It’s Pride
season and many cities across the world have already began their celebrations.
Next week, Atlanta,
Georgia will be joining these cities by celebrating their third annualSouthern
Fried Queer Pride festival.
Southern Fried
Queer Pride (SFQP) is an organization by and for LGBTI individuals of color.
Taylor Alxndr, SFQP’s co-founder and executive director, grew tired of the
corporatization of LGBTI Pride and wanted to create a more localized,
community-funded, ‘homegrown’ event.
‘We saw there
was a lack of space for queer and trans people of color, especially black
people, to have our own experiences, to feel valid,’ Alxndr said.
‘We don’t
accept money from major corporations that may want to tamper with our mission
and our goals,’ Alxndr explains. ‘A lot of corporations want to give you a
certain amount of money, but they want to have a certain amount of space in
your program or maybe water down your political message. We definitely don’t
want to do that.’
The five-day
festival, to begin on 23 May, will feature a pop-up thrift shop, a social for
Latinx LGBTI people, a potluck for trans and nonbinary people, a gallery
exhibition on digital queerness, a dance party, and more.
The way the
festival is organized is entirely through members of the community, who pitch
ideas for workshops, presentations, and panels they want to host or include.
The success of
the annual SFQP festival has inspired other Southern states to participate as
well. North Carolina may be hosting their own satellite version of the event.
‘People are
really drawn to things that they can connect with; more grassroots things, more
community-based things have that closer connection,’ Alxndr states.
‘In the current political climate we’re in, I think building resilience and
building these strong bonds as a community are more important than ever.’
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