.
Hawkins provoked another cheer when she told them that a delegation from Iqaluit
Pride will march in the June 26 Pride Parade in Toronto, one of the largest
such events in North America.
Four Nunavut cabinet ministers - Premier Paul Okalik, Ed Picco, Levinia Brown
and Olayuk Akesuk - mingled with the Sunday afternoon picnickers, as did Iqaluit
Mayor Elisapee Sheutiapik.
Alison Brewer, the former president of Iqaluit Pride, and Stephanie Hawkins,
the current president, share their pride with a crowd of more than 200 gathered
at the Iqaluit Pride and Friends of Pride Picnic this past Sunday afternoon.
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Underscoring the wide support that the Pride Group enjoys in the community,
Hawkins read out a long list of organizations that supported the event with
donations: labour organizations like PSAC, the Federation of Nunavut Teachers,
and the Nunavut Employees Union, plus the Elk's Club, the Royal Canadian Legion,
and a variety of local businesses.
She said in an interview later that the Iqaluit Pride group and their allies
in Friends of Pride play a big role in Iqaluit - they act as a voice for gay
and lesbian people, and as a social support network.
Alison Brewer, a former president of the Pride Group who has received a Governor
General's "Person's Case" award for her work on behalf of gay and
lesbian rights in Nunavut, said she thinks this year's Iqaluit Pride event was
the best-attended yet.
"The other thing that's nice is that there were far more gay and lesbian
Inuit than were here before," Brewer said.
She said that when she helped organize the Iqaluit Pride group's first picnic
about five years ago, she was "shaking" when she put up posters advertising
the event.
But now she believes that a majority of Iqaluit residents have always supported
gay and lesbian rights.
"The support was always there. Here is the show of support," Brewer
said, waving her arm at the friendly crowd gathered around her.
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