Gay parade brazil
Weeks ahead of its famous LGBT Identity festival parade, Brazil struggles with one LGBTI+ killing every 38 hours
São Paulo, Brazil – In , LGBTI+ individuals were violently killed in Brazil, according to data released this month by the Observatory of LGBTI+ Deaths and Force. This alarming statistic translates to one death every 38 hours.
In , the organization recorded stormy deaths, % more than last year.
However, the actual number of victims could be higher than collected by the Observatory, which suspects underreporting.
Because the recognition of gender individuality and sexual orientation of the victims depends on the media reporting the deaths, many cases of violence against LGBTI+ people may be omitted and/or distorted. There is likely a significant underreporting of stormy deaths of LGBTI+ individuals in Brazil, the Observatory stated in its report.
This concern is reinforced by the reality that in many small towns across the country, there is no local media to inform potential incidents of violence against LGBTI+ community members, making it impossible to collect data in thes
São Paulo, Brazils LGBT+ pride draws over 3 million in a spectacle of pride and politics
São Paulo, Brazil – LGBT+ people and supporters from all corners of Brazil and even other countries gathered on Sunday in the country’s largest city, São Paulo, to celebrate diversity, love, and to reaffirm their commitment to the freedom to be themselves.
After a week of cloudy weather, with temperatures fluctuating between 10°C and 20°C, the sun came out, pushing thermometers up to 26°C along Avenida Paulista, the city’s main thoroughfare.
The rainbow, a symbol of LGBT+ rights, was ubiquitous painted on faces, adorned on clothing, waving flags, and on sparkly accessories.
The party kicked off at 10 a.m., and over the course of more than six hours, dozens of artists performed on 16 parade floats that traveled the miles of the avenue, drawing large crowds.
According to the São Paulo LGBT Self-acceptance Parade Association (APOLGBT-SP), which organized the event, over 3 million people participated in the celebration.
With a strong political message, the parades slogan
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Never ever apolozie for who you love, take celebration on who you are this statement is so true, and when you are surrounded by postive people, who make you beliave in your stregth, you will start relying more on this statment.
The same scenerio and postive vibes can be seen and felt at Sao Paulo LGBTQ self-acceptance parade. Where you can find you inner heart, peace of mind, and can observe why you need to take period out of your active world, by simply staying like who you are. Free soul. Boundless human.
You can see those free souls every year in Sao Paulo where annual LGBTQ pride parade held. It is an annual gay pride parade that takes place in Avenida Paulista, in the town of Sao Paulo, Brazil, since The parade was considered the biggest event parade in the earth, at the time it got recorded in Guinness Book of World Records. In , the town hall of Sao Paulo invested R$ 1 million reais in the march. The event is the second largest of the city and also selected as the best in the world by a renowned magazine.
The Pride march is organized by the APOGLBT, Associacao da Parada do Or
Gay pride revelers in Sao Paulo reclaim Brazil’s national symbols
SAO PAULO, Brazil — The iconic yellow and green of Brazil’s flag mixed with a sea of rainbow-colored tutus, hand fans and drag queen hairdos at Sunday’s LGBTQ pride parade in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
The annual event along Sao Paulo’s main thoroughfare is among the biggest gay pride celebrations in the world, attracting thousands of people to celebrate the sexual diversity in a country synonymous with street partying but where violence and discrimination against members of the LGBTQ community has surged in recent years.
While apparel is mostly optional, this year organizers made a special appeal for participants to wear leafy and yellow in a pointed rebuke to far-right followers of former President Jair Bolsonaro, who in recent time appropriated Brazil’s national symbols for themselves.
“We will protest this afternoon to take assist our flag and to reveal that Brazil will be greater, it will be queer, butch, transvestite,” Erika Hilton, who in became one of two openly transgender people elected to Brazil’s congress, told a c