There’s plenty to love about Being Queer

Vivek Shraya will be in town to lead a discussion after the screening of What I LOVE About Being QUEER

For a community with so much to celebrate, queer folks sure don’t spend enough time talking about what makes our identity and sexuality great. I have story in The Wanderer this week about a documentary that tries to cover some of the joy of the fluid gender roles and “the doin’ it.”

You can read my story on Vivek Shraya’s What I LOVE About Being QUEER here, or meet him in person at the film screening tonight. It’s at 6:30 at Edmonton’s Idylwylde Library.

To the end, my dear

Nobel Peace Prize winner Leymah Gbowee stands in front of a white board with her hands raised like she's trying to push the crowd into action.
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Leymah Gbowee confided that Archbishop Desmond Tutu warned her to watch her words carefully after winning, since they’d instantly be published on the internet (Photo by Alissa Everett)

Last night, my friend Evan and I had the pleasure of seeing Nobel Peace Prize winners Leymah Gbowee and Tawakkol Karman speak at the University of Alberta’s Festival of Ideas. Gbowee is famous for her work leading a women’s movement that helped end the civil war in Liberia, but she’s based in Ghana these days. The first thing she said on stage was that she was thankful to the organizers for coordinating a trip that was as long and complicated “as going to space.”

Karman is renowned now for her work rallying Yemenis out on the streets to fight for their right to free expression, free speech, and to eventually to end the rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. As a journalist, activist, and mother of three she’s taken extraordinary risks to fight for civil rights in Yemen. She said even after the lives of her children were threatened, she took courage knowing that millions more youths would take to the streets if they were harmed. Incredible change is possible, she said, if you are willing to take on a cause and pursue it to the very end. Have a goal in mind, and make a path towards it.

Moreover, she said women need to take on the responsibility for finding a just place for themselves in Yemeni society.

“Women must be the leaders, not ask for leadership from anyone,” she said. “We don’t want gifts from anyone. We want what we deserve.”

Similarly, Gbowee’s life seems to be a story of recognizing a responsibility to step up to the plate when no one else can. After 2000, ten years after the Liberian civil war began, a movement of Christian and Muslim women was building around the country to call for peace. She had convinced many of them that this was their fight, and they wanted her to lead them. Gbowee said she must have quit fifty times, and each time she’d find 200 hundred women waiting outside her house, telling her it was time to go back to work.

It makes me wonder — how seriously do most of us take the idea that we’re the ones who need to step up to the plate to solve our big crises, and we must follow our work to the very end? That, as the Hopi poem (or maybe prophecy) goes, “We are the ones we’ve been waiting for”?

I have an uncomfortable sense that many of us engaged in environmental and social justice work find our milestones more in our efforts than our accomplishments.

The Next Step

I’m gratified to see the conversation has continued over how to keep traffic safe on Whyte Ave, and that my post here about Isaak Kornelsen helped spark conversation on Loop Frame Love and Green Edmonton. Among others, the writers on these two blogs have taken the observation of the poor cycling infrastructure on Whyte Ave and run with it (or pedaled with it, I suppose).

Conrad Nobert
Activist and educator Conrad Nobert is helping plan what comes next for cyclists on Whyte Ave.

It’s frustrating that it takes a tragedy to get serious discussion going about such basic safety issues in Edmonton right now. But I am pleased to see that Green Edmonton’s Conrad Nobert is taking the next step and organizing a town hall meeting where we can voice our opinions on what to do about Whyte Ave.

The Edmonton Bicycle Commuters will be there making a presentation on the possibilities before us, as will local city councillor Ben Henderson. I’ll be there covering the meeting for Terra Informa. Hope to see some of your faces in the room dreaming up what we want!

Cyclist Town Hall Meeting
Tuesday, September 25, 2012 – 7:30pm
Queen Alexandra Community Hall, 10425 University Ave (near Calgary Trail and 76th Avenue)