March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation
The March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation took place on April 25, 1993, and served as a significant event in the LGBT rights movement. Organizers aimed for not only equality but also inclusivity, working to ensure representation across various races and genders within their leadership. The march addressed a broad array of issues, including civil rights, discrimination, education, family rights, and the impact of the HIV-AIDS epidemic, while calling for the end of military bans on gay, lesbian, and bisexual individuals.
The event was notable for its extensive programming during the week, which included workshops, political lobbying, and the display of the AIDS Memorial Quilt. The march itself drew substantial attention, with estimates of attendance ranging from 300,000 to over a million people, marking it as one of the largest demonstrations in U.S. history. Media coverage was extensive, reflecting the event's significance in raising awareness for LGBT rights issues. Furthermore, the march established a historic connection between the LGBT movement and the NAACP, highlighting a commitment to combating broader forms of oppression. In the years following the event, progress was made in various areas of LGBT rights, demonstrating the lasting impact of this landmark gathering.
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March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation
LGBT people and their supporters gathered in Washington, D.C., for marches, demonstrations, vigils, conferences, and other events. The march marked the start of a new era for the LGBT movement, as it recognized more explicitly the need to embrace transgender people as well as people of all races and backgrounds. Also, the issue of GLBT persons in the military became a major part of the movement’s platform.
Date April 25, 1993
Locale Washington, D.C.
Summary of Event
The lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights movement (also known as the LGBT movement) has been based upon equality since its conception. Organizers, however, had more than equality on their minds when they planned the 1993 March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian, and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation. Organizers also wanted to have a balanced and inclusive decision-making group for the march, one that would include people from many races and which represented all genders. Backed by the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), march organizers also were able to meld their concerns about fairness and inclusion into the march agenda.
The march platform included issues pertaining to GLBT rights as well as civil rights in general, and to issues of discrimination, education, family rights, and others. HIV-AIDS concerns, too, were high on the list of demands and priorities, as was the demand to end the ban that kept gays and lesbians out of the military and that discharged those found to be gay, lesbian, or bisexual while in the service.
The preamble to the march’s platform stated,
The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender movement recognizes that our quest for social justice fundamentally links us to the struggles against racism and sexism, class bias, economic injustice, and religious intolerance. We must realize if one of us is oppressed we all are oppressed. The diversity of our movement requires and compels us to stand in opposition to all forms of oppression that diminish the quality of life for all people. We will be vigilant in our determination to rid our movement and our society of all forms of oppression and exploitation, so that all of us can develop to our full human potential without regard to race, religion, sexual orientation/identification, identity, gender and gender expression, ability, age, or class.
The week of the march included more than 150 political and cultural events. The AIDS Memorial Quilt, a stark reminder of the HIV-AIDS epidemic, was on display on the Washington Mall. Visitors to D.C. could take part in conferences and workshops, congressional lobbying, and religious ceremonies. Couples had the chance to join in a symbolic wedding ceremony held in front of the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) building. A candlelight vigil was held at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, and there was a gathering at Arlington National Cemetery to honor lesbian, gay, and bisexual veterans.
Protesters demonstrated in front of the U.S. Supreme Court the Monday after the march. Organizers had planned for groups of people to cross police lines and sit on the plaza in front of the Court building. That morning, protester Herb Donaldson and a group of his friends from San Francisco had decided to join the demonstration, even if it meant their arrest. At the end of the day, standing in the courtroom after being arrested, protesters reported that the feeling of pride and camaraderie was tremendous.
A major goal of the march was to reach Congress members and bring the GLBT message directly to them. Many lawmakers, however, avoided activists throughout the weekend. The LGBT community felt they had been supported politically by President Bill Clinton and his positive position on lesbian and gay rights. Regrettably to activists, Clinton seemed to have become somewhat embarrassed by his own support. Although he submitted a statement that was read to the crowd assembled after the march, some protesters felt his support had diminished. David Mixner, a gay rights leader who had worked on Clinton’s campaign in 1991, criticized Clinton for being absent from Washington the day of the march. Mixner pointed out that the stronger the march had become, the greater the evacuation of Washington by politicians.
Although march organizers said the 1993 march was the largest demonstration in U.S. history, officials have not been able to agree on a definite number. U.S. Park Police estimated the crowd to have numbered about 300,000 individuals, whereas organizers argued that there were more than 1 million protesters and marchers. Regardless of the numbers, it is clear that the event received unprecedented media coverage. Major television networks covered the event, many with live broadcasts. The following day, 156 newspapers nationwide carried front page stories of the landmark gathering.
Significance
Years after the 1993 march, the United States has seen some change regarding the rights of LGBT individuals, especially regarding same-gender civil unions, employment discrimination, and domestic partnership benefits. Also, the unity of the event was unprecedented; for the first time in history, the LGBT movement connected with the NAACP.
Although organizers of the march chose not to use the term “transgender” in the march’s name, they still were able to bridge gaps within the LGBT community by making sure to include a wider range of individuals under the lesbian, gay, and bisexual rights umbrella. It was not too long after the march that the acronym “LGBT,” and its variations, began to be used by the movement as an all-inclusive acronym.
Bibliography
Clendinen, D., and A. Nagourney. Out for Good. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999.
Coxe, Cece, Lisa Means, and Lisa Pope. One Million Strong: The 1993 March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, and Bi Equal Rights. Boston: Alyson, 1993.
Marcus, Eric. Making Gay History: The Half Century Fight for Lesbian and Gay Equal Rights. New York: HarperCollins, 2002.
Vaid, Urvashi. Virtual Equality: The Mainstreaming of Gay and Lesbian Liberation. New York: Anchor/Doubleday, 1995.
Witt, L., S. Thomas, and Eric Marcus, eds. Out in All Directions: A Treasury of Gay and Lesbian America. New York: Warner Books, 1995.