“Gaylic” Queer Irish Website

Inspired by a reading from queer Irish writers called “Lavendar & Green” at the San Francisco Public Library, I’ve decided to start up a website and email list for queer Irish, Irish heritage, and friends at http://www.gaylic.org/

A few interested persons have offered to help create the website – we’ll see if they come through.

One thought on ““Gaylic” Queer Irish Website

  1. 16 YEARS OF ANTI-GAY DISCRIMINATION, BUT IRISH QUEERS FIGHT ON
    Protest at NYC St. Patrick’s Parade as Irish LGBT people refuse to disappear

    Challenges to the exclusion of LGBT people from the NYC St. Patrick’s parade this year will come from both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. Once again, Irish Queers will assemble at 58th Street & Fifth Ave. at 10:30am to protest the exclusion of Irish & Irish American LGBT people from the parade. At the same time, in Ireland, LGBT groups will call for an end to the homophobia of the New York parade. Council Speaker Quinn, who has frequently protested with Irish Queers at the New York parade, will join the Dublin groups.

    “Because of the parade, St. Patrick’s Day in New York has become a call to action against bigotry. In this time of war and anti-immigrant backlash, it’s urgent that we raise our voices,” said JohnFrancis Mulligan, an organizer with Irish Queers. “So it’s especially scandalous that Mayor Bloomberg marches each year. It’s scandalous that uniformed police and firefighters march in a blatantly anti-gay event.”

    “This is about more than a parade – it’s about whole communities,” said Tierney Gleason of Irish Queers. “When parade organizers voice hatred toward Irish and Irish-American LGBT people, they foster intolerance and ultimately violence against LGBT people in immigrant communities.”

    “As Irish Queers, we persist in living our Irishness and queerness simultaneously. We won’t let a bunch of religious-right businessmen tell us we’re not Irish just because we don’t fit their agenda,” Gleason continued.

    The New York St. Patrick’s Day Parade has become synonymous with bigotry – in spite of the fact that the first St. Patrick’s Parade in New York was organized to combat anti-Irish prejudice; and the AOH was originally formed to fight for Irish workers’ rights in anti-immigrant times.

    The New York City parade organizers have actively excluded Irish LGBT people for 16 years. They have also excluded other groups whose Irish identity they deemed “unsuitable,” including the families of Irish hunger strikers and political prisoners.

    In Ireland, where news of Quinn’s visit has rekindled discussion of New York’s parade issue, Irish groups are both bemused and horrified by the ongoing discrimination in the US-Irish community. Irish Queers has been working with Ireland’s Gay & Lesbian Equality Network (GLEN) to support Speaker Quinn’s visit to Ireland. Through GLEN’s efforts, every political party in Ireland has signed on in support of gay rights.

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    Irish Queers, which evolved out of the Irish Lesbian & Gay Organization, is active on immigrant justice, Northern Ireland self-determination, anti-racism and other social justice issues.

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