menu

Claiming a BME LGBT Identity

Dr. Maria Antoniou, the Interim Director of Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard wants to open a community wide discussion about identity.

Dr. Maria Antoniou
Dr. Maria Antoniou

BME, LIKE LGBT, is a social label under which lies a myriad of personal experiences and identities. It’s easy to get lost in acronyms, to see them as boxes we need to tick, to debate who’s in or out, or whether we are doing the right thing: being inclusive or exclusive.

I want us to go beyond labels and to speak about experiences, to share who we are and where we have come from, to listen to each other with mutual openness and respect – as BME and/or LGBT people. To find ways of creating community based on our sameness and our difference.

For me, being both BME and LGBT has been confusing, painful, inspiring and joyous. At some points in my life, I have marginalised my Cypriotness to claim a lesbian identity. At other times, my ethinicity has been far more important to me than my sexuality. I now try to claim an identity that is both Cypriot and lesbian.

This is not easy. Lesbians don’t fit into mainstream ideas of Cypriotness. Whilst growing up I felt forced to make a choice – Cypriot or lesbian, as if it was impossible to be both. In many ways, coming out as a lesbian at age 21 meant losing my family, forfeiting my cultural identification, giving up my claim to Cypriotness. I’m not alone in this experience – BME LGBT people frequently feel pressured into choosing, in being either/or, prioritising or marginalising parts of ourselves.

This isn’t helped by the racism we encounter both inside and outside of the LGBT community. In the face of racism I am undeniably Cypriot, undeniably BME. I have white skin, which I am aware gives me some social privilege, but I am visibly different (from white British people). I have a ‘foreign’ name. I have another language. My parents were migrants.

Within the LGBT community, I would like us to open up the discussion about identity. To welcome, express and explore the diverse experiences within the label ‘BME’, as we are doing with ‘LGBT’. To share and to listen to how BME LGBT identities are differently lived. I would also like to invite critical reflection on what it means to be ‘white’ / non-BME. In our society, whiteness doesn’t have to be conscious of itself, in the same way that heterosexuality and cisgender don’t have to be. Whiteness just is.

But I am not naïve. First we need to create a safe space in which to do this, where we can speak freely about ourselves without fear, and without attack. Anyone want to join me in this mission?

Labour stands up for the NHS

Labour made a firm commitment to a free and locally accountable NHS, and slammed the Conservatives’ push for privatisation within the health service at todays (October 23) full council meeting.

Cllr Warren Morgan
Cllr Warren Morgan

Councillor Morgan, Leader of the Labour and Co-operative group said:

“Ten days ago the Tories admitted to the Times newspaper that ‘NHS reforms have been our worst mistake’. And we can see the results.

“No top-down reorganisation of the NHS? Since 2010 there have been 440 reorganisations. Senior NHS managers’ pay has risen by almost three times as much as nurses’ salaries since the general election. 44% of NHS workers are now working up to 5 hours unpaid overtime a week, saving the NHS £1.5bn a year. Yet Jeremy Hunt responds by freezing their wages.

“In a recent snapshot, 5,600 A&E patients were waiting up to 12 hours for beds, double the numbers seen in previous years. Locally our A&E in the city is constantly in Code Black, while collectively Surrey & Sussex NHS Trusts are £16.4 million in the red.

“Andy Burnham has committed Labour to ‘removing the market from the NHS’ to create an ever-greater NHS, one that will eventually include universal, free provision of care to the elderly.

“Labour will guarantee no-one will have to wait longer than one week for cancer tests and results by 2020. A Labour government will deliver £2.5bn in additional funding per year, 20,000 more nursing posts, 5,000 more care workers, 3,000 more midwives and 8,000 more GPs.

“Labour’s commitment to a free-at-the-point of use health service is absolute. Only Labour can deliver all this, because only Labour, not the Greens, are an alternative to the current Tory led government.“

 

Hove MP’s swimming pool petition makes a splash!

Mike Weatherley, the Conservative MP for Hove and Portslade, met with around 75 supporters from his 50m swimming pool protest campaign outside Hove Town Hall this afternoon.

Mike Weatherley Swimming Pool Protest

THE GROUP lobbied councillors as they arrived for todays full council meeting where Mike was handing in his petition in support of a 50m swimming pool on the site of the King Alfred Sports Centre in Hove.

The 2000 signature petition was signed by among others, Olympic Diver Chris Mears and swimming champion Karen Pickering MBE.

Mike has been actively supporting new state-of-the-art sporting facilities in Hove. Last year he hosted a public meeting attended by hundreds of residents on the redevelopment of the King Alfred site and he also spoke at a Brighton & Hove City Council Policy & Resources meeting in order to keep the desire for a 50m swimming pool alive.

He said: “This 50m pool campaign has received huge support from residents across Brighton & Hove, as well as local swimming clubs and national swimming celebrities. I have been clear that I will only support proposals that include a flexible 50m swimming pool and this petition highlights the strength of feeling amongst residents on this matter. I want to thank everyone who helped make this petition so successful and look forward to seeing innovative designs for the King Alfred in the near future.”

Supporters of a 50m pool include: Shiverers Swimming Club; Amateur Swimming Association; Olympic Diver Chris Mears; Karen Pickering MBE; Swimtrek; Brighton Swimming Centre; Brighton Swimming Club; Dolphins Swimming Club; Dolphins Disabled Swimming Club; Marlins Swimming Club.

In his speech to the full council meeting, he said: “The beauty of a flexible 50m facility is that every now and then, perhaps during early mornings and Friday evenings, it would be transformed into all of its 50m glory and used by the more serious swimmers – many of whom are children…There are large economic benefits too. A 50m pool that can be used for galas will attract teams from all around the country and, indeed, the continent. These teams will use our local hotels and local restaurants. They will use our shops and spend money at our attractions. Any other configuration will fail in that regard.”

 

What makes life ‘liveable’ for LGBTQ people in Brighton?

Dr Kath Browne
Dr Kath Browne

The Liveable Lives project is led by Count Me In researcher, Dr Kath Browne at the University of Brighton.

The project explores what ‘Liveable Lives’ means to people who come under the LGBTQ grouping (including but not limited to lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer people) and how this might be powerful in seeking positive social change for LGBTQ people beyond the equalities agenda.

Each personal perspective is vital to shaping the project findings.

Sharing your insights could mean that thinking about LGBTQ people will include understandings of people like you, and will communicate your ideas and concerns rather than trying to speak ‘for’ you as an LGBTQ person.

Join organisers on Saturday, November 22 at the first of a series of interactive workshops with LGBTQ people in India and the UK that will explore what makes our lives ‘liveable’ rather than just ‘bearable’, so that life feels like living, not just surviving.

This ground-breaking research will gather stories and experiences of everyday life as an LGBTQ person through activities like drawing a map of where your life feels more or less liveable; making a collage to visualise the challenges to living your life; or expressing your ideas through writing.

If you prefer to talk, you can join in with discussion groups, or you could do a one-to-one interview with a researcher. Also, if you’d like to stay involved in the project after the workshop, you’ll also be able to take part through your mobile phone using our quick and easy web-based app!

The workshop will be held at Friends Meeting House, Ship Street, Brighton, BN1 1AF on Saturday, November 22. You can drop in any time from 11am to 4pm, and come and go as suits you throughout the day.

There will be food and drinks available to keep you going! Take along partners, friends, and share the invite with your networks.

If you are interested in taking part, click here:

This will help organisers plan for the numbers who wish to attend and let them contact you direct with further details about the event.

Alternatively, to contact via Facebook, click here:

or Twitter (@liveablelives)

Or email: 


 

Event: Liveable Lives project workshop (Brighton)

Where: Friends Meeting House, Ship Street, Brighton, BN1 1AF

When: Saturday, November 22

Time: 11am – 4pm

 

 

 

Dr. Kath Browne

Reader

University of Brighton

E: k.a.browne@brighton.ac.uk

 

X