TransJustice General Meeting
Join TransJustice for its weekly open meetings the first Wednesday of every month. TransJustice meetings are for People of Color who identify as Trans, gender non-conforming, gender variant, gender deviant, butch lesbians, drag queens, bi-gendered, Two-Spirit, drag kings, femme queens, A.G., genderqueer, non-gendered, andro, crossdressers, and gender-benders.
2nd Annual Safe Neighborhood Summit
The Safe OUTside the System Collective of the Audre Lorde Project is proud to host the Second Annual Safe Neighborhood Summit, the most significant annual event for the S.O.S. Collective's Safe Neighborhood Campaign, which works directly with the local community to prevent and intervene in anti-LGBTSTGNC violence without relying on the police. Last year's Safe Neighborhood Summit inspired and educate over 80 Central Brooklyn Community members on how to prevent and intervene in violence with free workshops, performances, and speakers. We hope to continue the tradition this year.
List of Endorsers: FIERCE, The Lesbian and Gay Anti-Violence Project, Right Rides, Domestic Workers United, the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, The Justice Committee, Immigrant Justice Solidarity Project, PFLAG for Families of Color and Allies NYC, Creative Interventions, Freedom Train Productions, Critical Resistance: New York City Chapter, Domestic Workers United, GLOBE of Make the Road New York, CAAAV, Nodutdol for Korean Community Development, Palestine Education Project, Center for Constitutional Rights, Kevin Powell, Brooklyn College LGBT Alliance, Community Voices Heard, FUREE, and Picture The Homeless.
Stonewall & Beyond: Honoring 40 Years Of Radical Queer Organizing
At the LGBT Community Center
208 West 13th Street (btwn 7th/8th aves.), NYC
An intergenerational dialogue with:
Katherine Acey (Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice)
James Credle (Newark Pride Alliance)
Julie Davids (Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project, CHAMP)
Rickke Mananzala (FIERCE)
Imani Henry (International Action Center)
Moderated by Trishala Deb, Audre Lorde Project
Video presentation by Jay Toole & Queers for Economic Justice
Performance by Mahina Movement
ALP's montly immigrants' gathering
What does the G20 have to do with us? This month, we are going to do an interactive training to look at the connections between globalization, immigration and war.
Hope to see you there!
The Liberated BODY
Translator Training Project.
Are you fluent in English and other languages?
Join the Audre Lorde Project in our new Translator Training Project.
Application Deadline: CLOSED, Sign up today for our June Training
The Translator Training Project seeks to provide opportunities for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Two Spirit, Trans and Gender Non-Conforming immigrants of color who are already informal community translators to:
- gain greater skills in interpretation/translation
- learn resources and strategies to use translation to generate income
- better understand how to make our community spaces more accessible
- share knowledge about health, social and community resources
- share resources on translating health, sexuality and gender issues.
Why focus on immigrant communities?
ALP has had a working group on immigrant rights for over ten years, and LGBTST immigrant community members have been an important source of community leadership for decades in New York City. Our goals have been to create spaces for immigrant community members to come together and break the isolation that some of us face, increase access to legal resources and support, and mobilize our participation in the broader immigrant rights movement for full legalization for all people.
“Can we be safe & visible?” Community Dialogue on Caribbean Sexuality and Homophobia
Join us as we talk about the myriad voices and issues for Caribbean people at home and abroad who are Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Two Spirit, Trans and Gender Non-Conforming (LGBTSTGNC). What is it like to be LGBTSTGNC and Caribbean? How are LGBTSTGNC communities in the region imagined within and outside Caribbean borders? Are sexual minority communities in the Caribbean more vulnerable to violence? What are these communities and others doing to create change? What are the experiences of Caribbean migrants and first & second generation Caribbeans in the United States who identity as LGBTSTGNC? What are some of the politics of language, identification, and visibility?
TransJustice General Meeting
Join TransJustice for its weekly open meetings the first Wednesday of
every month. TransJustice meetings are for People of Color who identify
as Trans, gender non-conforming, gender variant, gender deviant, butch
lesbians, drag queens, bi-gendered, Two-Spirit, drag kings, femme
queens, A.G., genderqueer, non-gendered, andro, crossdressers, and
gender-benders.
S.O.S. Collective - Free Self Defense Class
Self Defense and Community Defense
Ever worry about your safety?
Want to learn how to protect yourself and your friends from violence?
Join the Audre Lorde Project's S.O.S. Collective for a FREE Self Defense class specifically for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Two-Spirit, Trans and Gender Non-Conforming People of Color. This class will combine physical and verbal self defense skills with discussions on safety prevention and violence de-escalation.
This class will be taught by the Center for Anti-Violence Education.
Space is limited email edixon@alp.org or call (718) 596-0342 x 22 to reserve your spot!
Subway directions to the Audre Lorde Project: C to Lafayette Avenue. M, N, Q, R, W, 2, 3, 4, 5 or LIRR to Atlantic Avenue/Pacific Street stop. G to Fulton Street.
Immigrant Rights Community Brunch!
*Are you Lesbian, Gay, Bi, Trans, Two Spirit, Gender Non-Conforming, Queer?
*Were you born outside of the United States?
*Are you Latin American, African, Asian, Middle Eastern, Pacific Islander and / or identify as a Person of Color?