Archive for June, 2010
People’s Daily Calls For Gay Rights
Jun 18th
Beijing – The mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party,the People’s Daily, has published an unprecedented call for gay rights in China in its English language website, as follows:
Watching gay men and lesbians in China struggle for basic rights and dignity is like hurtling through a time warp to the past.
Job discrimination. Social ostracism. Broken-hearted parents. Lives of deception, denial and depression. Police oppression. Brutality from vicious straight men or teenage hoodlums looking for easy targets.
And those are just the visible hurdles of being gay in a straight society.
They’re the consequences of the invisible assumptions, the unenlightened attitudes that feed poisonous outcomes.
Because of cultural differences, the fight for gay rights here is bound to take on Chinese characteristics, whatever those might be. So the paths to gay rights taken in Western countries probably diverge from those that will be available here.
Nonetheless, here’s a description of what gay life can be when people stop hiding, win their rights and live with pride, a look through the time warp into the possible future.
This month, cities all over the United States will be hosting their annual Gay Pride parades. These have evolved from a few dozen people marching with paper bags over their heads to hide their identities into massive celebrations that attract tens of thousands of families, politicians and sponsors.
The best-known is in San Francisco, home to one of the country’s biggest gay populations.
From a single afternoon featuring a parade, this event now spans several days. Its activities range from picnics in the park for families to a gigantic carnival featuring booths selling food, souvenirs, arts and crafts, clothing, jewelry and services.
Some of the items are blatantly sexual. But some of America’s biggest businesses also set up booths to show their eagerness to cater to this sizable, well-organized and generally well-heeled population. These include resorts, luxury housing developments, airlines and banks.
Even The Walt Disney Co sets aside a week in June every year to hold Gay Days at Disneyland in Anaheim, California and Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida. Minnie and Mickey don’t mind.
The parade in San Francisco a couple of years ago was led by a large contingent of lesbian bikers, clad in black leather and riding big, noisy, powerful motorcycles. People in the audience, as well as parade participants, dressed (or undressed) in amazing costumes of lingerie, lace, leather, feathers, jewelry, body paint, boots, masks and lots of attitude.
Even dogs were dressed up or dyed in the colors of the gay-rights symbol, the rainbow.
In every city, state and local politicians march or ride in the parades or come to mingle with the gay voters. The biggest parades, such as those in New York, Chicago and San Francisco, attract national celebrities from sports, politics and entertainment.
All large American cities have gay enclaves. These tend to be among the trendiest and more expensive neighborhoods, with some of the best restaurants, hottest clubs and chicest boutiques. As a population, gays and lesbians tend to be highly educated and financially comfortable.
In fact, when gays and lesbians start moving into a run-down fringe neighborhood, you can bet that property values there will rise through the roof. First, they’ll renovate the housing. Then upscale cafes and bars will appear. Finally, straight people who appreciate good restaurants and can afford high-quality housing begin moving in, too.
Gays and lesbians buy houses together, open businesses, get married, have children and in general conduct their lives in the same ways as the straight population. Schools have learned to accommodate children, without fuss, who have two mommies or two daddies.
None of this came easily. It took more than 40 years of struggle, individually and as a group, to win the political and social rights supposedly guaranteed by law to all.
But it can be done, and the rewards made it worth the struggle.
La Cage Aux Folles Meets Bangkok
Jun 11th
Bangkok – Producer Takonkiet Viravan has come up with a Thai version of that very camp French movie “La Cage Aux Folles”.
Starting 18 April, there will be evening shows daily of “Kinaree See Rung” at 7.30pm, plus weekend matinees at 2pm at the Muang Thai Rachadalai Theatre, on the 4th floor of The Esplanade at Rachadapisek Road in Bangkok. Last performance will be on 27 June.
In the leading roles as Issy is Ruangsak ‘James’ Loychusak (in his first such gay/katoey role), while Songsit ‘Kob’ Roongnophakunsri plays the part of his partner Georges.
Issy and George own a very successful drag night club and lead a very ‘out’ and camp lifestyle, but are presented with a major problem when Georges’ son gets engaged to the daughter of an ultra conservative politician, and the two partners have to learn to act like straight men to support Georges’ son. The outcome is hilarous and takes several twists on the way.
“La Cage Aux Folles” was later made into a Hollywood film, and a musical called “The Birdcage”.
Ticket for the Thai language “Kinaree See Rung” cost 500, 1,000, 1,500, 1,800, 2,300 and 2,800 baht and available at Thaiticketmajor booths. Call 02-262-3456 or visit http://www.thaiticket major.com
Small Start For Beijing LGBT Center
Jun 7th
Beijing – In apartment 2108, there’s a small second-hand book market. It seems nothing special but the dozens of rainbow-colored signs decorating the room offer some clues to the uniqueness of the event.
This is a gay-themed sale in the unit, which functions as the Beijing LGBT Center, for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.
More than 70 books and hundreds of magazines and DVDs were donated by people from the LGBT community, with about half the titles dealing in homosexual subjects.
“The book market is a new channel of fundraising,” said Yang Ziguang, manager of Beijing LGBT Center. “But what matters more is that it’s another opportunity to build up the sense of a big family, and bond together.”
Founded on Feb 14, 2008, the center is a public, nonprofit organization which aims to raise the awareness of self-identity of the LGBT community, and promote the gay movement and multicultural development, according to the organization’s mission statement.
The center has invited celebrities such as the openly gay mayor of West Hollywood, John Duran, and Taiwan movie director Zhou Meiling, a lesbian, to give speeches to the LGBT community in Beijing. It also provides other activities such as movie screenings, chorus training, an English corner and travel opportunities.



















