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Dyke March stresses need for rights, visibility including of trans people, Palestinians

In Stockholm, Sweden, Dyke March was held as part of the LGBTQIA Pride in Stockholm, with marchers calling not just for rights and visibility of lesbian women, but also of other minority sectors.

STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN – Dyke March was held as part of the LGBTQIA Pride in Stockholm, with marchers calling not just for rights and visibility of lesbian women, but also of other minority sectors.

Dyke March – which was originally organized by the Lesbian Avengers in 1993 in New York City – is a more political effort done during Pride. More aligned with the original push of Pride to be a political event calling for the human rights of LGBTQIA people, the very first Dyke March was said to similarly advocate for increased lesbian rights and visibility.

In Stockholm, this year’s Dyke March also called for the advancement of the rights of transgender people (particularly transgender women) who could also experience discrimination from other members of the LGBTQIA community, as well as the human rights of Palestinians who continue to suffer from the hands of Israel with the backing of Western superpowers.

These themes were also stressed in other Dyke Marches in other parts of the world – e.g. in June, the NYC Dyke March was themed “Dykes Against Genocide”; and also in June, the Berlin Dyke March had to deal with trans-exclusionary radical feminists (TERFs) belonging to the LGBTQIA community.

The founder of Outrage Magazine, Michael David dela Cruz Tan completed BA Communication Studies from University of Newcastle in NSW, Australia; and Master of Development Communication from the University of the Philippines-Open University. Conversant in Filipino Sign Language, Mick can: photograph, do artworks with mixed media, write (DUH!), shoot flicks, community organize, facilitate, lecture, and research (with pioneering studies under his belt). He authored "Being LGBT in Asia: Philippines Country Report", and "Red Lives" that creatively retells stories from the local HIV community. Among others, Mick received the Catholic Mass Media Awards in 2006 for Best Investigative Journalism, and Art that Matters - Literature from Amnesty Int'l Philippines in 2020. Cross his path is the dare (guarantee: It won't be boring).

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