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Boston Vigil to Honor Slain Gay Activist

By Charlotte Robinson, February 10, 2011
Thursday, Boston Pride, Queer Women of Color & Friends & Join
the Impact MA, will host a community vigil to remember &
honor David Kato, the brave leader of Uganda’s persecuted LGBT
community who was found bludgeoned to death in his home
in late January. The candlelight ceremony will take place
Thursday, February 10 at 6:00pm in Copley Square.
A screening of “Missionaries of Hate” will follow at Club CafĂ©
209 Columbus Avenue. This powerful documentary explores
the efforts of American evangelicals to spread hatred & violence
against gays in Uganda. Updates to Come...
Exclusive Audio Chat w/ Robin McGehee,
of GetEQUAL & Molly McKay, of Marriage
Equality
USA, w/ a Gay Marriage News Update
& about a very important
Valentine's Day Action
@ OUTTAKE VOICES™

Hear Audio Interviews w/ LGBT Leaders @OUTTAKE VOICES™
Support Our Vision @ OUTTAKE™ EQUALITY STORE...:)
View Our Historic Short Trailer on Gay Marriage

1 comment:

Keri Aulita said...

The onus is on us to remember David as we press forward for true equality, both here in Massachusetts and throughout the world. We will gather not only to pay respect to this fearless hero, but to recommit ourselves to the fight for absolute and unequivocal freedom.

Kato was one of those rare individuals who embodied the courage of human conviction; the Rosa Parks of his country; a man who was willing to stand up for justice whatever the costs. In a country that is still contemplating the death penalty as punishment for homosexuality, David’s actions speak to his selflessness and his standing as a true leader. David’s death is a loss not just for Uganda’s LGBT community, but for the international civil rights movement as a whole.

When we gather in solidarity for a brother lost to shameful violence, we will do so in the relative comfort of a city that has largely come to accept and embrace its LGBT people. We will not know the terror and anxiety that out LGBT people face every day on the streets of Uganda. So we take a moment to contemplate the character of a man who defied the horrific hatred of his times to provide a beacon of light to his community.


Keri Aulita, Boston Pride Deputy Director

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