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  • Perhaps you've heard of this big event called Pride.

  • There's usually a parade, maybe some speakers and workshops,

  • some communities make a whole rainbow-colored week of it.

  • But do you fully understand why?

  • June 28th, 1969.

  • Stonewall Inn at 51st through 53rd Christopher Street,

  • between 4th and Waverly in Manhattan's Greenwich Village

  • was, at the time, a mafia-owned gay bar where the LGBT community could drink and dance as themselves.

  • Kind of.

  • In 1969 crossdressing and homosexuality were considered mental illnesses and treated as crimes.

  • Essentially, operating a gay bar was a known business risk, and being at one, whether or not you were

  • LGBTIQQA2KP etc, was a known patron hazard.

  • Gay bars, including Stonewall Inn, weren't persecution-free zones.

  • Cops could come in at any time, arrest, and humiliate people.

  • It was just at least you could take the chance of being yourself until this happened, unlike

  • everywhere-else clubs where you couldn't.

  • At around 1:20-1:30 AM on the 28th, policemen, patrol officers, and a detective

  • entered the scene to, quote, "take the place".

  • It was a raid.

  • There are lots of speculations about why this particular raid incited a riot.

  • It's human nature to try to understand these things, to pinpoint what caused everything to start changing.

  • We don't know. What we do know is that without any planning or discussion

  • the historic, game-changing stonewall riots,

  • the, quote, "single most important event leading to the gay liberation movement and the modern

  • fight for LGBT rights in the United States" began.

  • Patrons did not show their IDs, those cross-dressing refused police crawling, one queen hit a cop when

  • he pushed her, and all this commotion moving into the streets attracted crowds.

  • Eventually 500 plus people amassed fighting in any way they could

  • against the police for their freedom to be themselves.

  • The original handful of officers took shelter in the Stonewall building until rioters broke

  • through the windows and doors

  • and more chaos ensued.

  • Cars were turned over, things lit on fire, there was harsh name-calling and beating of one-another.

  • Eventually New York City's tactical police force intervened

  • but the raging continued with rioters chasing the police out of the neighborhood until

  • streets were left charred and broken.

  • Eventually there was quiet, but once word got out - people talking, newspapers releasing their

  • stories of the riot

  • thousands returned to the cause of Stonewall the following night to go at it again.

  • You may wonder, why the battle?

  • Finally there was an out. A real "out on the public streets" kind of out.

  • People declaring with victory arms that they were gay and okay because before this anything but

  • conformative sexuality was shunned.

  • First by religion, then psychiatry. There was no "out of the closet" proud and gay, unless you wanted

  • to lose yourself to torture treatments and incessant public ridicule, forced to "straighten up".

  • Can you imagine all these rules to hide yourself and finally the streets are filled with people like

  • you and your allies demanding that the police stop discriminating against you?

  • The historian David Carter writes in his book Stonewall how it not only changed the rioters, it changed

  • the people who witnessed it in papers and on TV.

  • They were touched by the actions of a socially despised minority standing up to the police.

  • It's a big deal!

  • I mean gay activism and the LGBT rights movements were in place before Stonewall

  • but this catapulted them forward.

  • Joan Nestle called the Stonewall rioting a coming together of historical forces

  • refusing to endure discrimination.

  • Lillian Faderman called it an emblem of gay and lesbian power and a shot heard around the world.

  • It wasn't the start of LGBT history but it is arguably the most influential event.

  • People energized by the riots were ready to take action. Groups like the Gay Liberation Front and

  • Gay Activist Alliance were swelling with members and momentum.

  • They spread news through their pamphlets and then even more organizations for equal rights mobilized.

  • Their plan was to put in place Christopher Street Liberation Day.

  • On the anniversary of Stonewall a crowd covering 15 city blocks marched

  • from Christopher Street to Central Park, proud and out to the world.

  • Los Angeles and Chicago coordinated their marches the same day, and a year later

  • what has become known as pride was in three more states and four more countries.

  • That's the parade. The colors and songs to celebrate who we are, specifically the

  • lesbian, gay, trans, bi, and queer "us".

  • It is not the completion of our efforts though.

  • Sexual and gender minorities still don't have equal rights, and still face stonewall raid like discrimination.

  • I hope this history lesson inspires you to change that.

  • Stay curious.

  • That's what the shirt says, stay curious!

  • There's also this video looking back on Stonewall after 40 years,

  • and this one is a full documentary since you're staying curious.

  • [gibberish], stay curious!

  • Nick: That's the one, [imitates gibberish] that's it right there.

  • Nick: Put that on a shirt.

Perhaps you've heard of this big event called Pride.

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驕傲的歷史 (History of Pride)

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    羅紹桀 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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