Personality Spotlight: Betty Couvertier


MORE INFORMATION:

Blessing of Relationships
Sunday, May 15, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Gentle Spirit Christian Church
Meet at 2nd Picnic Pavillion in Candler Park
1500 McLendon Ave., Atlanta, GA 30307
www.gentlespirit.org

International Day Against Homophobia
(and Transphobia and Islamophobia)

Tuesday, May 17, 6-10 p.m.
Unity Fellowship Church
9 Gammon Ave SE, Atlanta, GA 30315
atlantahomophobiaday.blogspot.com

[The show is] about who we are, telling our stories: real people speaking up and taking a stand. WRFG gave me that opportunity to have a voice — independent media — where we can just tell it like it is.

Do you believe Lady Gaga is an LGBT activist? Do you like her music?

Yes and yes. She has a soapbox and she is using it, which is good. And I love “Born this Way.”

Tell us about IDAHO and why you decided to organize the event last year and this year.

IDAHO for me is an opportunity to be part of the world movement for equality. IDAHO is international — folks all around the world observing who we are and breaking down walls. It is putting it up front that hate, bigotry, and fear cannot continue, that it will destroy us if we do not communicate, articulate, find that common ground that makes us one.

Plus [IDAHO] is an opportunity for the politics, the social, the networking, the people, religion, and the search for the common good to come together in one package, one event that can spread and is spreading.

With the addition of the celebration of this year’s theme “Same-Sex Couples…A Story of Love” at the Church Without Walls on May 15, we hope to continue the expansion in the years to come. And, yes, I’m planning on 2012 already.

If you could give one piece of advice leaders in our LGBT movement, what would it be?

The necessary conversations after so many years of hush-hush are happening — we are having conversations about sex, about violence in our community, about relationships, about race, about religion. And we are having them not only with our LGBT family but also with our allies and some who don’t see themselves as our allies.

These conversations must continue and we must take them from the kitchen table to the pulpits and to the halls of our legislature.

Where do you get those fancy hats you wear?

I laughed out loud on that one. Here and there, mostly at thrift shops.

 

Top photo: Betty Couvertier has been involved in Atlanta LGBT activism since the mid 1990s.