Castg asi anti-gay atmosphere Rsia, and Sochi’s mayor claimg “There are no gays here,” many the muny move on wh life
Contents:
- HOW SOCHI BEME THE GAY OLYMPICS
- LIFE GO ON FOR SOCHI’S GAY MUNY, SPE 2014 WTER OLYMPICS
- SOCHI'S GAY SCENE
- DACHA, CHACHA AND A GAY BAR: 9 WAYS SOCHI SURPRIS
- EXCLIVE: SOCHI'S GAYS HAD PROTECTN FROM THE MAYOR WHO CLAIMED THEY DON'T EXIST
HOW SOCHI BEME THE GAY OLYMPICS
* gay sochi *
A monstrator holds a rabow flag and the Rsian natnal flag durg a prott agast Rsia's anti-gay laws outsi the Rsian embassy Berl. (Rters/Thomas Peter)In Augt 1982, 1, 350 athlet om 12 untri gathered San Francis for the first-ever Gay Gam.
LIFE GO ON FOR SOCHI’S GAY MUNY, SPE 2014 WTER OLYMPICS
At the Mayak Cabaret, one of the few gay clubs Rsia’s Olympic cy of Sochi, a man strips to his unrwear as a drag performer stris towards him. * gay sochi *
The Stonewall rts were more than a the past; a year earlier, reports had surfaced about rare pnmonia and ncer afflictg homosexuals New York and California—the first glimmers of what would later be lled AIDS. Tom Wadll, a gay Olympian who would die of AIDS five years later, told The New York Tim that he had anized the athletic petn to “pull the gay muny together globally.
SOCHI'S GAY SCENE
It has gay bars. And Cossacks. Not necsarily the same place. * gay sochi *
”At the time, that gay muny found self vastly different circumstanc around the world. As the activist Greg Day wrote the program for the gural Gay Gam, the U.
DACHA, CHACHA AND A GAY BAR: 9 WAYS SOCHI SURPRIS
Had “much to learn om Holland, Norway and France where there are natnal laws protectg the rights of Gay and Lbian cizens.
” “Direct ntact” wh athlet om the natns, Day argued, would be enlighteng for Amerins livg a untry where ternatnal visors were often nied entry bee of their sexual s later, sports are once aga stirrg to take stock of gay rights around the world.
Ultimately, the stlit Olympics history may be remembered for markg a perd which gay rights aren’t so much advancg globally as expandg certa parts of the world while regrsg or languishg 6, 000 athlet om 85 untri gather Sochi, the global gay-rights divi will be unmistakable. “The stat of LGBT rights globally is schizophrenic, ” Jsi Stern, executive director of the New York-based Internatnal Gay and Lbian Human Rights Commissn, tells me. But gay rights only me to the fore the summer of 2013, when the Rsian ernment, which crimalized homosexualy 1993, banned the dissematn of “propaganda of nontradnal sexual relatns” around children—makg more difficult for gay activists to operate and, rights groups allege, fuelg a rise anti-gay vlence the untry.
EXCLIVE: SOCHI'S GAYS HAD PROTECTN FROM THE MAYOR WHO CLAIMED THEY DON'T EXIST
Around the same time, Print Vladimir Put signed another law prohibg gay and lbian upl foreign untri om adoptg Rsian children.
Put has sce clared that gays attendg the Olympics should feel "at ease” (so long as they “leave the children peace”), but that’s done ltle to prevent Sochi om beg a battleground for gay rights. The mayor of Sochi sayg there were no gay people his cy didn’t help, perhaps the most provotive rebe to Rsia’s lims on LGBT rights, Print Obama has clud three openly gay athlet—Billie Jean Kg, Cal Cahow, and Brian Boano— the U. Gay Olympic athlet have exprsed outrage as well; the Atralian snowboarr Belle Brockhoff, for stance, has vowed to “rip on [Put’s] ass” after petg and possibly flash an oblique six-fger salute reference to “Prciple Six, ” an anti-discrimatn clse the Olympic Charter.