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Windham County Seeks LGBT Activists
Brattleboro
– Thanks in large part to a $10,000 grant from the Unity Project,
Windham County may see an upsurge in organized lgbt activity. Craig
Cullinane was hired by the AIDS Project of Southern Vermont to get the
conference going.
So far, the plan is to hold the
conference on May 14. Cullinane expects 20-25 participants. Location
is still to be decided. The entertainment/inspiration/learning facilitator
will be Jeff Bercuvitz, known to many Vermont lgbt organizations from
his work with Queer Summit attendees last year.
Glenn Johnson of T.H.E. Men's Project
of the APSV said he wrote the grant with the aim of giving something
back to a community that has supported the AIDS project over the years.
"We realized there was no other project that was able to apply
for this program money, and there's a real need to get more grassroots
organizing going."
"Rural areas such as Windham County
offer a myriad of challenges to a strong LGBT community," Cullinane
wrote in an email, "including isolation, discrimination, lack of
public visibility and acceptance, and homophobia and general silencing
of LGBT issues. No LGBT movement in this region has been consistently
successful in creating community space, functional and sustainable organizational
capacity, or common goals and objectives across identity boundaries."
It is Cullinane's intention to get
proportional representation from all the segments of the community.
Three activists will be recruited from the attendees to go to the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Force's "Creating Change" conference
next fall.
For conference information (unavailable
at press time), go to glbtconference@yahoo.com,
or call 802-579-5056.
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