Sudbury Pride Explained

Sudbury Pride
Size:250px
Formation: (Incorporated in 2012)
Type:2SLGBTQ+ not-for-profit community organization
Status:Active
Purpose:Advocate, educate, and entertain
Headquarters:Greater Sudbury
Region Served:Greater Sudbury
Language:English, French
Website:Sudbury Pride

Sudbury Pride (French: Fierté Sudbury) is a 2SLGBTQ+ Pride advocacy organization based in Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. Their now annual Pride festival, held for the first time in 1997[1] and organized by a committee that included sociologist Gary Kinsman, was the first Pride event in Northern Ontario, and the only one in the region until the launch of Thunder Bay's Thunder Pride festival in 2010.

The first parade occurred on July 19, 1997. After the first event it was then held in August of each year until 2007, and has since been held in July.

In 2006, This Magazine cited Sudbury Pride as an event which, because of the city's working class culture, feels "real, dangerous, like Pride's supposed to feel."[2]

Events

Originally consisting of only a Pride March, the event expanded in 2006 to become what is now known as Pride Week. Following an opening ceremony and the raising of the Pride Flag at Tom Davies Square to launch the festival, a week-long series of events is held.[3] Though the specific events and projects vary from year to year, these have included film screenings at Rainbow Cinema and the Sudbury Indie Cinema Co-op, a youth-centered Pride Prom at the Sudbury Theatre Centre, as well as events at Science North, Market Square, Bell Park, the downtown branch of the Greater Sudbury Public Library and various bars and restaurants in the city's downtown core, including Zig's, the city's only gay bar.[4] On the final day of the festival, a march takes place through downtown.

In 2014, the event added an annual program of awards to honour local businesses, organizations, and individuals who have been trailblazers in the city's LGBTQ2 community.[5]

Starting in 2018, the organization modified its mandate to create year-round programming, events, and projects, as well as increasing outreach efforts with other marginalized groups.[6] The first such event took place in February 2019 and consisted of a speed friending event, as an alternative to speed dating, and a winter formal.[7]

The 2020 event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, although its organizers announced plans to proceed with an online "digital pride festival" called Queerantine.[8] The Queerantine program included panel discussions and a public forum on policing,[9] a livestreamed Pride mass from St. Andrews United Church, a trivia competition, local author readings and theatrical performances from the Théâtre du Nouvel-Ontario, and musical performances by Jennifer Holub, Tafari Anthony and G.R. Gritt.[10] In addition to the livestream, some of the events were broadcast on EastLink TV, the city's cable community channel. A second online event, Queerantine 2.0, took place in the summer of 2021 in response to continued uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[11]

To launch the 2023 edition of Pride Week, the organization put on its first two-spirit social and powwow.[12]

Activism

In 2017, following similar discussions at Pride Toronto in response to demands from the Toronto chapter of Black Lives Matter in 2016 and in response to feedback from marginalized community members, it was jointly decided by Sudbury Pride and the Greater Sudbury Police Service to not allow the participation of uniformed police officers during its Pride March.[13]

In response to the controversy surrounding Doug Ford's 2018 plan to revise Ontario's 2015 sex education curriculum, Sudbury Pride sought to file a human rights complaint against the provincial government to the Ontario Human Rights Commission.[14]

In 2020, the organization and activists from Greater Sudbury's 2SLGBTQ+ community reported being targets of a campaign of harassment[15] by local far-right and extremist groups.[16] This campaign received public responses from both the Greater Sudbury Police Service[17] and NDP members of provincial parliament[18] condemning the attacks.

Sudbury Pride chose to cancel its Pride March in 2023 following pressure from local activists and groups, in particular from Black Lives Matter Sudbury. They criticized the involvement of the Greater Sudbury Police Service, whose presence was required by the City in order to issue a permit for the event.[19]

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Gays parade their pride". Sudbury Star, August 11, 2002. p. A1.
  2. "We're here...and here...and here...", This Magazine, May/June 2006.
  3. http://www.northernlife.ca/News/Lifestyle/2006/07-13-06-pride.aspx "Sudbury gay pride week starts July 17"
  4. http://www.northernlife.ca/news/lifestyle/2010/07/pride-130710.aspx "Pride week geared to all ages"
  5. http://www.northernlife.ca/news/localNews/2014/07/07-pride-festival-sudbury.aspx "Sudbury poised to show its pride"
  6. Web site: August 20, 2018 . With new mandate, Sudbury Pride bolsters activism, outreach efforts . CBC Northern Ontario.
  7. Web site: February 14, 2019 . Sudbury Pride introduces speed-friending as an alternative to speed-dating . CBC Northern Ontario.
  8. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/sudbury/sudbury-pride-queerentine-1.5531998 "Online 'Queerentine' festival to replace this year's Sudbury Pride Week festival"
  9. Web site: July 13, 2020 . Sudbury Pride aims to continue conversations around policing . CBC Northern Ontario.
  10. https://www.sudbury.com/lifestyle/full-sked-out-for-queerantine-the-virtual-sudbury-pride-festival-2534597 "Full sked out for Queerantine, the virtual Sudbury Pride festival"
  11. Web site: July 11, 2021 . Fierté Sudbury Pride announces its pride week programming . The Sudbury Star.
  12. News: Gentili . Mark . July 11, 2023 . Two-spirit social, powwow kicks off Fierté Sudbury Pride 2023 . Sudbury.com.
  13. Web site: July 10, 2017 . Sudbury police ditching uniforms for Pride parade . CBC Northern Ontario.
  14. Web site: July 16, 2018 . Sudbury Pride fighting Doug Ford's sex ed. repeal with human rights complaint . Sudbury.com.
  15. Web site: January 14, 2020 . Members of Sudbury's LGBT community targeted, harassed, group says . CBC Northern Ontario.
  16. Web site: February 5, 2020 . Far-Right Harassment of Fierte Sudbury Pride . Anti-Racist Sudbury.
  17. Web site: February 3, 2020 . Online harassment made worse by letter from Sudbury police, says Fiérte Sudbury Pride . CBC Northern Ontario.
  18. Web site: January 29, 2020 . 'We're not going to stand for hate' . The Sudbury Star.
  19. News: July 12, 2023 . Sudbury Pride cancels annual march due to mandatory police presence . CBC Sudbury.