Big events on tap as Stonewall Month winds down in Ga.


MORE INFORMATION:

Friday, June 22

Pride Seder
Presented by Congregation Bet Haverim
7 p.m. at Central Congregational Church
2676 Clairmont Road NE
Atlanta, GA 30329

Georgia Equality’s Evening for Equality
7 p.m. at Twelve Hotel
361 17th St., Atlanta, GA 30363
www.georgiaequality.org

Saturday, June 23

22nd annual Pride Run/Walk 5k
8 a.m. , Race starts at Piedmont Park
near the Aquatic Center
www.eteamz.com/frontrunnersatlanta

Augusta Pride
Parade: 10 a.m., Festival: 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Augusta Common
836 Reynolds St., Augusta, GA 30901
www.augustapride.com

Wednesday, June 27

Dine with Pride at Doc Chey’s (Morningside)
Portion of bills donated to Atlanta Pride
5 – 10 p.m., 1424 N. Highland Ave., Atlanta, GA 30306

Out in the Stands
LGBT Night at Turner Field
Braves vs. Arizona Diamondbacks
VIP meet-and-greet with Ben Cohen
7 p.m. at Turner Field
755 Hank Aaron Drive, Atlanta, GA 30315
Tickets: 404-614-1325 or
stacey.nicely@braves.com

Friday, June 29

Author/blogger Sinclair Sexsmith
Discussion on body confidence in
queer masculine community
7:30 p.m. at Charis Books and More
1189 Euclid Ave., Atlanta, GA 30307
www.charisbooksandmore.com

Saturday, June 30

Sylvia Rivera Community Event
Trans community member panel
11:30 a.m. at  the Phillip Rush Center
1530 Dekalb Ave., Atlanta, GA 30307

Author/blogger Sinclair Sexsmith
‘Say Please: Lesbian BDSM Erotica’
7:30 p.m. at Charis Books and More
1189 Euclud Ave., Atlanta, GA 30307
www.charisbooksandmore.com

Sunday, July 1

KCCA Children’s Story Hour
Kelli’s Childcare Collective of Atlanta
celebrates queer families
“A Tale of Two Daddies”
“Who’s in a Family”
 “In our Mother’s House”
1 p.m. at Charis Books and More
1189 Euclid Ave., Atlanta, GA 30307
www.charisbooksandmore.com

That puts this year’s Atlanta Pride on the weekend of Oct. 13-14. Yet the city still celebrates Stonewall Month in June, and several events retain “Pride” in their names.

Plenty of ‘Pride’ in June

There is plenty of “Pride” in store for this weekend, in Atlanta and two other Georgia cities. On Friday, June 22, Congregation Bet Haverim, Atlanta’s LGBT-founded synagogue, hosts its annual Pride Seder; the next day, the Atlanta Pride Run steps off from Piedmont Park.

This year’s Pride Seder service is entitled “No Place Like Home” and will place an emphasis on homelessness in the LGBT community, particularly among young people, according to Congregation Bet Haverim Rabbi Joshua Lesser.

“We want to educate ourselves and our community,” Lesser said. “This is a broader issue outside of the gay Jewish community.”

The service is set for 7 p.m. June 22 at Central Congregational Church.

The next morning, another annual tradition, the Atlanta Pride Run, gets underway from the aquatic center at Piedmont Park. The route will cover an area through and near the park. In addition to the run is a Friday night pre-dinner taking place at Einstein’s from 7-9 p.m. and a brunch at 5 Napkin Burger from 9:30-11 a.m. after the run.

Also on Saturday, June 23, the city of Augusta hosts its third annual Pride festival, with organizers hoping to draw as many as 10,000 for the downtown parade and festival at the Augusta Commons. Headliners include Tom Goss, Josh Zuckerman, Dee Hemingway and She N She.

This year’s theme is “It’s Time.”

“That refers to it being time to be unified, time to put up gay artists in front of the community,” said Travis Jenkins, Augusta Pride president.

“When the parade starts on Saturday morning you will see tears of joy streaming down the faces of the crowd,” Jenkins added. “It’s not just the pride in being able to be who you are, it’s also the pride of the community being able to come together to make Augusta Pride possible.”

And while it isn’t listed on the Atlanta Pride Committee’s Stonewall Month calendar, East Side Pride is also set for June 23. Held at Milam Park in Clarkston, the event targets the eastern suburbs of Atlanta, though all are welcome for entertainment and a potluck meal. The park’s new pool is open, so attendees are also encouraged to bring bathing suits.

Finally, the Doc Chey’s restaurant chain, which has hosted “Dine with Pride” days all month to benefit the Atlanta Pride Committee, hosts its final event June 27 at the Doc Chey’s in Morningside.

‘Evening for Equality’ and ‘Out in the Stands’

Not all Stonewall Month events are expressly Pride-themed, but all reflect the spirit of equality and openness made possible by those early activists.

On Friday, June 22, Atlanta honors its own activists as Georgia Equality hosts its Evening for Equality, a fundraiser expected to draw close to 300 to the Twelve Hotel at Atlantic Station.

Along with dinner and a silent auction, the event includes awards honoring those advancing the cause of LGBT equality here in Georgia.

This year a special award, the Champion for Equality Award, will be given to U.S. Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), who is a recognized leader in the civil rights movement and a long time LGBT ally. Darlene Hudson and Craig Washington, co-founders of the Bayard Rustin-Audre Lorde Breakfast taking place on Martin Luther King holiday, will receive the Community Builder award.

Larry Lehman, who serves as the executive director/CEO of AID Gwinnett, will receive the Guiding Star Award. Jerry Gonzalez, the founding and current executive director of Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials, will receive the 2012 Allen Thornell Political Advancement Award.

Another big Stonewall Month event is the second annual “Out in the Stands” night at the Atlanta Braves. The June 27 game is a Wednesday night clash against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Proceeds from special tickets will benefit the StandUp Foundation, an anti-bullying advocacy organization founded by English rugby star Ben Cohen.

Based in Atlanta, the StandUp Foundation works to raise awareness of bullying, with an emphasis on gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender youth. It is also dedicated to decreasing homophobia in sports.

Bloggers, panels and more

Stonewall Month offers a diverse mix of fun and educational events; Charis Books & More, Atlanta’s lesbian-owned feminist bookstore, joined in by co-hosting two reading/discussion series.

The first, focused on late gay civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, concluded last week. The second features author/blogger Sinclair Sexsmith, who writes the Sugarbutch Chronicles (www.sugarbutch.net). The visit includes workshops on June 29 (radical queer masculinity and body confidence) and June 30 (reading from “Say Please: Lesbian BDSM Erotica”). Charis also hosts a queer story hour for kids on July 1, billed as a bonus event for Stonewall Month.

Rounding out Stonewall Month, the third annual Sylvia Rivera community event takes place June 30 at the Phillip Rush Center. The event is named after Rivera, a transgender woman who was a veteran of the Stonewall Riots. It is co-sponsored by Atlanta Pride, Juxtaposed Center for Transformation, and Transgender Individuals Living Their Truth.

“(The event) was named in her honor because of the role she played in the Stonewall riots and her activism to include the transgender community in the larger context of the queer community,” said Glen Paul Freedman, Atlanta Pride Committee board chair.

 

Top photo: The 15th Annual East Point Possums Show, a marquee event for Atlanta’s Stonewall Month, took place June 15 in the East Point Commons with some 28 drag performances raising funds for the Phillip Rush Center. Possums ‘matriarch’ Rick Westbrook announced that next year’s event would benefit Lost-n-Found, a homeless LGBT youth advocacy organization he helped found. (by Dyana Bagby)