Manila pride: When pride is all about love

Jacob Walse Dominguez

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Manila pride: When pride is all about love
The LGBT community and their families and friends gather to celebrate 20 years of the Metro Manila Pride March

MANILA, Philippnes – Happy pride! 

More than 1, 000 individuals took to the streets in Malate, Manila on Saturday, December 6, in celebration of 20 years of standing up for equal rights through the annual Metro Manila Pride March.

This year, the individuals included not just people from the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) community in Manila but also groups from Bulacan and Batangas, as well as straight allies, families, and friends who marched in support of equal rights and non-discrimination towards LGBTs.

This year’s march is a culmination of a 3-month campaign launched by Task Force Pride (TFP), with the goal of paring down the LGBT movement to its core, which is love.

“In 1994, the Pride March was the first time that gay rights as a civil rights issue was ever tackled in such a public scale in the country,” said According to Nicky H. Castillo, TFP spokesperson. “Every year since, LGBT people and those who support and love them come out to publicly and colorfully assert LGBT rights as human rights.” 

20 years of love, pride

Photo by Fechi FajardoFor the last 20 years, the Metro Manila Pride March has been a large space to demonstrate the strength, vibrancy and resilience of the LGBT community.

It began in 1994, the first of its kind in Asia, and has since been going strong, serving as a platform for the LGBT community in the Philippines to make their call for acceptance and equal rights heard. 

This year’s Pride March hoped to encourage more LGBT Filipinos to understand that they have a place to express who they truly are. “This year, we are also declaring Metro Manila Pride as a safe space for our friends and families to support the LGBT people they love,” Castillo added. 

This year marked changes in the way TFP has run the annual march. 2014 focused on sharing an informed perspective with Filipinos  and explaining that when it comes down to it, LGBT persons are part of our families and friends, are people we love and are people who are part of the rest of Philippine society.

“We need more than just one day to claim our space to celebrate our diversity and assert our rights,” Castillo explained, “In addition to creating more spaces that positively promotes the diversity of our community, we also need to design a space that celebrates our wonderful straight allies, families, and friends.”

Photo by Fechi Fajardo

This year’s message is all about coming out for love and understanding.

It emphasizes that the call for equal rights and non-discrimination come from, ultimately, a deep love for our family members who may be LGBT and our fellow Filipinos as a whole. 

“In the end, we want the send the message that the core of the LGBT advocacy is love,” Castillo said. “LGBT people, their friends, their families, and their supporters came out to march to assert that we are here for each other, calling for the recognition of our right to love, our freedom to love, and for the people we love.

“Because when it comes down to it, Pride is all about love.” – Rappler.com 

Jacob Walse Dominguez is a member of Task Force Pride. He is a staunch advocate of LGBT rights.

The 2014 Metro Manila Pride March is organized by Task Force Pride in partnership. Please contact metromanilapride@gmail.com for questions or further comments.

Many thanks to the organizations that participated in the 2014 Metro Manila Pride March: Metropolitan Community Church Quezon City, Rainbow Rights Philippines, FEIST Magazine, Akei, Downelink Philippines, Equality Philippines, PinoyG4M.com, UP Babaylan, Proud to Be LGBT, Akbayan, Babaylanes, Bahaghari Advocacy Group, Bigger Manila, Dakila Collective for Modern Heroism, Deaf Dykes United, EAGLE@IBM,  ECOG, Filipino Freethinkers, GALANG Philippines, GANDA Filipinas, JP Morgan Chase & Co., Pinoy Deaf Queer, STRAP Manila, Kapederasyon, Kasimbayan UTC, Lesbian Alliance Bagbag, Ladlad, Lesbian Alliance Movement, MCC Makati, MCC Marikina, MCC Metro Baguio, Make Your Nanay Proud, One Bacardi, Pinoy Deaf Rainbow, Outrage Magazine, PATAS, Pinoy FTM, Pink Rockers, Queer Archers Alliance, Quezon City Pride Council, Spectrum, TLF Share, The Well, Trans Deaf Philippines, Trippers Philippines, Tiklop Society of the Philippines, United Philippine Amerasians, and UP College of Medicine One’s True Nature, Commission on Human Rights, Philippine Commission on Women, and the National Youth Commission. A complete list of participants can be found at www.bit.ly.com/TheyCameOutForLove

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