May 23, 2014 | to | May 26, 2014 |
DC Black Pride (DCBP), presented by Black Lesbian & Gay Pride Day, Inc. (BLGPD), is held annually during Memorial Day Weekend. DCBP celebrates the African-American lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community of Washington, D.C.
DC Black Pride 2014
Since 1991, BLGPD has presented DC Black Pride (DCBP) annually. Each year, more than 25,000 men and women from all over the world attend DCBP and experience the great culture and history in the Washington, DC area. Attendees have come to expect only quality social and non-social events during the Memorial Day Weekend.
DCBP is a program of the Center For Black Equity [CBE] (formerly the IFBP). CBE is a coalition of Black Pride organizers formed to promote a multinational network of LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) Prides and community-based organization.
HistoryThe African-American lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community of Washington, D.C. has always been full of life, and its history rich.
From 1975 until 1990, the Club House was a premiere community gathering space most notable for its annual Memorial Day weekend celebration, called the Children’s Hour. It was, of course, more than an hour in fact, it usually went all night long. The Children’s Hour quickly became an institution that could not be missed word of mouth about what was happening in D.C. during Memorial Day weekend spread up and down the East Coast and throughout the country. What began as a local highlight soon began pulling in folks from all over.
When the Club House closed its doors in 1990, many feared that the Memorial Day tradition would be lost as well. Three men – Welmore Cook, Theodore Kirkland and Ernest Hopkins – found themselves concerned with not just the lack of a place for the community to gather during the holiday weekend, but also with the growing epidemic of HIV/AIDS and its impact on their community. They envisioned creating an event that would continue the tradition of the Children’s Hour as well as raise much-needed funds for the HIV/AIDS organizations that served the African-American community in Washington and the surrounding area.
From that idea came the first Black Gay and Lesbian Pride, which was essentially collaboration among those three organizers, the DC Coalition of Black Lesbians and Gay Men, and the Inner City AIDS Network. On May 25, 1991, the first DC Black Pride (DCBP) festival was produced on the grounds of Banneker Field. Hundreds of people from the community came together for a relevant cause.
The following year, DCBP increased its offerings as it took steps to truly become a weekend-long festival, with an event line-up, including a midnight cruise on the Potomac River, a Sunday prayer breakfast and the first Washington film screening of Marlon Riggs’ groundbreaking film “Tongues Untied.”
As DCBP continued to grow in popularity and in programmatic offerings during the mid-nineties, organizers decided to make the event official by creating a board of directors, filing for incorporation and becoming a 501(c) 3 nonprofit organization — Black Lesbian & Gay Pride Day, Inc. (BLGPD) was born. The all-volunteer governing body of this nonprofit would now oversee the planning and execution of DCBP.
DCBP was the catalyst for what is now referred to as the Black Pride Movement. Since the birth of DCBP, thirty other Black Pride celebrations now take place throughout the world, many using DC Black Pride as a model. During 1998′s DCBP Festival, Earl Fowlkes, the President of BLGPD at the time, met with the organizers of Black Prides from New York City, Detroit, Atlanta and several other cities to form the International Federation of Black Prides. That organization now has thirty members and serves as the principal body through which organizers find support, raise funds and share best practices.
More than two decades afer the first DCBP drew 800 people to Banneker Field for a day themed “Let’s All Come Together,” more than 100,000 members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community of African descent and their allies have come to celebrate the beauty of a shared community and raise awareness and funding for HIV/AIDS in the name and spirit of Black Pride.
Still today, we continue our efforts to not only celebrate the traditional Memorial Day Black Pride, but to raise funding for programs throughout the year.
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