Skip to content

Bermuda Pride Parade 2019

Date: August 31, Saturday

Location: Victoria Park, Hamilton

Lead Sponsor: OutBermuda

Website: Bermudapride.net

Victoria Park Bandstand Pavilion

Bermuda’s 1st LGBTQ Pride Parade – August 31, 2019 @ Victoria Park in Hamilton, almost a year after re-legalizing same-sex marriage.


#LGBTQBERMUDA ADVOCATES (FB)

FB Links: Bermuda Pride Organizers | Bermuda Pride Supporters | OUTBermudaRainbow Alliance of Bermuda | Bermuda Human Rights CommissionMarriage Equality Bermuda | SameloveBermuda | Two Words And A Comma | Kinsfolk Bermuda | LGBTQ Bermuda

2019 – Parade Route


Bermuda Pride 2019 Events

Rainbow Alliance of Bermuda Bermuda Pride Weekend Events Roundup.

Aug 29 – Thursday | 7:00 – 10:00 pm

Aug 30 – Friday | 6.30 pm

Panel Discussion: “Free to be me: Expressing LGBTQI+ identities against a legacy of colonialism.” https://bermudapride.net/events/
Location: Hamilton Princess

Aug 31 – Saturday | 9 am – 7 pm

Community Celebration “Pride in the Park

Location: Victoria Park
09:00 – Park Open
09:30 – Yoga session w/ Fusion Works with Marcia
10:15 – Joy T Barnum LIVE + OPENING SPEECH & moment of silence for members of the LGBTQI+ community lost along the way
10:30 – Pre-Parade Assembly
11.00 – 12:30 – Bermuda Pride Parade
12:30 – 19:00 – Pride Ceremony @ Victoria Park Band Stand

Live entertainment from: Anomi Amaya Deveroux, Chrissy Dior, Denzel Amos, Eliza Olander, Joy Barnum, Padma Bermuda, Melodies and Mimosas, Mia Williams, Mike Hind, Nkosi, Roderick Ferguson, The Queen of Bermuda Ms Sybil Barrington, Tiffany Paynter, Wine Women & Song and Zebra Kidd.

Emcees – Edward Christopher and Jonathan Christopher; Dizzle the DJ, & DJ Felix.


Please be advised that dogs are not allowed in Victoria Park.

Please do not bring single use plastics to the park.

FREE hydration station – bring a reusable water bottle.


Sept 1 – Sunday 11:00 – 12:30 pm


Sept 1 – Sunday 8 pm

The QUEEN of BERMUDA – Ms SYBIL BARRINGTON is having her DYNAMIC FEMALE INTERNATIONAL IMPERSONATORS at CITY HALL at 8pm.

Tickets $55 GET THEM EARLY B4 THEY SELL OUT!!!! www.bdatix.bm or at SHANNONS BOUTIQUE !!!!!


Bermudian and Pride London Director of Community Engagement, Christopher Joell-Deshields, explains why Pride Parades are still important.

Pride Parade @ Wikipedia

Pride parades (also known as pride marches, pride events, and pride festivals) are outdoor events celebrating lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) social and self acceptance, achievements, legal rights and pride. read more @ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pride_parade
São Paulo’s 18th annual LGBT Pride Parade 2014
Gay Pride London 2011
Articles
Bermuda Pride 2019 Has ‘Officially’ Launched Bernews – July 22, 2019 
Queen of Bermuda reigns in London’s Pride parade Bermuda Sun – July 3, 2011
Links
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_rights_in_Bermuda

Featured Image courtesy of Jeffrey Porter

The Simple Truth About Discrimination & Marriage: A Conversation with Mark Pettingill

Bermuda Lawyer Mark Pettingill talks about Same Sex Marriage and the legal fight for Equality in Bermuda

Shawn Crockwell put it best when he said “You cannot Cherry Pick on discrimination”


The Simple Truth: Discrimination is Discrimination – A Reflection with Mark Pettingill

“You cannot cherry-pick on discrimination,” says Shawn Crockwell, and it’s a sentiment that resonates deeply with his partner, Mark Pettingill. The conversation surrounding equal rights, particularly in the context of marriage, often gets tangled in complex legal jargon and nuanced arguments. But at its core, the issue is remarkably straightforward: everyone deserves the same fundamental rights.

As Mark Pettingill reflects on the legal battles fought alongside his close friend and partner, Shawn Crockwell, the absurdity of denying same-sex couples the right to marry is clear. While religious institutions have the protected right to define their own ceremonies, the legal institution of marriage should be accessible to all. The distinction between a religious ceremony and a contractual marriage is crucial. As Pettingill points out, the fight was always for the contractual right, not the imposition of a religious ceremony on unwilling institutions.

The creation of civil unions, while a step in the right direction, ultimately underscored the discriminatory nature of the system. By offering a similar legal framework but denying the title of “marriage,” the government essentially created a separate and unequal status. This echoes historical injustices based on race, religion, and sex.

Think about it: “You can’t do this because you are gay.” This statement, stripped of legal euphemisms, reveals the stark reality of discrimination. It’s the same logic that once justified denying women equal pay or segregating people based on their race.

Pettingill, alongside Crockwell, his close partner, who he describes as like a “Butch Cassidy and Sundance Kid” partnership, are deeply involved in Bermudian politics and law. Their shared commitment to equality is a cornerstone of their work. Pettingill uses a powerful analogy: imagine a sign outside a bar reading, “No gay people allowed.” Most would immediately recognize this as blatant discrimination. Yet, denying same-sex couples the right to marry, a fundamental legal right, is often met with less outrage. Why?

The answer lies in the subtle ways discrimination can be packaged and presented. Legal complexities and “colorable artifice” can obscure the simple truth: denying a group of people a right afforded to others is discriminatory.

The fight for marriage equality isn’t about special rights or privileges. It’s about basic human dignity and the principle that everyone should be treated equally under the law. As Pettingill reflects on the words of his partner, Shawn Crockwell, “This has always been a very very simple case and still is a human issue where everybody should have the same entitlement and if they’re not is discriminatory end of story.”

Let’s remember that the fight for equality isn’t about abstract legal theories. It’s about real people, real lives, and the fundamental right to love and be recognized. It’s about dismantling the structures that perpetuate inequality and building a society where everyone is treated with dignity and respect.

Video Transcript

You know, my partner Shawn Crockwell  put it best when he said, ‘You cannot cherry-pick on discrimination.’ Once you start defining rights based on whether someone is a human being, then, with the right balance, everyone has the same rights. As I’ve always said, I would have defended a church if a gay couple had tried to force them to perform a marriage ceremony against their doctrine or creed. Those protections, those religious freedoms, are protected by the Constitution, the Human Rights Act, and even, in my view, by the Marriage Act. The Marriage Act provides for both religious and civil marriage ceremonies. We were only arguing for the civil right to marry, not the religious right.

The government created a Civil Union Act, and the only real difference is the name. You can have a civil union, but you cannot get married. That’s what the act specifically states: you can do all these things, it’s called a civil union, but you cannot get married. Immediately, you’re discriminating against a class of people, denying them something everyone else can do, simply because they’re gay. You can dress it up with any kind of artifice to obscure the issue, but you’re still saying, ‘You cannot do this because you are gay.’

Historically, let’s think about that. ‘You can’t do this because of your religion, your sex, your race.’ The rhetorical question is, ‘Why shouldn’t women be happy with a job and getting paid less than a man?’ In modern terms, that’s a nonsensical argument. Of course, that’s wrong; it’s sexual discrimination, discriminating against women because of their sex. People don’t seem to grasp it. If we put up a sign in a bar saying, ‘No gay people allowed,’ I think people would understand that’s wrong. You’d be denying them the right to enter a place. People would rightly object and say that’s discriminatory. But they don’t seem to get it when you say, ‘Okay, you want to get married, but we’re not allowing you that.’ It’s like saying, ‘You have all these rights, but not this specific one.’ To me, this has always been a very simple case, and still is: a human rights issue where everyone should have the same entitlements. If they don’t, it’s discrimination, end of story.

fb/LGBTQBermuda

samelovebermuda.com

fb/samelovebermuda

fight2_1
Please Donate to help with the Legal Costs here
SAME LOVE BERMUDA – YT Playlist

The situation regarding same-sex marriage in Bermuda has been quite complex and has seen significant changes since 2018.

Here’s a summary of the key developments:

A Turbulent Legal History:

  • Bermuda has experienced a back-and-forth legal battle regarding same-sex marriage, with periods of legalization followed by reversals.1
  • In essence, same sex marriage was legal at times between 2017 and 2022.
  • However, in March 2022, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council ruled against same-sex marriage, effectively banning it once again.2

Domestic Partnerships:

  • Bermuda has implemented domestic partnerships, which provide some legal rights to same-sex couples.3 However, these partnerships are distinct from marriage.

Public Opinion:

  • It’s important to note that public opinion in Bermuda has shown signs of shifting. Polls indicate increasing support for same-sex marriage, though legal challenges remain.

Key points to remember:

  • The legal landscape in Bermuda has been very dynamic.
  • Although same sex marriage is not currently legal, same sex marriages that were preformed in certain time periods are still considered valid.
  • There is still ongoing debate regarding this topic.

In essence, while progress has been made in terms of legal recognition of same-sex relationships, the right to marriage itself has been a subject of considerable legal contention in Bermuda.

  1. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Same-sex_marriage_in_Bermuda
  2. constitutionnet.org/news/ bermuda-court-ruling-favor-same-sex-marriage-overturned-privy-council
  3. gov.bm/domestic-partnerships-bermuda

Bermuda Raised – No Longer Bermuda Bound

by Kirkland Hamill

The island of Bermuda, the place where I spent most of my childhood, recently earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first national territory to repeal marriage equality.

I wish I could say I was surprised.

It took me 14 years of living off the island before I felt safe enough to admit (even to myself) that I was gay. There is darkness beneath the island’s beauty. It is nestled beneath the colorful bonnets of the old ladies arriving at church every Sunday to sermons preaching the so-called word of God. It’s in the esoteric masculinity of men in lime-green shorts and gray knee socks greeting each other on the street, cheerfully using some variation on the word ‘sissy’ to solidify their bonds. It’s part of a system that continues to allow racial resentments between the island’s black and white populations to fester and grow, with little public dialogue to heal the breach

My mother was Bermudian-born and -raised. She reared my two brothers and me as a single parent, exhibiting the trademark island ferocity, pride, and stubbornness that helped us get by as a poor family living in one of the wealthiest countries in the world. When I was 12 years old, and my pale blond hair started peaking in a dainty cowlick, my mother called me by my new nickname — Faggity Fag — for the first time. She said it playfully but pointedly for weeks until I learned to take my hand off my hip and float a little closer to the ground.

When I was 14, the all-boys school that I attended held a public debate between the rugby coach and the football (soccer) coach to decide which sport had the bigger “poofters.” It’s the football players, the rugby coach argued, with their dainty footwork and pretty-boy looks. It’s the rugby players, the football coach said, dancing in scrum circles with linked arms, faces shoved into each other’s crotches, chasing boys they wrestle to the ground. I voted for the pretty boys. The rugby players won in a landslide.

Bermuda is an isolated country, 700 miles from the U.S. mainland in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. We rely on rain, caught on our roofs and collected in underground tanks, for drinking water. We live with the constant threat of hurricanes battering our shores, with no option for evacuation. We are a self-sufficient lot, buoyed by faith and comforted by tradition. Children are led in prayers before school every morning and say grace at lunchtime.

bermuda-traditional-kite-3d-model-max-obj-3ds-fbx-stl-skp

Every Good Friday, the skies are filled with homemade kites fashioned from balsawood and colorful tissue paper, signifying the resurrection of Christ. I believe that most Bermudians don’t know how much pain is generated by their religious certainty or how cruel is their righteousness.

When I turned 16, I went away to boarding school in the United States on a scholarship after begging my mother to let me go. I returned to live in Bermuda only once more, for a year after my freshman year of college, after my life had started to fall apart. I went to see a community counselor sponsored by the island’s only hospital and confessed for the first time my deepest fear — that I might be gay. The counselor, a woman, scowled almost imperceptibly and said simply, “I’ve met gay people, and you look nothing like them.” It took me until the age of 30 to realize she was wrong, that a gay person could be anyone — could be me. From the time I was very young, I couldn’t even see myself because where I grew up there wasn’t an acknowledgment that who I was existed.

I now live in Washington, D.C., where I served on the board of directors of the Human Rights Campaign, the country’s largest LGBTQ advocacy organization, for 10 years — from the desperation of the Bush years until marriage equality became the law of the land in 2015. During that time, my fellow advocates and I learned a valuable lesson — never give up, never stop calling out injustice, and hold people accountable until ignorance becomes more painful than enlightenment.

My partner of seven years, Dave, and I were planning on returning to Bermuda this spring to celebrate the Bermuda Supreme Court’s May 2017 decision legalizing same-sex marriage. We have canceled our trip. Because no matter how beautiful the beaches, how polite the people, and how sparkling blue the water, I will only be able to see the ugliness underneath it all until this legislation is overturned.

Kirkland is currently working on a memoir — Filthy Beasts — partially set in Bermuda

epes_sh6_400x400
KirklandHamill.comFB | IG | X| linkedin

This commentary was originally posted @ The Advocate magazine 

The Advocate – advocate.com

The World’s Leading #LGBT #News Source



hrc-fb-shareHuman Rights Campaign
| hrc.org | facebook | x | instagram | pinterest

By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end discrimination against LGBTQ citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all


Related Articles

Websites of Interest

@ITTPbda Denounces Domestic Partnerships in #Bermuda

ITTP (It’s That Type of Party) completely denounces the Domestic Partnership Bill.

We did not agree with a half baked compromise like “Civil Unions” so how would “domestic partnerships” be any more acceptable

DOMESTIC PARTNERSHIP ACT 2017


It’s That Type of Party  facebook  |  twitter  | instagram

A comedic group that covers the news provides social/political commentary, and produces hilarious skits!

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bba_4S3F2QL/

https://twitter.com/ITTPbda

 

It’s That Type of Party #YtPlaylist

#Bermuda #SameSexMarriage Re-Ban @gaytimesmag

bermuda-rainbow

LGBT+ people in Bermuda celebrated earlier this year when the country’s Supreme Court effectively legalised same-sex marriage with a landmark ruling, after it deemed a ban on such a union a discriminatory violation of human rights.

After the positive response to the ruling, the Bermudan government then confirmed that it would not appeal the decision.

However, MP Wayne Furbert has now introduced a Bill which seeks to re-ban same-sex marriage. The issue will head back to Bermuda’s Parliament, where it has a very real chance of winning support from anti-LGBT lawmakers.

Read Full Article @ gaytimes.co.uk


Interview with MP Wayne Furbert On Marriage Bill, May 30 2017 see complete article @Bernews

#Bermuda Rejects #MarriageEquality in Invalid Referendum

The British Overseas Territory of Bermuda held a non-binding referendum on marriage equality and same-sex civil unions on Thursday, June 23, 2016.

In a message to HRC Global, Tony Brannon of Same Love Bermuda said the results of the referendum are invalid as turnout did not meet the required 50 percent threshold.

Since the results are non-binding and the minimum voter turnout threshold was not met, the government will ….

read full article: Bermuda Rejects Marriage Equality in Invalid Referendum

‘AN UNDENIABLY CLEAR MESSAGE HAS BEEN SENT’–PRESERVE MARRIAGE @todayinbermuda

Preserve Marriage, which consists of a diverse cross-section of our community, appreciates the people of Bermuda who came out to express their beliefs about same-sex marriage and same-sex civil unions.

Although 46.89 percent of the voting population participated, it cannot be ignored that an undeniably clear message has been sent to retain marriage in Bermuda as a special union between a man and a woman for the benefit of society. Bermuda voted against same-sex marriage and against same-sex civil unions almost 2 to 1 on both questions …

Read complete article: ‘AN UNDENIABLY CLEAR MESSAGE HAS BEEN SENT’–PRESERVE MARRIAGE

Legalize Same Sex Marriage in #Bermuda


We all have a sexual orientation and a gender identity. Sexual orientation covers sexual desires, feelings, practices and identification and can be towards people of the same or different sexes. Gender identity refers to how individuals perceive and call themselves.
Therefore any form of discrimination against members of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community, based on sexual orientation and/or gender identity, is an issue that transcends religious beliefs and political views and affects all of us simply as part of being HUMAN.
We believe that all people, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity, should be able to enjoy their human rights.
We believe that morality and integrity cannot exist without embracing an idea of Love that is inclusive and not selective.
We believe that Love should be shared and enjoyed by all.
We believe that Love is an empty word if it is deprived of acceptance, empathy and inclusion.
Source: Legalize Same Sex Marriage in Bermuda

Visit & Support samelovebermuda.com