fbpx

Blog

Safety Means Everyone: Building a Nurturing GBLTQ Community – by Juli MacDonnell

August 22, 2012

 

The last few days, I’ve been having conversations about how to nurture a rural queer community – when Gay, Lesbian, Trans, Bi, Queer (GBLTQ) people feel safe in our community and when they don’t.  I talked to someone at a Youth Drop-In Centre.  He told me of a youth that said he had never been bullied at school for being gay, thanks to the Gay/Straight Alliance at School.  Friends of mine say that they rarely think about it, because they feel so accepted and part of the community.

This is as it should be.  Yet, while I also rarely experience violent or  direct homophobia in my daily life,   when I was  younger, poorer, and more vulnerable, I often had to deal with hostility, derogatory remarks, threats against my livelihood and physical well-being.  I’m aware of the current high suicide rate of questioning youth, many ostracized by their families, friends, and communities because they may be gay, lesbian, or transgendered.  I’ve heard elders talk about their fear of the homophobia they will face when they enter residential care and no longer have the same choices.

When I try to reconcile these disparate experiences of safety and homophobic oppression , I am reminded that my current sense of safety is recent, quite possibly transitory, dependent on many factors outside my individual control – age, the economy, the choices of my neighbours, and the strength of our human rights policies.  Most of all, this reminds me of the importance of working together to build safety for everyone, even when some of us have the temporary grace of comfort.

Why is everyone talking about Consent?  By Sharyn Carroll

Why is everyone talking about Consent? By Sharyn Carroll

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAy5LYJlTII From high profile cases in the media to Canadian students and faculty calling for change across college and university campuses, the term “Consent” is being put under a microscope. Our understanding of this word raises...

SWOVA Focuses on Consent and Sexual Assault

SWOVA Focuses on Consent and Sexual Assault

Statistics tell us that one in three women and one in six men will experience some form of sexual violence in their lifetime, while less than one in ten assaults are reported to the authorities. Most sexual assaults happen by someone the victim knows. (Stats Can 2004)...

Re-defining Feminism  by Elise Pearson

Re-defining Feminism by Elise Pearson

I find that definitions can be limiting and problematic, and I’d like to see if I can encourage you to think for yourselves about what this word, or movement, or ideology might mean to you. Instead I’ll start by providing a few different definitions I’ve come across...

The Process of Consent by Elise Pearson

The Process of Consent by Elise Pearson

On May 25th girls from the Salish Sea Girls' Leadership Project and recruits from grade 12 at GISS (Gulf Islands Secondary School) entered the high school to talk to the grade 11 students about sexual health and consent. In my own experience, and in speaking with...

Name(Required)
Email(Required)
Please let us know what's on your mind. Have a question for us? Ask away.
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.