InterPride

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InterPride
InterPride logo
FoundedOctober 1982 (1982-10)
FoundersMarsha H. Levine and Rick Turner (deceased)
Type501(c)(3)
FocusOrganizations producing LGBT Pride parades and other events
Area served
Global
MethodCapacity building, coalition building, public education
WebsiteOfficial website
Formerly called
National Association of Lesbian/Gay Pride Coordinators, International Association of Lesbian/Gay Pride Coordinators, International Association of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Coordinators

InterPride is an international organization representing and composed of producers of pride events for the LGBT community that celebrate lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) culture and pride.

History[]

Image from the first WorldPride, held in Rome on July 8, 2000

InterPride was incorporated as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization in Texas in the 1980s. The organization was originally known as the National Association of Lesbian/Gay Pride Coordinators (NAL/GPC), before changing the name to International Association of Lesbian/Gay Pride Coordinators (IAL/GPC) in October 1985, the International Association of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Coordinators at the conference in West Hollywood, California, and eventually to InterPride in the late 1990s.[1]

Formation of InterPride[]

In April 1981, Pride Coordinators Rick Turner and , from San Francisco and Boston respectively, met at the "call to unite" – a gay and lesbian leadership conference in Los Angeles, and the start of an organization then known as NOLAG (National Organization of Lesbians and Gays). While discussing common issues that their individual pride organizations faced, and remarking that their connections with the New York Pride and Los Angeles Pride committees were helpful for problem-solving, Rick and Marsha felt this trading of information was important and could develop into a potential network.

More than a year later in August 1982, Levine sent out a call for the First Annual Conference of the National Association of Lesbian/Gay Pride Coordinators (NAL/GPC), to meet in Boston. Rick Turner (now deceased) declined joining in establishing the organization, due to his deteriorating health. With the aid of San Diego Pride Committee and chairperson Doug Moore, who had been collecting a list of national pride organizations, and with small donations from the Los Angeles and Boston Pride Committees, the mailing list from Moore was used to distribute a self-mailing registration form designed and produced by Levine. Though many committees expressed an interest in attending, most didn't have the funds to send delegates at that time.[1]

On October 9, 1982, in Hill House on Beacon Hill, members from the Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, San Diego, and San Francisco Pride committees gathered in response to Levine's mailing. Three long tables were pushed together to make a triangular seating area. For two days many topics concerning coordinating LGBT prides was discussed, and while each city had different events, they discovered much of the planning and logistics was surprisingly similar. They voted to hold a second conference in San Diego the next year.[2]

The 15 people in attendance at that first gathering were:

Boston - Marsha H. Levine
New York - Tony Gambino [deceased], David Colle [deceased], Brian O'Dell, Janet Love, Fred Goldhaber [deceased], R. Paul Martin
San Francisco - Konstantine Berlandt [deceased], Glenne McElhinney
Chicago - Rich Pfeiffer (deceased)
San Diego - Doug Moore
Los Angeles - George Piazzi, Sharon Tobin, Cheryl Ruddy [deceased], Sean Johnson [deceased]

Milestones[]

Date Milestone
October 1985 During the organization's conference in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with representatives of Toronto, Ontario, and Germany in attendance, the membership voted to officially change the organization's name from the National Association of Lesbian/Gay Pride Coordinators, to the International Association of Lesbian/Gay Pride Coordinators (IAL/GPC). The organization also pledged to continue reaching out to other countries.
October 1997 During the organization's conference in New York, its membership voted to establish the "WorldPride" title and awarded it to the city of Rome, Italy, for the year 2000.[1]
October 1999 The first conference held outside North America, in Glasgow, Scotland.[1]
October 2001 The first conference held in the southern hemisphere, in Auckland, New Zealand. Delegates were welcomed by the New Zealand Prime Minister.[1]
October 2003 The first conference held in a city that did not use English as its primary language, in Montreal, Quebec. The conference itself was still conducted in English.[1]
October 2004 The 22nd annual InterPride conference and the first conference held in a non-English speaking country, in Reykjavik, Iceland.[1]
May 2005 The second WorldPride was postponed until August 2006, due to military and religious unrest in the region.[1]
June 2019 Stonewall 50 – WorldPride NYC 2019 included Human Rights conference, festival and Pride March with 150,000 pre-registered participants among 695 groups.
June 2020 In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, co-produced Global Pride, reached more than 200 million people globally, thanks to coverage around the world, including in global titles Time Magazine, Forbes.

Officers[]

Title Name
Co-Presidents Hadi Damien Ω, Linda DeMarco ‡, Julian Sanjivan ‡
Vice Presidents, Global Outreach & Partnership Management Robyn Kennedy ‡, Marsha H. Levine ‡, Emmanuel Temores Ω, Natalie Thompson ‡
Vice President, Diversity & Inclusion Kenneth Kwok Ω
Vice President, Membership Debbie Brixey Ω
Vice President, Development vacant ‡
Secretary Alan Reiff Ω
Treasurer Dave Wait ‡

‡ term ends October 2023
Ω term ends October 2024

Membership[]

Please refer to the InterPride website.

Activities[]

Marchers at Pride London, host of WorldPride 2012

InterPride's programs and activities are geared towards networking, education, and mentoring.[2]

Conferences[]

During the last three decades, pride organizations from almost every continent have participated in InterPride's annual world conference.[3]

The conference is held each year in a different city, with the location of upcoming conferences being voted on two years prior to their occurrence. To demonstrate a commitment to support and empower the global LGBTI+ Pride community, the conference is now frequently held outside North America. Scholarships, through the Pamela O'Brien Memorial Scholarship Fund, are available for member organizations that cannot afford to attend. O'Brien was a longtime member of Cape Cod Pride in Massachusetts, USA and served InterPride as a Regional Director and Vice President of Operations.[4]

In addition, several regional Pride networks hold their own conferences independent of InterPride.[2]

World Conference and General Meetings[5]
Year Theme Host city
1982 (first AGM) United States Boston, MA, USA
1983 (first conference and AGM) United States San Diego, CA, USA
1984 Unity & More in '84 United States Wichita, KS, USA
1985 Alive with Pride in '85 United States Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA
1986 Forward Together United States San Francisco, CA, USA
1987 Proud, Strong, United United States Baltimore, MD, USA
1988 Rightfully Proud United States St. Louis, MO, USA
1989 Stonewall 20 – A Generation of Pride Canada Vancouver, BC, Canada
1990 Look to the Future United States Minneapolis, MN, USA
1991 Together in Pride United States Boston, MA, USA
1992 Pride = Power United States Long Beach, CA, USA
1993 A Family of Pride United States Houston, TX, USA
1994 Stonewall 25 – A Global Celebration of Lesbian & Gay Pride & Protest United States Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA
1995 Pride – From Silence to Celebration United States Phoenix, AZ, USA
1996 Pride Without Borders United States Kansas City, KS, USA
1997 Equality Through Visibility United States New York City, NY, USA
1998 Unity Through Diversity United States West Hollywood, CA, USA
1999 Prideful Past, Powerful Future Scotland Glasgow, Scotland
2000 Take Pride, Take Joy, Take Action United States Atlanta, GA, USA
2001 Embrace Diversity New Zealand Auckland, New Zealand
2002 Pride Worldwide United States San Francisco, CA, USA
2003 Peace Through Pride Canada Montreal, QC, Canada
2004 Vive La Difference Iceland Reykjavik, Iceland
2005 Equal Rights. No More. No Less. United States Minneapolis, MN, USA
2006 Pride – Not Prejudice United States Portland, ME, USA
2007 United For Equality Switzerland Zurich, Switzerland
2008 Live Love Be Canada Vancouver, BC, Canada
2009 Your Rights, Our Rights, Human Rights United States St. Petersburg, FL, USA
2010 One Heart, One World, One Pride United States Long Beach, CA, USA
2011 Pride Around the World Belgium Brussels, Belgium
2012 Pride Links Us Together United States Boston, MA, USA
2013 Pride 365 Canada Montreal, QC, Canada
2014 Reflections of Pride – Stonewall 45 United States Pittsburgh, PA, USA
2015 Color Our World with Pride United States Las Vegas, NV, USA
2016 Solidarity Through Pride France Montpellier, France
2017 Viva la Vida United States Indianapolis, IN, USA
2018 Remember the Past, Create the Future Canada Saskatoon, SK, Canada
2019 Millions of Moments of Pride Greece Athens, Greece
2020 Exist. Persist. Resist. Norway Oslo, Norway
2021 #YouAreIncluded Online due to COVID
2022 English: From Silence to Solidarity

Spanish: Del Silencio a la Solidaridad
Portuguese: Do Silêncio à Solidariedade
French: Du Silence à la solidarité

Mexico Guadalajara, Mexico

WorldPride[]

Marchers at Pride Toronto WorldPride 2014 with signs commemorating significant events in LGBT history in Canada.

WorldPride, licensed by InterPride and organized by one of its members, is an event that promotes visibility and awareness of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT pride) issues on an international level. WorldPride includes parades/marches, festivals and other cultural activities such as human right conference.

At the 1997 world conference and general meeting InterPride members voted to award the inaugural WorldPride to be held in Rome in 2000. The host cities continue to be selected by the members of InterPride with WorldPrides usually held every two years.[6]

Date Host city Notes
July 2000 Italy Rome, Italy The event was organized by the Italian gay rights organization Circolo di Cultura Omosessuale Mario Mieli along with InterPride and coincided with the Great Jubilee.
August 2006 Israel Jerusalem, Israel Took place after a year of delays. The scheduled parade was denied a permit owing to the 2006 Lebanon War.[7][8]
July 2012 United Kingdom London, United Kingdom Help just ahead of the London Olympic and Paralympic Games during celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee. Pride London planned a parade with floats, a large performance area in Trafalgar Square plus street parties in Golden Square and Soho.
June 2014 Canada Toronto, Canada Pride Toronto, in partnership with the city's tourism agency, Tourism Toronto, submitted a bid to host WorldPride 2014. The 2009 annual conference of InterPride, held in St. Petersburg, Florida, USA, voted to accept the bid of Pride Toronto to host WorldPride in North America for the first time.
June 2017 Spain Madrid, Spain In October 2012, InterPride's membership voted at its annual conference in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, to award WorldPride 2017 to Madrid Pride and the city of Madrid, Spain.
June 2019 United States New York City, United States On October 19, 2015, NYC Pride announced that the city would host WorldPride to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots.[9]
August 2021 Denmark Copenhagen, Denmark For the first time, WorldPride will be shared by two neighbouring cities in the Øresund Region of Copenhagen and Malmö and coincides EuroGames. The LGBTI+ inclusive sporting event includes 29 sports with an estimated 6,000 athletes attending.
February–March 2023 Australia Sydney, Australia For the first time, WorldPride will be held in the southern hemisphere. This will provide a focus on LGBTI rights and communities of the Asia Pacific region including a First Nations Hub dedicated to showcasing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts and culture. WorldPride will coincide with Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras.
2025 Taiwan Kaohsiung, Taiwan For the first time, WorldPride will be held in East Asia.[10]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "History". InterPride. Retrieved July 4, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Robinson, Charlotte (October 12, 2012). "InterPride 2012 Co-Chairs on Celebrating 30 Years of Global Pride". Huffington Post. Retrieved July 4, 2014.
  3. ^ Houston, Andrea (October 8, 2013). "Xtra heads to Montreal for the InterPride conference". Daily Xtra. Retrieved July 4, 2014.
  4. ^ "Scholarship". InterPride. Retrieved July 4, 2014.
  5. ^ "Themes & Host Cities". InterPride. Retrieved July 4, 2014.
  6. ^ "WorldPride". InterPride. Retrieved July 4, 2014.
  7. ^ Buchanan, Wyatt. "Broad Opposition to World Pride in Jerusalem", The San Francisco Chronicle, July 26, 2006. Accessed August 5, 2007.
  8. ^ "Jerusalem gay rights group delays WorldPride events due to Gaza withdrawal"[dead link], The Advocate, May 17, 2005
  9. ^ "New York City Will Host WorldPride 2019 To Celebrate 50th Anniversary Of Stonewall - Towleroad". Towleroad. Retrieved 2015-10-20.
  10. ^ InterPride (2021-11-13). "PRESS RELEASE: WORLDPRIDE 2025 BID WON BY KAOHSIUNG PRIDE IN A HISTORIC VOTE FOR THE GLOBAL AND EAST ASIAN LGBTQIA+ COMMUNITIES". Medium. Retrieved 2021-11-14.

External links[]

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