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The
Rainbow Flag
Color has
long played an important role in our communities' history and
expression of pride. In Victorian England, for example, the color
green was associated with homosexuality. The color purple (or,
more accurately, lavender) became popularized for the lesbian
and gay communities with "Purple Power". And, of
course there are the pink and black triangles. The pink
triangle was first used by Hitler to identify gay males in
Nazi concentration camps, and the black triangle was similarly
used to identify lesbians and others deemed
"asocial". The pink and black triangle symbols were
reclaimed by our communities in the early 1980s to signify our
strength of spirit and willingness to survive oppression. As
we gain acceptance of our rights, the symbols of oppression
are gradually being replaced by the symbols of celebration. By
far the most colorful of our symbols is the Rainbow flag, and
its rainbow of colors - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and
purple, which represent the diversity of our communities.
The first rainbow flag was
designed in 1978 by Gilbert Baker, a San Francisco artist, in
response to calls by activists for a symbol for the community.
Baker used the five-striped "Flag of the Race" as
his inspiration, and designed a flag with eight stripes: pink,
red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. These colors
were intended to represent respectively: sexuality, life,
healing, sun, nature, art, harmony, and spirit. Baker dyed and
sewed the material for the first flag himself - reminiscent of
Betsy Ross and the creation of the US Flag.
When Baker approached a company
to mass-produce the flags, he found out that "hot
pink" was not commercially available. The flag was then
reduced to seven stripes.
In November 1978, San
Francisco's lesbian, gay and bisexual community was stunned
when the city's first openly gay supervisor, Harvey Milk, was
assassinated. Wanting to demonstrate the gay community's
strength and solidarity in the aftermath of the tragedy, the
Pride Committee decided to use Baker's flag. The indigo stripe
was eliminated so that the colors could be divided evenly
along the parade route - three colours on one side and three
on the other. Soon the six colors were incorporated into a
six-striped version that became popularized and that, today is
recognized by the International Congress of Flag Makers.
The flag has become an
international symbol of pride and the diversity our
communities.
WHAT THE RAINBOW
FLAG SIGNIFIES
A symbol of pride
The rainbow flag, symbol of
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered pride. Pride at
having not only survived, but thrived in a world which has
often been a hostile place. It is pride in being who we are,
it is pride in becoming a full and equal citizen of Canada, it
is pride in standing up for what we believe in.
A symbol of hope
In addition to being the symbol
of pride, the rainbow is a symbol of hope. Tremendous progress
has been made in the fight for equal rights. Step by step,
lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgendered people are
obtaining recognition as equal members of Canadian society, in
big cities and in towns and villages across Canada. Our
anti-gay opponents are becoming frustrated because their hate
cannot defeat our love. Things are not perfect, but the
progress we are making is extraordinary...and the rainbow
affirms our hopes for an even better future.
A symbol of diversity
Finally, the rainbow is a
symbol of diversity. Although myths and stereotypes portray
all gays and lesbians as having a single, monolithic
"agenda", the reality is that ours is an
extraordinarily diverse community. Across all races and
cultural backgrounds, across all languages, with or without
disabilities, across all religions, our communities continue
to flourish. Sometimes, our own communities are divided
between gay and lesbian, between "gay" and
"queer", between those in big cities and those in
the suburbs and small towns, between "assimilationists"
and those who want to live apart from the mainstream. While
diversity poses its challenges, it is also enriching. There
are as many opinions as there are people. There is no lesbian,
gay, bisexual or transgendered "lifestyle", there
are only lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people.
Millions of us, each one unique. This is our strength.
So, why should we bother?
- Because the government will
not allow us to marry the person of our choice;
- Because people are still
denied jobs, promotions or denied accommodation because of
their sexual orientation;
- Because gay teenagers are
disproportionately at risk of suicide;
- Because Canadians are still
beaten or murdered for being lesbian, gay, bisexual or
transgendered;
- Because we are still made to
feel uncomfortable when holding the hand of a partner
while walking down the street;
- Because our materials are
still censored by the government and banned from schools;
- Because our relationships
remain unrecognized in hundreds of federal, provincial and
territorial laws.
BY CELEBRATING
PRIDE TOGETHER, WE REMEMBER OUR PAST, AFFIRM OUR FUTURE AND
PROVIDE IMPORTANT VISIBILITY WHICH ADVANCES OUR STRUGGLE FOR
EQUALITY.
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