WARSAW, Poland – Hundreds of gays,
lesbians and their supporters marched Saturday through the capitals of
Poland and Latvia, demanding more rights in Eastern European societies
where they still face high levels of intolerance.
The parades were supported by the governments of the
United States and other Western countries who are pushing for an end to
discrimination and violence toward gays.
Homosexuality was a taboo throughout the communist era
and that hostility lingers today, despite a growing sense of openness in
the region since several of its countries joined the European Union in
2004.
About 2,500 people turned out in Warsaw while some 400
braved rain and hail to march in Riga. The demonstrations are among many
gay pride events taking place in June across Europe and elsewhere.
Both the Warsaw and Riga marches required massive
police protection. Previous gay pride parades in the Baltics and Poland
have been marred by violence and heckling from protesters, though this
year the opponents were few and calm.
Ola Osinska, a 28-year-old who held hands with another
woman during the Warsaw parade, said she has been attacked in the city
three times for being a lesbian.
"It's even worse in small Polish towns," Osinska said.
"And even though I have been beaten three times, I am here today because
I want to show that I will not hide."
In Riga, U.S. diplomats took part to show their
support. They said U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has asked
American officials to be more active in promoting equal rights for
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people throughout the world.
"Human rights belong to everyone, regardless of sexual
orientation. So we are marching in support of LGBT people here in
Latvia, in the Baltics, in Europe, and throughout the world," said U.S.
Ambassador to Latvia Judith Garber.
The U.S. Ambassador to Poland, Lee Feinstein, expressed
his solidarity for Warsaw's participants though he was out of town. He
was among diplomats of about 10 Western countries who signed a letter
supporting equal rights for gays and lesbians.
Poland's gays and lesbians have slowly started to
become more visible in a society that has long treated homosexuality as a
taboo.
A few open-platform trucks pumping techno and pop music
and decorated in colorful balloons inched their way down Marszalkowska
street, one of Warsaw's key boulevards. Drag queens and other
participants danced to the beat.
Two of the trucks belonged to small left-wing parties
that support gay rights. The major parties are either hostile or
indifferent to the issue.
One of the supportive parties, Palikot's Movement, has
made gay rights an issue of public discourse by bringing the country's
first openly gay man, and the first transsexual into parliament as
lawmakers in elections last year.
The strong influence of the Roman Catholic church has kept many Poles from embracing the gay rights movement.
Agata Trzebuchowska participated in the Warsaw gathering while dressed like St. Mary, her head covered in a blue shroud.
"The situation might be getting better in the political
sphere in Poland, but it's not getting better in the church," said the
20-year-old anthropology student.
A group of about 20 people from Belarus also marched in Warsaw as they prepared for a gay pride parade in Minsk in October.
They carried a banner that said, "It's better to be gay
than a dictator" — a quip on a comment Belarus' autocratic President
Alexander Lukashenko made earlier this year.
Lukashenko said, "It's better to be a dictator than
gay," a statement directed at Germany's gay foreign minister, Guido
Westerwelle.
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