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Mariela Castro Presides Over Gay Meeting in Cuba

May 18th, 2008 · No Comments

(source)

Mariela Castro, head of Cuba’s National Center for Sex Education and daughter of Cuba’s acting President Raul Castro, smiles during an event in commemoration of The International Day Against Homophobia in Havana May 17, 2008.

Gay activists in Cuba gathered on Saturday to celebrate International Day Against Homophobia in Havana’s Vedado district. Excitingly, Mariela Castro, President Raul Castro’s daughter, who has promoted the rights of sexual minorities, presided.. 

According to The Associated Press, the meeting may have been the largest gathering of openly gay activists ever on the communist-run island. 

“This is a very important moment for us, the men and women of Cuba, because for the first time we can gather in this way and speak profoundly and with scientific basis about these topics,” said Castro, director of Cuba’s Center for Sexual Education.

Mariela Castro joined government leaders and hundreds of activists at the one-day conference for the International Day Against Homophobia that featured shows, lectures, panel discussions and book presentations. A station also offered blood-tests for sexually transmitted diseases.

Cuban state television gave prime-time play Friday to the U.S. film “Brokeback Mountain,” which tells the story of two cowboys who conceal their homosexual affair.

Prejudice against homosexuals remains deeply rooted in Cuban society, but the government has steadily moved away from the Puritanism of the 1960s and 1970s, when homosexuals hid their sexuality for fear of being ridiculed, fired from work or even imprisoned.

Now Cuba’s parliament is studying proposals to legalize same-sex unions and give gay couples the benefits that people in traditional marriages enjoy. Parliament head Ricardo Alarcon said the government needs to do more to promote gay rights, but said many Cubans still need to be convinced.

Things “are advancing, but must continue advancing, and I think we should do that in a coherent, appropriate and precise way because these are topics that have been taboo and continue to be for many,” Alarcon told reporters.

Some at the conference spoke of streaming out into the streets for a spontaneous gay-pride parade, but others urged caution.

The gay rights movement should be careful not to “flood” Cuban society with a message that many are not ready to hear, physician and gay activist Alberto Roque cautioned.

And Mariela Castro said gay activists should opt for more subtle ways to chip away at deep-seated homophobic attitudes.

Tags: Americas · Home · News

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