Leandrinha Du Art na 21ª Parada do Orgulho LGBT de BH – 08/08/2018
leandrinha du art posted a photo:
Fotos: Mídia NINJA
(CC-BY-NC)
Please enter your date of birth to proceed.
Leandrinha Du Art na 21ª Parada do Orgulho LGBT de BH – 08/08/2018
leandrinha du art posted a photo:
Fotos: Mídia NINJA
(CC-BY-NC)
2018-07-14: Bavario
psyxjaw posted a photo:
I attended Christopher Street Day in Munich on my visit last year, but I didn’t manage to make it to the parade itself, which was something I made sure I rectified this year.
shirt01 with model joey – red racer boy
Joey Cuties posted a photo:
The new Big Boy’s Design – September 2018
Design Title: Red Racer
Design Number 02 / 07
O CORPO É NOSSO Direitos Sexuais e Reprodutivos de Mulheres Lésbicas
unfpabrasil posted a photo:
O CORPO É NOSSO Direitos Sexuais e Reprodutivos de Mulheres Lésbicas
Para marcar o Dia da Visibilidade Lésbica – celebrado nacionalmente em 29 de agosto – a campanha da ONU, Livres & Iguais, lançou a série “O Corpo é nosso: direitos sexuais e reprodutivos de mulheres lésbicas”. Em atividade na Casa da ONU em Brasília na segunda-feira (27), representantes de governo, sociedade civil e corpo diplomático discutiram a promoção da igualdade de direitos humanos e o tratamento justo desta população.
Data: 27/08/2018
Local: Casa da Onu Brasília
Créditos: UNFPA Brasil/Weber da Cruz
#LimitlessAfricans: Olave
mowunna posted a photo:
#LimitlessAfricans, Olave: Non-binary Trans Femme Burundian (Shot in Rotterdam, Netherlands)
Q. What would you have to say to people who say that being LGBTQ is “un-African”?
“That it is a lie. That “African”-ness cannot mean outside of human experience, conduct and existence. That as we develop and root ourselves in “African”-ness, we should imagine it as spacious and inclusive. That we do ourselves a disservice, that we lose real wealth in diversity, if “African” is going to mean restrictive, exclusive and oppressive. LGBTQIA people have always existed, have always been part of the lived realities, the cultural and spiritual space of all cultures, philosophies and traditions on the continent. They have been healers, leaders, outcasts and at times not particularly interesting. They have, and do, and we will continue to be. It is “un-African” to erase them (our shared ancestors), to exclude us (your siblings, neighbors, lovers, friends and parents) and those to come (our children, our legacy, our hope). “
You must be 18 years old or older to chat