Topic archive for "lbgt"

Gay.net: Two Latino Children, One Strong Latino Family

By Rick Andreoli at Gay.net

Since November of last year we have been posting videos from Cuentame’s “An Honest Conversation” video series. The project was created to show the direct, sober, honest and often painful stories of LGBTQ Latino youth, their friends, families and the community in general. From bullying to abuse, struggle to triumph, this series aims to break taboos within the Latino community while changing paradigms within this fast-shifting demographic.

The final video in the series focuses on the Moreno family in Arizona. Gay siblings, Samantha and Guillermo, sit down with their mother and offer up their stories. From Samantha dealing with the fact that her father hasn’t spoken to her partner in nearly 12 years, to Guillermo understanding a balance between his Catholic faith and being gay, the two show how being gay can be a family affair. The Morenos presents a framework that does not hold Latino family culture and queer sexuality mutually exclusive. Challenging yet hopeful, they are an example of how an honest conversation can change the family dynamic for the better.

Watch more “An Honest Conversation” videos
Gay Latinos Break Their Silence
Gay Latinos Speak: Bianca
Gay Latinos Speak: Army Vet Ronnie

Jorge Gutierrez – Gay, Latino & Undocumented

MORE
Website: mycuentame.org
Join the Conversation: anhonestconversation.org
Share Your Story: facebook.com/cuentame

Think Progress: Watch Two Gay Siblings Come Out To Their Catholic Latino Family

By Staff at ThinkProgress

The Brave New Foundation’s Cuéntame presents the latest in its collection called “An Honest Conversation,” stories about LGBT Latino youth and their friends, families, and communities. This video features the Morenos, a fervently Catholic Latino family in Arizona in which both brother and sister faced the struggle of coming out as gay to their parents. In the end, they agree that despite its challenges, their coming out strengthened the family’s union, because “this is all we have, the family.”

Watch it:

ALMA Chicago: Queer, Undocumented, & Unafraid [Video]

By staff at ALMA Chicago

This video is part of a series by Cuentame, called “An Honest Conversation.” In this video they interview Jorge, who speaks about his experience as a queer undocumented immigrant.

La Opinion Covers ‘An Honest Conversation’

By Virginia Gaglianone at La Opinion

Como tantos jóvenes latinos, cuando Jorge Gutierrez, un joven gay indocumentado, comenzó a ejercer su activismo se encontró con quienes le decían que los asuntos gay no tenían nada que ver con los derechos de los inmigrantes y que debía concentrarse “en una batalla a la vez”.

Gutierrez contó que en un principio, cuando entraba a una reunión de jóvenes indocumentados se decía a sí mismo “Ok, hoy seré indocumentado solamente, y no me acordaré que soy gay”. Pero el joven activista pronto descubrió que no podía seguir negociando y dividir sus batallas, porque los dos temas le concernían por igual.

“Tenía que ser las dos cosas”, recordó. Sabiendo que había otros jóvenes en su misma situación, decidió tomar la responsabilidad y encarar la situación.

Gutierrez cuenta su historia personal en Undocumented and Unafraid, Queer and Unashamed, un video que puede verse en You Tube, parte de la campaña Una conversación honesta. La serie presenta cinco videos que se concentran exclusivamente en los problemas de la comunidad latina LGBT (lesbiana, gay, bisexual y transexual), y que buscan concientizar, impactar e iniciar un diálogo sobre el tema en la comunidad hispana.

La campaña es una iniciativa de la organización Cuéntame ¡Instigadores latinos!, una organización digital sin fines de lucro fundada en 2009 que se concentra en las artes, los medios de comunicación y el activismo dentro de la cultura latina.

Read the rest of Jorge’s story here.

HIV Plus Magazine: An Honest Conversation About HIV – A new video series encourages Latinos to open up about HIV

By Trudy Ring at HIV Plus Magazine

Some Latino activists are taking the old saying “Honesty is the best policy” and acting on it in a thoroughly modern way.

Cuéntame, a project of the social justice-oriented Brave New Foundation, is a social media group whose name translates as “count me” or “tell me your story.” Based in Culver City, Calif., the project is using Internet videos to let Latinos tell their stories and raise awareness of a variety of issues. Its video series An Honest Conversation deals with lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender issues, including HIV, which disproportionately affects gay men, Latinos, and gay men who are Latino.

It’s not easy to raise awareness when people are reluctant to discuss these matters, which is common among Latinos, says Jessica McMunn Macias, a story and content producer for Cuéntame. “It’s very taboo in our community,” she says of LGBT topics and HIV. “An Honest Conversation’s goal is to open up the conversation with families.”

Last October, at the first gay pride event ever held in conservative Lubbock, Texas, Macias found a Latino gay man willing to open up about being HIV-positive. “It was just fate,” she says of encountering Ronnie, a 42-year-old nurse now living in Los Angeles. From an event stage, she asked if anyone would like to share a story. He tapped her shoulder and said he would.

In that appearance and a follow-up shoot the next day, there emerged a compelling, often tragic, but ultimately hopeful tale. In the video Ronnie (last name withheld by request) talks about being gay-bashed and otherwise abused, hiding his homosexuality to join the military, being found out and discharged, and eventually receiving his HIV diagnosis. He says he “gave up” for about two years afterward, drinking and partying to escape. But after receiving admonitions from an aunt, he finished college and became a nurse, and now he is helping others.

All his experiences, he says, have informed his life. “I have been beaten up as a kid. I’ve been sexually assaulted as a kid. I’ve been beaten up as an adult. I’ve been shot at, I’ve gone overseas, I’ve been in the military—I thank God that I’ve done all this, because I can walk into a room as a nurse now, and I can look at a person’s face…and I know exactly what happened,” he says, giving as an example a girl who was beaten up because she was a lesbian. “The only thing I need to figure out is, What do I need to do for her to get her out of that situation?”

Read More at HIV Plus Mag.com or pick up the March/April 2012 issue.

Gay.net: Jorge Gutierrez – Young, Gay, Latino & Undocumented

By Rick Andreoli at Gay.net

Is it tougher to be gay or undocumented? This is what Jorge Gutierrez—who is young, gay, Latino and undocumented— discusses in the 4th video of Cuentame’s “An Honest Conversation” series, which focuses on LGBTQ issues in the Latino community.

Gutierrez offers up his inspiring story of breaking through numerous barriers through activism, and how he is now unafraid to open up and give people his honest opinions on all these topics. Through this video you see one young man breaking taboos, challenging conventions and shifting paradigms within and outside of the Latino community. Brave, courageous and up front, Jorge’s “honest conversation” will surprise and inspire you.

 

INFO
Website: mycuentame.org
Join the Conversation: anhonestconversation.org
Share Your Story: facebook.com/cuentame
Read Jorge’s full story

Watch more “An Honest Conversation” videos
Gay Latinos Break Their Silence
Gay Latinos Speak: Bianca
Gay Latinos Speak: Army Vet Ronnie

Read more at Gay.net.

Huffington Post: Jorge Gutierrez, Undocumented Queer Activist Works To Bring LGBT And Pro-Immigration Groups Together

By Gabriel Lerner at Huffington Post

Jorge Gutiérrez, 27, was addressing a hall packed with almost 200 young people in Memphis, Tennessee.

Like him, they were brought to the United States as children. Like him, they grew up as Americans. Although they were bilingual, English was their first language.

Their parents came illegally, so they too, are undocumented.

Then, he told them that he is not only undocumented, but also gay. He asked the pro-immigrant organizations represented there to be inclusive. If there were others who, like him, were undocumented and LGBT, he asked them to stand up and come down to the front.

One by one, more than 20 activists stood up and approached. Some of them were revealing their sexual identity for the first time. Some were well known activists in the DREAMers movement.

Gutiérrez, currently lives in Santa Ana, California. At the age of 10, he arrived illegally from El Cora, Nayarit, Mexico, with his mother, two brothers and two sisters. In 2008 he graduated from Cal State University – Fullerton with a BA in English.

He is undocumented and queer, one of many.

“Some of the most recognized leaders of the DREAMer movement, who never talked about it, are now out of the closet, and are calling on others to do the same,” he told The Huffington Post in a series of phone calls.

Read the full story at Huffington Post’s Latino Voices.

AOL Latino: ¿Soy o no soy gay? Bianca, una conversación honesta

By Aurelia Fierros at AOL Latino

Bianca Molina es una joven y entusiasta latina llena de sueños y expectativas, que se prepara para ingresar a la universidad en el otoño y que ya está lista para hacerse cargo de los desafíos que le deparará la vida.

Pero hasta hace poco, sus objetivos no eran tan claros, y su existencia giraba en torno a una sola pregunta: “¿soy o no soy gay?”

A las dudas, confusión y remordimientos que llenaban su vida, cuenta Bianca, se agregaron largas noches de lágrimas y desesperación, todo en el más completo de los secretos.
Hasta que llegó el punto de ruptura.

“Yo tenía dieciséis años y estaba muy deprimida. Vivía escondiendo mi identidad, en el closet. Yo sabía que algo estaba mal, sentía que estaba mal, porque estuve por tantos años en una escuela católica, donde predicaban con mucho énfasis contra la homosexualidad y todo eso estaba en mi cabeza y yo no era capaz de aceptarme a mí misma tal como era”.

“Pero entonces a mi madre le diagnosticaron cáncer. Esa fue la gota que rebasó el vaso. Sentí que Dios me estaba castigando por tener esas emociones, por pensar como pensaba, por sentir lo que yo sentía, y que me culpaba por todo lo que significaba perder a mi madre. Decidí quitarme la vida.

Read the full story at AOL Latino.

Press by Campaign:

For Press inquiries, please contact Kim at:
bravenewfoundation.press@gmail.com

Brave New Foundation |
10510 Culver Blvd., Culver City, CA 90232 | info@bravenewfoundation.org
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy