Posts Tagged ‘2009 Manila Pride March’

I AM NOT IMMORAL! / HINDI AKO IMORAL!

Friday, December 4th, 2009

I AM NOT IMMORAL Photo and Video Project
by TEAM PILIPINAS

I AM NOT IMMORAL!

I AM NOT IMMORAL!

Rainbow greetings!

A brainchild of indie filmmaker-producer Jethro Patalinghug and celebrated fashion photographer Niccolo Cosme, the ‘I AM NOT IMMORAL!’ Photo and Video Project is partly a response to the Commission on Elections 2nd Division’s decision to dismiss the petition of Ang Ladlad LGBT Party to take part in the 2010 National Elections on the alleged grounds that “petitioner tolerates immorality which offends religious beliefs” and that “homosexuals are a threat to the youth.”

As a registered non-profit organization working on social change for and by young Filipino lesbians, gays, bakla, bayot, bantut, bisexuals, tomboy, transgenders, transsexuals, intersex (LGBTI) and other sexual and gender minorities (SGM) from the grassroots, Philippine Forum on Sports, Culture, Sexuality and Human Rights (TEAM PILIPINAS) believes that society’s view on LGBTIs and SGMs as either being mentally disordered, sinners or immoral people is wrong, oppressive and unjust and that there is a need to raise people’s awareness on these issues and to mobilize public action against such discriminatory views. This Photo and Video Project is our attempt at fulfilling those needs.

Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact Bruce Amoroto at +63916-2826781, Francis Baraan at +63918-9455008, Jethro Patalinghug at +63906-2979922 or Tonee Coraza at +63918-9337596. Thank you very much.

xx

TEAM PILIPINAS at the 5 December 2009 Manila Pride March

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

20 November 2009

Rainbow greetings!

Philippine Forum on Sports, Culture, Sexuality and Human Rights (TEAM PILIPINAS) is a registered non-profit organization contributing to social change that is led and participated by young Filipinos from the grassroots who may or may not openly identify as lesbian, gay, bakla, bayot, bantut, bisexual, tomboy, transgender, transsexual, intersex (LGBTI) or as another sexual or gender minority (SGM). Through sports, culture, and human rights and sexuality advocacy TEAM PILIPINAS works to strengthen human rights, diversity, equality and peace in the Philippines and all over the world.

TEAM PILIPINAS believes that aside from experiencing violation of basic and fundamental human, economic and social rights and freedoms—rights to food, education, health, work, social security and highest attainable standard of living, most Filipino LGBTIs and SGMs continue to face stigma, discrimination, oppression, and violence for having a different sexual orientation and gender identity. The recent decision of the 2nd Division of the Commission on Elections to dismiss the petition of a LGBT party to participate in the 2010 National Elections on the bases of “moral grounds” and the alleged threat to the “well-being of the youth” is a clear manifestation that LGBTIs and SGMs in the Philippines are still looked upon negatively.

I LOVE P.R.I.D.E. / I LOVE Pinoys who Respect Rights, Identity, Diversity & Equality

I LOVE P.R.I.D.E. / I LOVE Pinoys who Respect Rights, Identity, Diversity & Equality

On December 5, as TEAM PILIPINAS takes part once more in the Manila Pride March, the organization will highlight the real problems faced by many Filipino LGBTIs and other SGMS—poverty, stigma and discrimination. During the daytime TEAM PILIPINAS will march under the banner of ‘DIVERSITY & EQUALITY!’ asserting that despite our sexual and gender diversity, we Filipinos are all equals under the promise of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which says, “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.” And in the evening, through the ‘I AM NOT IMMORAL’ Photo and Video Project, TEAM PILIPINAS will raise the public’s awareness on the immorality issue and educate people on the stigma and discrimination faced by Filipino LGBTIs and other SGMs because of the view that they are immoral, sinful, or mentally ill.

We are happy to invite you to support the work of TEAM PILIPINAS. Together, let us contribute to making the Philippines a country that recognizes, promotes, and protects the equality in dignity, rights and freedoms of each and every Filipino regardless of their sexual orientation and gender identity. Should you have any questions regarding our work and the plans for December 5 Manila Pride March, please feel free to contact us. Thank you very much.

Philippine Forum on Sports, Culture, Sexuality and Human Rights (TEAM PILIPINAS) Inc.
http://diversityandequality.ph / http://teampilipinasorg.multiply.com
teampilipinas.org@gmail.com Mobile: +63-916-2826781
SEC Registration No.: CN200816094

I AM NOT IMMORAL!

I AM NOT IMMORAL!

I AM NOT IMMORAL!
by Jethro Patalinghug

It is OUTRAGEOUS! Every bit of the person that I am tells me that it is UNACCEPTABLE. For Ang Ladlad Party to be rejected to become a duly registered sectoral party by the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) because of allegations of “IMMORALITY” is an abomination to humanity, an abomination to the LGBTI community… and I take it very personally!

The statement has gone beyond the sectoral party rejection arena. It has a potential to echo into the consciousness of the already confused and fragmented society about the value and relevance of the LGBTI community. Therefore it has a potential to go against all our efforts to become more accepted and recognized as a legitimate and respectable sector of society.

WE CANNOT ALLOW THIS!

We must join all our efforts to not only control the damage that has been made, but also aggressively attack the opponent head on! Our individual expressions and reactions such as the status messages and notes here on facebook are commendable, but if we do it together in one solid form might be a stronger backlash.

Presenting!

“I AM NOT IMMORAL!”

On the night of DEC 5, the night of the PRIDE March, let us all gather and express our reactions towards the issue. Let us make our voices louder as we each say “I AM NOT IMMORAL!” through individual head shot photos to be taken by renowned photographer Niccolo Cosme and individual video clips to be directed by Jethro Patalinghug. Together these photos and video clips, when combined into a resource website and a youtube channel, will not only become a living testament to our protest but also become a readily available media for people in the worldwide web to watch. The possibilities are endless, not only our fellow Filipinos will see it but also people around the world. Let us show them that our humble community here in the Philippines can and will asserts their rights.

HINDI AKO IMORAL

HINDI AKO IMORAL

xx

Pride Marches in the Philippines: Bringing about Change

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

a reply to a yahoogroup message

Dear all,

Yes, it’s true that the Stonewall Riots–the event that marked the birth of the gay rights movement in the US and in the world–happened on June 28, 1969 and in the following year was commemorated by marches in New York, Atlanta, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

The marches however were initially called either “Gay Freedom March” or “Gay Liberation March” and not what we now know as “Pride March”. It was only in the 80′s with a shift in the gay movement and the take over of “less radical” activists that “Gay Liberation” and “Gay Freedom” were replaced with “Gay Pride”.

We also have to note that the organizers of the first marches were militant organizations like Gay Liberation Front which was for example dedicated to gay rights and also to the broader social ideals of the time, which included peace, equality and economic justice.

The First LGBT Pride March in Asia that happened on 26 June 1994 in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines was organized by Progressive Organization of Gays in the Philippines (PROGAY Philippines) and Metropolitan Community Church (MCC) Manila. Both of these organizations are militant in their own right–not only embracing equal human rights but also social, economic and spiritual justice in the Philippines.

In 1995 MCC, ProGay Philippines and other organizations held internal celebrations. In 1996, 1997 and 1998 large and significant marches were organized and produced by Reachout AIDS Foundation, all of which were held in Malate, Manila, Philippines. In 1998, the year of the centennial commemoration of the Republic of the Philippines, a Gay and Lesbian Pride March was incorporated in the mammoth “citizens’ parade” which was part of the official centennial celebration. That parade culminated in “marching by” the President of the Philippines, His Excellency Joseph Estrada, at the Quirino Grandstand in Luneta Park in Manila.

In 1999, Task Force Pride Philippines (TFP), a network of LGBT and LGBT-friendly groups and individuals seeking to promote positive visibility for the LGBT community was born. Since then TFP has been organizing the annual Metro Manila Pride March. In 2003, TFP decided to move the Pride March from June to the December Human Rights Week to coincide with related human rights activities such as World AIDS Day (December 1), Philippine National Lesbian Day (December 8), and International Human Rights Day (December 10).

In 2005, the First Manila Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Freedom March took place on December 10 along España all the way up to Plaza Miranda in Quiapo, Manila. Concerned that the prevailing economic and political crisis in the country at the time presented threats to freedoms and liberties of all Filipinos, including sexual and gender minorities, LGBT individuals and groups, non-government organizations and members of various commmunities and sectors organized the LGBT Freedom March calling for systemic and structural change. Members of the Organizing Committee included TFP, Lesbian and Gay Legislative Advocacy Network Philippines (LAGABLAB), K2B Gay, Lesbian Advocates Philippines (LeAP), Lunduyan, Order of St. Aelred (OSAe), Pro Gay, Rainbow for Change, and concerned individuals (which included yours truly).

We have a colorful history of Pride and marches lead and organized by the LGBT community here in the Philippines. However, to say that the 2009 Manila Pride March being organized by TFP for December is a celebration of the 15th Anniversary of the First LGBT Pride March in Asia, is indeed a misinformation. It would be even more of a misinformation because to me TFP is a “conservative” organization compared to say the Gay and Liberation Front that organized the First Gay Liberation March. Some members of TFP believe in advocating for broad issues of social, economic, gender, environmental justice in combination with the LGBT struggle, but as a network TFP is still predominantly mellow, “exclusivist” and myopic about equality and rights. At one TFP meeting I heard one “activist” saying, “kaya lang naman tayo marami sa Pride March ay dahil sa merong ‘straight’ na sumasali” (the reason why we are many at the Pride March is because many straights are joining). And then another TFP “member” even said, “ayaw kong makipag-martsa sa mga nanlilimahid” (I don’t want to march with someone who is in ragged clothes or is like a beggar)–this coming from someone who claims to believe and advocates for equal human rights. Still others believe in spending thousands on a dozen or so pageant contestants over the participation of grassroots and community-based LGBTs.

Many in TFP now only see the Pride March as a display of glitz and glam and no more of the grim determination embodied in the Freedom and Liberation Marches. Some are simply oblivious to the fact that here in the Philippines, a Third World country, the ones who badly need their equal human rights protected are the bakla, tomboy, bayot in the community and the majority poor Filipinos living below global standards. In this country, not only do we need to be freed from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity but more importantly we need to be freed from structural and systemic discrimination and inequality that perpetuates poverty.

We need Pride Marches that contribute to bringing about real and lasting change for all Filipinos equally.

In my individual capacity, I have been involved with TFP since 2000 and it’s been a struggle convincing my colleagues to take on a more progressive stance about equality and the Pride March. Others I’m sure feel the same way. Change is the most permanent thing in life but at this point, I doubt that changes will happen especially seeing that TFP nowadays only entertain parties, pageants, programs and selfish interests–business and political.

For diversity, equality and justice,

Bruce Portugal Amoroto


Bruce Amoroto
President-Coordinator, Philippine Forum on Sports, Culture, Sexuality and Human Rights (TEAM PILIPINAS)
Vice President, GLISA Asia Pacific
Member, Gay and Lesbian International Sport Association (GLISA) International Board of Directors
team-pilipinas@yahoogroups.com

http://diversityandequality.ph

http://teampilipinasorg.multiply.com

+63-916-2826781
GMT+8:00 (Manila, Philippines)

TEAM PILIPINAS is a member of Gay and Lesbian Asia Pacific Sport Association (GLISA Asia Pacific)
http://www.glisaap.org http://www.asiapacificoutgames.org