What's next for the Pride Coalition for Free Speech?
TORONTO NEWS / Happy, tired, ready for next steps
Marcus McCann / Toronto / Thursday, July 15, 2010
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As late-afternoon patrons lazed on a Church-Wellesley patio on July 9, a group of activists straggled in. They weren’t the usual boozey, after-work set, with their shaggy haircuts and hairless arms.

The mild-mannered Michael Went was there, as was larger-than-life Roy Mitchell. Jane Walsh, with her trademark squarish pink glasses, sat at one end of the long table. On average, it was an older crew, not serious partiers.

They met to discuss the future of the Pride Coalition for Free Speech, to talk about how to keep the ball rolling, and how to infuse future Pride celebrations with the spirit of activism evident in 2010.

>> Free speech at Toronto Pride: Read all of Xtra's coverage in one place

A question hung in the air: how should they best harness all the energy and goodwill generated in the previous month?

Over the spring, the group had coalesced gradually. It started with Walsh and Doug Kerr, Went’s husband. Before the controversy, Walsh and Kerr spent the winter planning Pride Toronto’s (PT) official human rights programming.

At first, they must have seemed an odd couple. Walsh, a labour activist, and Kerr, a straight-laced consultant, came from different sides of the political track. But they came to represent the cross-community cooperation that became a hallmark of the coalition’s work.

More than 300 people marched in the Pride Coalition for Free Speech contingent in the 2010 Toronto Pride parade on July 4.
(Matt Mills)
Shortly after the PT board of directors announced its sign-vetting policy in March, Walsh and Kerr ran into each other — by accident — at Starbucks. They both thought the policy was a bad idea and agreed to work together.

By then, Elle Flanders and Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (QuAIA) were already mobilizing opposition. In London, Ontario, Rick Telfer was whipping queers up on Facebook through the Don’t Sanitize Pride Facebook group.

Walsh and Kerr organized a meeting with PT executive director Tracey Sandilands. Then they pulled together a larger group – primarily artists — to talk to PT co-chairs Genevieve D’Iorio and (at the time) Jim Cullen.

Walsh reached out to video artist Roy Mitchell and writer Farzana Doctor. Kerr brought DJ and lawyer Zahra Dhanani on board. Shortly after their meeting with the co-chairs, the sign-vetting policy, including its Orwellian ethics committee, disappeared.

But sensing there was still trouble brewing — especially after a scolding letter to PT from city councillor Kyle Rae was leaked — they continued to bring people in. They called on playwright Brad Fraser, former PT board member Mark Smith and musician Troy Jackson.

“I knew we had trouble on our hands; we knew,” says Walsh.

“At the same time too, we were incredulous that we’d have to do anything,” adds Mitchell.

But sure enough, PT announced on May 25 that it would ban the term “Israeli apartheid.” By then, the coalition was ready and was able to organize a meeting quickly at The 519. A Facebook page went up with a laundry list of groups participating. It was the first time most had heard of the Pride Coalition for Free Speech.

“A lot of the work that happened behind the scenes — people kind of think that it came together overnight,” says Walsh.

Xtra has spilled a lot of ink on what happened next: 400 people showed up to the first coalition meeting; it spiralled off into two subsequent planning meetings and a host of Pride Week events. Over that period, queers marched on the PT offices twice, more than 20 people gave back their PT honours and a vigorous letter-writing and PR campaign was hatched online.

The coalition’s decision-making was based on whoever showed up at meetings. Subgroups were struck to plan events, and suddenly there were dozens of people working in concert.

“I don’t think anyone wanted to do everything; I don’t think that’s humanly possible,” says Mitchell. “But what it comes down to is a faith in people and a belief in the history.”

Dhanani concurs.

“Every one of us thought that we needed as much help as we could get,” Dhanani says. “That’s how amazing this organizing has been — it was different than everything I’ve ever been involved in. It wasn’t about power and control; when those conversations came up, we shut them down right away.”

Of course, this gaggle of activists are the tip of the iceberg. In building a movement, they were riding a wave of popular sentiment in queer circles. No matter how people felt about the Middle East, or QuAIA, there was a sense that the censorship tack taken by PT wasn’t the right one.

“They had great networks, and they knew how to work Facebook,” adds Jane Farrow, who in June declined to be PT’s honoured dyke. In doing so, she became a face for the so-called Refuseniks.

“But that reduces it to who was the bigger kid in the playground; their ideas had more merit,” she says. “Those ideas had more sway.”

They were also able to tap into other frustrations that had been laying dormant for years. For some, censoring QuAIA was the latest in a string of concessions made in the name of safety and financial security.

At meetings, folks spoke of a time before parade spectators were cordoned off behind barricades. Others, like fellow Refusenik Sky Gilbert, yearned to return to more overt expressions of sexuality (rather than just toned bodies).

Others had more specific gripes. The treatment of Blackness Yes, which organizes Pride’s most visible nod to people of colour, was a recurring motif.

Farrow and others criticized the PT artists’ agreement, which forbids political speech from the stage.

So when the ban was rescinded, Walsh, Dhanani, Mitchell and the rest of the gang didn’t disband. Rather, they made the tone of the events they were planning — a picnic, a panel discussion, their parade entry — more joyful, but they carried on.

The People’s Gala, originally planned as a stormy protest at the entrance to PT’s $350-a-plate fundraiser, became a love-in. Even the location changed; rather than meeting in front of The Carlu, Dhanani moved the event to the corner of Church and Maitland.

In part, they wanted to etch the censorship battle permanently into the minds of the week’s revellers. There was also a sense, says Dhanani, that the campaign was snowballing.

“We didn’t want to lose the momentum. We were mobilizing more and more people,” she says. “It was a celebration of our success. And out of the campaign, we grew the kind of Pride that we had been craving for the last decade.”

So then, what of the early-evening, post-Pride meeting? What’s next for the Pride Coalition for Free Speech? There is still work to be done on several of the group’s projects, including democratic renewal and a return to a community focus at next year’s festivities.

By using the flat political model the group espouses, they’re throwing that question back to the queer community.

Whatever the outcome, coalition organizers believe the tenor of future Pride celebrations is at stake.

“There will always be room for squirt guns and beads and stilettos and motorcycles at Pride,” says Farrow. “Will there always be room for politics? That’s the question.”




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Reader Comments


 
Tuesday or Thursday?
The listing at the botton says the Post-Pride reception is on Thursday July 20th, a date that doesn't exist. Which is the correct time?
Ryan, Toronto ON
07/15/10 8:26 AM EST
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larger-than-life?
and life is pretty large! Thank you for this article. We have more work to do - shit. And while I will happily take on being part of an older crew, there were some young ones. And truth be told, I am totally in the struggle for dinner and party invites. Politics are fun and so are the people involved in this struggle...young old and everything in between. Andil said to me at the first big meeting we had, "This is what Toronto looks like". And I'd have to agree with him on that. Amazing group of people and I'm honoured to be involved with them in all this. Much love to all.
roy, Toronto on
07/15/10 10:16 AM EST
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[Editor's Note]
RE: Tuesday or Thursday
Sorry about that. The event is Tuesday, July 20, 7pm at the 519. Here's the Facebook event page: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=102342393153810
Brent Creelman, web editor, Toronto ON
07/15/10 11:41 AM EST
Maybe a hate-free pride?
I think everyone agrees on free-speech, so maybe they could start working on a Coalition for a Hate-free Pride, which seems to be a more difficult thing for Torontonians to achieve.
William, Montreal QC
07/15/10 3:06 PM EST
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@ William
I agree...and also setting out guidelines...one of which includes no name-calling. I also think that it might be an idea to concentrate on gay issues such as the right to give blood without the systemic discrimination of the CBS, or more public awareness...there's a whole country out there beyond Toronto that is still very homophobic (I know...I work in one of their schools and it's a helluva a commute)...but think about all of our youth who are trapped in those rural or suburban communities...reach out to help those people. Gay agenda, Gay participants, gay beneficiaries...
J.B. Thomas, Toronto Ontario
07/15/10 10:08 PM EST
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Amazing!
Looks like William and JB, you're inspired by what went down at Pride to get active in the community! I hope that this Pride will also inspire others to take this opportunity to make Pride this amazing thing. It now has the chance to be something so superb. Peace out all and thanks.
roy, Toronto ON
07/16/10 12:06 AM EST
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Bourgeois activism? No thanks!
The Pride Coalition for Free Speech needs to deal with their class privilege. A brain trust comprised of PhDs in critical theory, lawyers and other bourgeois academics convening at Starbucks can't be trusted with this stuff alone, because they aren't a representative sample of our communities. I'd like to hear from a bartender, a waitress and someone who cuts hair. There's been a distinct class bias all the way through this discourse, and a rather snobbish if unintentional put-down of working folk who guard their weekend life from entities that would water down the fun and demand that they spend more time in meetings agonizing over faraway problems. We thank them for their up-front work and hope that they will understand that free speech is a basic Canadian value that one needn't teach at OISE to get. It's called anti-oppression, Zahra. Declare your privilege and get out of the fucking way - for once! And let's stop this "I'm of the community and you're not" false dichotomy and demonization of the pride board. That diverse board made some bad decisions but they are from our community. Let's not turn them into pariahs. If you can do a better job, run. Given what we've just read about, they could use the brain trust to give their time and expertise. Bitching from the sidelines is no longer an option. You won. Take yes for an answer, and get on with it.
Karla Marx, Oshawa ON
07/16/10 4:38 PM EST
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Bourgeois activism?
What are you saying, Karla Marx? That QuAIA and their supporters are a bunch of middle-class, white, York University-attending, posturing hypocrites? You just figured that out?
Shivers, Toronto Ontario
07/16/10 5:05 PM EST
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Classy
Karla You are on crack! This coalition has been some of the most class race and politically diverse bunch of activists I have worked with in my long life as a Queer Feminist Labour activist. Don't want to spend time in meetings - good luck seeing another world is possible- it takes a village baby. And sweat and tears and skin as thick as a rhinoseros in this town. I have been working with Pride Toronto for years and refuse to demonize the hard work of a well intentioned but sometimes wrong board of queer community members. We all need to step up PT is in a financial crisis and we all better put our money where our mouths are...we want rights but it takes responsability. It takes energy to makes our Queer instititions accountable but we ignore them at our peril!! But slagging us for our priviledge we're not knocking anybody out of the way.
Rose Coloured Glasses, Toronto ON
07/16/10 6:23 PM EST
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Classless? Nope.
Zahra Dhanani - Lawyer Rinaldo Walcott - PhD etc. On it goes. Lawyers, university professors etc are a very small segment of society but OVER-REPRESENTED here. I am not on crack. Nice! Come on! Is that what you assume when someone has a different take on stuff than you? Accuse them of being on drugs? Wow. You'll fit right in with the name-callers and race-baiters of QuAIA/Coalition for Free Speech But Hypocritically Not Practising it Ourselves. I don't doubt it is race-diverse. As is Pride Toronto, so seriously, that's just the norm now and doesn't endow it with a mandate from the people in and of itself. I stated it is economically (and politically) non-diverse and I think time will prove me right. Read Dhanani's comments - she attends a meeting about free speech and shuts down conversations she doesn't want to hear, while pretending that this is oddly not about power. I won't accuse her or you of being on crack (crack users are people too, btw) Perhaps you and Zahra could prove us all wrong. Get on stage and take turns reading "Men Loving Boys Loving Men" or a lurid rape fantasy porn. When you do that, you'll have proved me wrong.
Karla Marx, Oshawa ON
07/16/10 8:07 PM EST
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Karla! You rascalian!
Karla, If you don't get your medications filled, this is what happens. You get really angry at no one in particular and then you get even meaner and lash out at people that are working hard to bring this community together. Nothing ever works for you. I think it was that trip that daddy took us on around the world that did you in. We saw such privilege and you became distraught. Don't worry darling sister. The revolution will not be televised. it will be on youtube and all the meaness you have in you will be nothing and amount to nothing in the end. We had such squabbles as children! Remember how you used to argue over me wanting to watch TVO and you The Brady Bunch. You said you wanted to deconstruct the class constructs of the weekly tv show, while we all knew that you were hot for Alice the maid which only spun you around in mental anguish because our family lived in such privilege and Alice was just a maid. Albeit, just the kind of lady you like! So Karla, time to get off your high horse now and start a hobby. Maybe knitting! Whatever you do, I do hope you lose the meanness that obviously has enveloped your sad little life. Find friends and forget the people that have wounded you, because in your above missives, you just sound so out of touch with what has happened, what will happen and what is happening now. We didn't call you vinegar tits at boarding school for no reason...haha Well of to the Bay now, can you believe that Joan has registered at the Bay! How pedestrian, n'est pas? your better looking and more fun sister Rose.
karla marx's sister rose, toronto On
07/16/10 10:24 PM EST
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OSHA-WA-WA?!!!!
Karla You are living in Oshawa? Now isn't that crazy. Or is that where you and you know who have created a little love nest for you...I totally understand you needing to get away from the hectic pace of Toronto - Lower Rosedale can be a jungle! and sister, do look into getting that prescription filled. Your better-liked and better dancer, sister rose
karla marx's sister rose, toronto ON
07/16/10 10:32 PM EST
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@Karla
Rinaldo Walcott showed up to one public meeting to call out Blackness Yes...so he had fucking nothing to do with the coalition. For the record. WTF if you went to a meeting you would have seen the coalition in all it's diversity. Where are you getting this. PhDs zero and one lawyer who doesn't practice law...crushing you with our class capital. I don't think so. Lighten up and take a joke.
RoRo, TO ON
07/17/10 5:21 PM EST
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Joke? Please!
RoRo, "To call out Blackness Yes" WTF? I'll take a joke. Any idea when one might be forthcoming? I have no intention of attending one of these meetings, to listen to people demonizing white men for the actions of a diverse board of Pride - and that's from an Pilipina tranny! No more academic cut-off-from-reality bullshit, please. A lawyer who runs a legal clinic is practising law. El Farouk is a lawyer. Elle Flanders is a MA in critical theory. Etc. Don't pretend your little group is diverse just because the upper crust wears different colours of skin. The elites stick together. We know that from history.
Karla Marx, Oshawa ON
07/26/10 7:38 PM EST
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WTF
@Karla again criticizing the coalition without knowing who we are. We'll keep up our work. Elites? Again where are you getting this delusion. And if all you need is an MA to be considered an academic that is a wide brush. A group of committed people working to make Pride Toronto accountable...demonizing no one. Diverse in many ways and working to reflect the broader queer communities. What exactly is the problem?
RoRo, Toronto ON
07/26/10 7:58 PM EST
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RoRoRo?
Free speech, RoRo. Free speech. Criticism. Disagreeing. Free expression. Not just for people who agree with. As for not knowing who I am, my full name is here. How 'bout you, RoRo? The problem is a bunch of non-elected people of privilege pretending they represent 'the community' - that's the problem. And, they're hypocrites who stifle dissent as Zahra Dhanani herself ADMITTED in Xtra. "We shut them down." At a meeting about free speech, we shut them down. That's the problem, since you ask, bitch.
Karla Marx, Oshawa ON
08/02/10 1:54 PM EST
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Run! Get elected! Take it over!
You demonized Tracy Sandilands, who as it is now abundantly clear, was carrying out the will of a diverse, community board, and through them, the City of Toronto. Don't talk to me about demonizing no-one. That's utter crap, and you know it. The entire pretext of your campaign has been that those diverse faces on Pride were corporate shills. The Pride Coalition should PUT UP OR SHUT UP. Run, take over the board, show us how it is done correctly. You people are all over the place, and don't seem to be about anything other than being against everything. That's hardly confidence inspiring.
Karla Marx, Oshawa ON
08/02/10 2:00 PM EST
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A mere MA! Hah!
"All you need is an MA" a very revealing statement there RoRo. Very few Canadians have one of those, most don't even have a bachelor's degree. The idea that a graduate degree is some kind of starting point for a queer discussion is deeply bourgeois. Broad brush, my ass. Listen, I'm not going to respond to any more of your defensiveness unless you engage with the issues. Prove me wrong. Do the work. Show you can be inclusive of opinions other than those held by the fairly narrow band of activists who have so far spoken on your behalf, the 'queer studies' contingent who see everything in terms of extremist cultural theory. Show you are truly a coalition of people with different opinions on a range of issues who support free speech, even for the anti-choice bigots. Because that's what unfettered free speech means. That's not clear so far. Instead of attacking me, rise to the challenge of unfettered free speech. I'm not the only one asking these questions so making it about me is a red herring.
Karla Marx, Oshawa ON
08/02/10 6:37 PM EST
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