Pride Month
PRIDE MONTH
June 2022
Paying tribute to the local Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Questioning, Intersex, and Asexual (LGBTQIA+) community in a celebration of history and culture and in recognition of the community’s struggle for inclusion and equity.
PRIDE IN THE PARK
Capturing LGBTQ+ Stories
We will be at Pride in the Park’s Queer Family Picnic to gather and record stories to document the LGBTQ+ experience in Glendale. Interviews will take place at Library Connection. Topics can include coming out stories, Glendale locations that have special meaning to you, and involvement in the LGBTQ+ community.
PICNIC @ ADAMS SQUARE MINI PARK
RECORDING OF STORIES @ LIBRARY CONNECTION
SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1:00PM - 5:00PM
DOCUMENTING LOCAL LGBTQ+ HISTORY IN GLENDALE
Glendale Library, Arts & Culture seeks to document the history of Glendale’s LGBTQ+ community through audio and video firsthand testimonies and conversations.
In our work to document local history, we recognize that we are missing vital stories and records from our LGBTQ+ community members. This community collections project is a step towards filling these silences.
GLAC is calling for these submissions in order to document Glendale’s unique LGBTQ+ culture and history to help inspire diversity, inclusion, and create a sense of community that has not been publicly visible for the past several decades.
ONGOING
Navigate to: Top | Documentary | Giveaway | Book List | Resources
SCREAMING QUEENS
Documentary, Survey & Giveaway
Coffee shops have a history of providing queer gathering spaces, especially to those in the LGBTQIA+ community who were not accepted into the nightlife scene. In 1960’s San Francisco, trans women and drag queens would meet at Gene Compton’s Cafeteria for food and coffee. Coffee plays a surprising role in this award winning documentary about the transgender women and drag queens who fought police harassment at Compton's Cafeteria in San Francisco's Tenderloin, three years before the famous riot at Stonewall Inn bar in NYC. Watch this documentary, then take a short survey for a chance to win a coffee gift basket with goodies from a few LGBTQIA+ roasters. This survey will be open through June 30. Winners will be notified after the survey closes.
ONLINE
ONGOING THROUGH JUNE 30, 2022
FRIENDSHIP BRACELETS
Grab & Go Craft Kit
June is Pride Month to celebrate the LGBTQIA+ community! The uprising at the Stonewall Inn in New York City in June, 1969, sparked the gay rights movement promoting equality, liberty, and justice for all. Friendship bracelets are a form of macramé originating in Central America. It is traditional to make and give a bracelet as a symbol of friendship. Make your own bracelet to share with a friend and show support for equality for all people in our community.
DISTRIBUTING FROM ALL BRANCHES
MID JUNE (WHILE SUPPLIES LAST)
Navigate to: Top | Events | Documentary | Book List | Resources
Navigate to: Top | Events | Documentary | Giveaway | Resources
LOCAL RESOURCES
glendaleOUT is Glendale’s grass-roots LGBTQIA+ organization. Their goal is for this queer community to be part of the broader narrative that is Glendale. They do this through political action, community building, and social connection.
The GCC Pride Center intends to provide a secure, supportive, and accepting environment for students who identify as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer (LGBTQ+), and their allies.
The mission of the GALASLA is to provide a safe and supportive network for LGBTQ people of Armenian descent. The GALAS will help connect the LGBTQ and Armenian communities.
Junior High Los Angeles - Junior High is a non-profit 501(c)3 community arts space prioritizing the safety and expression of female, queer, nonbinary, and artists of color.
LGBT Seniors is focused on assisting support for the LGBT seniors; together LGBT activists, seniors and renters worked together to form the first city, West Hollywood, in the nation for openly gay people.
The Los Angeles LGBT Center is supported by one of the largest and most experienced research teams who focuses on the health and mental healthcare of LGBT people.
The ONE Archives at USC Libraries is the largest repository of LGBTQ materials in the world. The Archives house over two million items, some of which have been digitized for your research and browsing needs
GENERAL RESOURCES
GLAAD handles challenging issues to help lead to cultural changes and protects all accomplishments.
GLSEN believes that every student has the right to a safe, supportive, and LGBTQ-inclusive K-12 education. They are a national network of educators, students, and local GLSEN Chapters working to make this right a reality.
The PFLAG Chapter Network--with over 400 chapters across the country--provides confidential peer support, education, and advocacy to LGBTQ+ people, their parents and families, and allies.
Youth Resources will help parents, guardians and other family members of LGBT youth to gain access to the resources they need to ensure that their children are safe and supported.
The Trevor Project was created to respond to a public health crisis that effect LGBTQ youth. The research team published the nation’s first estimate of LGBTQ youth considering suicide.
TED is dedicated to share ideas, in the form of powerful talks, about global issues including LGBTQ issues.
Transquality is the National Center for Transgender Equality. It is the nation’s leading social justice advocacy organization for transgender people.
The National LGBTQ Task Force is the oldest national LGBTQ advocacy group. The Task Force is training millions of activist across the nation to help assist in ending discrimination again LGBTQ people.
The Safe Zone Project (SZP) is a free online resource providing curricula, activities, and other resources for educators facilitating Safe Zone trainings (sexuality, gender, and LGBTQ+ education sessions), and learners who are hoping to explore these concepts on their own.
The Human Rights Campaign envisions a world where every member of the LGBTQ family has the freedom to live their truth without fear, and with equality under the law.
The Welcoming Project began in 2011 to encourage businesses, health care/service providers, organizations, and congregations to display welcoming signs for the purpose of making LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) individuals and allies feel welcomed as patrons.
The Queer Armenian Library is an effort to gather many special pieces that were made by Queer Armenians and made about Queer Armenians. These pieces can include essays, memoirs, novels, poetry, and films. J.P. Der Boghossian is the curator of the library.
Equality Armenia has a mission to encourage and facilitate a constructive dialogue in Armenian communities about LGBTQ inclusiveness, equal rights and equal protections under law. LGBTQ rights are human rights.