Gay pride parade minneapolis 2022


History of Gay Pride in Minneapolis

Beginning as just a picnic in Loring Park, Twin Cities Pride is now a multi-day festival celebrating more than 50 years in Minneapolis.

Last year’s Minneapolis Pride Festival stretched from June 28 to 30 and totaled around , people in attendance, slightly more than the 50 people who showed up for the original event. 

The first Minneapolis Gay Pride march took place to celebrate the anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising in New York. With 25 people marching down Nicollet Mall and 25 waiting in Loring Park to bail them out, a tradition began. 

Activist group Target City Coalition, aiming to combat actions from antigay actress Anita Bryant, protected the Pride festival in the s. Bryant targeted St. Paul to try to repeal an early gay rights ordinance. 

Executive Director of the Twin Cities Pride Festival Andi Otto said though the pride festival is popular today, the back was not always there. 

Otto said before the Loring Park picnic in , the LGBTQ+ community usually found support hidden in bars and clubs. 

“It&#;s just grown ever since the

News

Pride Month is celebrated in June to commemorate the  Stonewall Uprising in New York. This uprising sparked six days of protest in response to discrimination and violence against the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual (LGBTQIA+) Community.

Today, Pride is observed across the country with parties, parades, art shows, talks, and peaceful protests. These events are colorful and often show rainbows and flags to represent adj parts of LGBTQIA+ life.

The first rainbow flag was made by Gilbert Baker in for San Francisco’s Gay Freedom Celebration. In Baker’s design, each color has a meaning: Pink represents sexuality, red represents life, orange for healing, yellow for the sun, emerald for nature, turquoise for art, indigo for harmony, and violet for the soul. 

While Pride Month is a time of celebration (of love, respect, and community), many people sustain to fear being accepted for who they are. It is also a time to remember those who have suffered or lost their lives due to ignorance and hate.

During Pride Month, we indicate

“I am bothered by the polarization in the GLBT community,” Mike Bolton wrote in the May 24, “Letters” section of focusPoint, a Minneapolis-based queer periodical from the mids. “I see essentially two camps: the ‘equal rights not special rights’ people … and those who think about themselves significantly different from mainstream society.”

Bolton continued: “I believe in order to make strides for GLBT rights we have to present a united front, but the two camps may be inherently divergent.”

Each June, LGBTQ+ people in the Twin Cities and around the United States celebrate Pride Month. The timing commemorates the riot at New York Metropolis queer nightclub Stonewall Inn, generally considered to be the flashpoint that kicked off the modern movement for queer liberation nationwide.

But almost as long as people have been celebrating Pride, there have been divisions like the ones Bolton refers to in that year-old letter. 

“It was a debate at every Gay Pride demonstration from the very beginning about who we included in the Movement and who was legitimately in the Gay Movement,” said Koreen Ph

With humble beginnings as a remembrance of the Stonewall riots and the gay liberation movement of the late s, Pride Month means time to uplift the LGBTQ+ community, honor their revolutionary history, and celebrate queer culture. Throughout the month of June, members of the community and allies alike arrive together to remember the key figures in the fight for queer liberation and to empower the future of the movement for equal rights.

Make the most of Pride Month with some of these exciting Twin Cities events, most of which will feature live music: 

Jun 1: “Going Out, Coming In: LGBTQ+ Spaces in Downtown Minneapolis” at Mill Urban area Museum
Explore the opening of the Mill City Museum’s exhibit on queer identity and love throughout the development of downtown Minneapolis. Inspired by the Twin Cities LBGTQ+ History Tours created by Twin Cities Pride and Minnesota Historical Society, the exhibit features powerful photos of queer resistance and love throughout 20th century Minneapolis. 
Tickets, S. Second St., Minneapolis

June 1: Cheers to Pride at Utepils
Raise a glass to th