Monday, February 22, 2010

Transgender, Bisexual, Lesbian and Gay Groups Invited To March In NYC Chinese New Year Parade

    The Chinese New Year was celebrated globally this past weekend. According to the Chinese Zodiac, it is The Golden Year of The Tiger. 
In New York City, LGBT Asian Pacific Islander - API groups were invited to march in the grand parade for the first time ever. API Transgender people as well as all API queers are gaining visibility that is incredibly important.
Why? Because in the United States folks who are not white and have different ethnicities than Western European have been marginalized for hundreds of years. Transgender Asian Pacific Islanders have been driven into an even smaller and far more marginalized group. Now, it appears Transgender as well as all Queer Asian Pacific Islanders are achieving greater visibility in New York City.
This is great news and gives us some hope in the South. 
Things that happen in New York City will eventually happen in Virginia and points south in maybe thirty years..







Gay groups invited to march in Lunar New Year parade
BY DANIEL ROBERTS AND ERIN DURKIN
DAILY NEWS WRITERS
Monday, February 22nd 2010, 4:00 AM
In a historic first, gay and lesbian groups marched through the streets of Chinatown Sunday in the festive Lunar New Year parade.
And they invited the Indian and Irish gays, too.
Wearing rainbow bandannas, about 300 gays and supporters waved versions of the fish and the phoenix, traditional Chinese symbols for prosperity and renewal.
They were joined by drummers and even a costumed tiger with its own rainbow armbands.
"We are ecstatic. It's a huge step forward," said Irene Tung, 31, a spokeswoman for Q-Wave, which led the gay contingent.
It was made up of marchers from groups that included St. Patrick's Day for All and the South Asian Lesbian & Gay Association, which have been barred for years from the annual St. Patrick's Day and India Day parades.
"Today is a historic breakthrough for this community, and someday I hope we will see the same on [St. Patrick's Day]," said St. Pat's for All founder Brendan Fay. "My feeling today was one of joy for this community."
Unlike the St. Patrick's Day Parade on Fifth Ave., which has for years barred gays, organizers allowed the gay group to march.
Steven Tin, executive director of the Better Chinatown Society, said there was no reason to exclude the groups.
"Why not?" he said. "We basically welcome groups that want to do a cultural celebration."
The thousands of revelers who packed Mott St. to watch the colorful parade ushering in the Year of the Tiger were mostly supportive, with frequent cheers for the gay marchers.
The Rev. Patrick Cheng of the Metropolitan Community Church marched with his 75-year-old mother.
"Given a lot of hostility in Asian-American evangelical communities, I think it's good for me to come out and represent the religious side," he said.
Mom Deanna Cheng said she's getting more comfortable discussing her son's homosexuality with her Chinatown neighbors.
"[I] try to make them listen and change their minds," she said. "In the past, I wouldn't have dared to say anything."
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