African LGBTs Speak For Themselves in
June 13-15 Pride Month Activities
African
countries passing harsh laws against LGBTs and our allies have been
much in the gay press over the past year. But all too often African
LGBTs have appeared as mute objects of repression, rather than people
organizing to win their own freedom.
A
consortium of Chicago area groups is working to change that by
featuring African LGBT activists speaking out in a long weekend of
activities about issues facing LGBTs on the continent, and how allies
elsewhere can help improve conditions. The Friday, June 13th through
Sunday, June 15th activities include forums, a film showing, a
television program, a wine and cheese reception with activists, and a
worship service:
Friday, June 13 – Free symposium on
"Theological Resources for LGBTI Liberation," 2 PM to 4 PM at the Broadway United Methodist Church, 3338 N. Broadway Avenue, Chicago with South African activists Judith
Kotzé and Ingrid Schoonraad from
Inclusive & Affirming Ministries. Participants
will explore the intersections of North American liberation theology
and South African post-apartheid theology as they relate to the
liberation for LGBTI people.
Friday, June 13 –
"LGBTI Solidarity in Africa" –
Rev. Judith Kotzé joins the
Gay Liberation Network's
Brent Holman-Gomez to discuss issues of LGBTI solidarity in Africa, and
preview the Saturday and Sunday events in Chicago. 6:30 PM to 6:55 PM,
cable channel 21 in Chicago.
Saturday, June 14 – Free
"Chicago Forum on LGBTI Solidarity in Africa" featuring a panel of African LGBTI activists from
Inclusive & Affirming Ministries and
CLASP (Chicago LGBT Asylum Support Program) discussing
how to provide advocacy and support. Breakout roundtables will allow
everyone to get involved in discussing U.S. policy, worldwide/church
advocacy, pathways to safe haven, and Chicago re-settlement. 2 PM to 5
PM at the
Episcopal Church Center, 65 E. Huron Street, Chicago.
Reception Fundraiser and Film Screening of "Call Me Kuchu" –
Join African LGBTI activists for a wine and cheese reception and the
screening of the acclaimed film, "Call Me Kuchu," about martyred Ugandan
activist David Kato. Reception at 5 PM, film screening at 6 PM, also
at the Episcopal Church Center, 65 E. Huron Street, Chicago. Suggested
donation: $25.
Sunday, June 15 – Worship Service of Solidarity and Welcome for LGBTI Activists from
Africa – 10:30 AM to 12 Noon at St. Luke's Lutheran Church Logan Square, 2649 N. Francisco, Chicago.
The Global Interfaith Network for People of all Sexes, Sexual Orientations, Gender Identities and Expressions. Representatives
from Inclusive & Affirming Ministries will introduce the new
interfaith network which was inaugurated this past January with an
international conference in South Africa. 2 PM to 3:30 PM, also at St.
Luke's Luther Church Logan Square, 2649 N. Francisco, Chicago.
Featured participants in the weekend's activities include:
Victor Charles Aweke,
a 31-year-old Nigerian who worked openly as a volunteer HIV and human
rights advocate in his home country until recent threats of violence
forced him to flee. Mr. Aweke previously worked with Heartland Alliance
for Human Needs & Human Rights as an Outreach Coordinator, Center
for the Right to Health as the diversity program officer, on HIV
Prevention Intervention Program for most-at-risk persons, Institute of
Human Virology as the liaison officer on the trust research for most
at-risk persons within the Abuja metropolis in Nigeria. An experienced
public speaker in Nigeria, the United Kingdom and the United States, Mr.
Aweke currently working with the Center for Integration and Courageous
Living and the Chicago LGBT Asylum support
program (CLASP).
Rev. Judith Kotzé,
is a lesbian from South Africa who in 1995 qualified as one of the
first woman ministers in the Dutch Reformed Church (DRC). She served the
DRC from 1996 to 2000 in the multi-disciplinary ministry regarding
prostitution. She has a Master’s degree in Missiology, working on
Interreligious Dialogue as a model for the Intra-faith Dialogue around
sexual orientation. Rev. Kotzé became Director of the Inclusive &
Affirming Ministries in 2011, having served in IAM in various capacities
since 1997, and has traveled widely in southern Africa as part of her
activism.
John Adewoye is
a Nigerian/American gay man resident in Riverdale, IL. He came to the
United States in 1999 as a Catholic priest with a secret agenda of
pursuing anti-gay "conversion therapy" but discovered it to be false.
This discovery and the U.S. environment emboldened him to accept himself
and come out as a gay man, but at the cost of his homeland and by
choice, the priesthood. He
is the founder of Courage Nigeria and the Center for Integration and
Courageous Living, and a co-founder of CLASP. Despite his exile, Mr.
Adewoye is an active member of two coalitions working hard to overturn
the
“Same-sex Prohibition Act 2013” signed to law in Nigeria January 2014.
He is a Chaplain at the University of Chicago Medicine, a member of
Chicago Gay Men Chorus, the Arch-diocesan Gay and Lesbian Outreach and
Adodi National. He became a US citizen on April 7 of this year.
Web:
Chicago Forum on LGBTI Solidarity in Africa