Posts Tagged ‘Lebanon’


#LebLGBT #DekAbuse

This will be my profile photo on Twitter and Facebook because:

I believe that all citizens should be treated equally regardless of their sexual orientation, gender, gender identity or expression.

I am outraged by the arbitrary arrests in Dekwaneh on Apr 21st 2013 where a transwoman and 3 men were detained, and subjected to verbal, physical and sexual abuse, their nude photos were taken by cell phones and sent to the media. The Mayor was present through all that and he then confesses to his crimes on national TV. All this is documented. No investigations or disciplinary measures were taken against the mayor by authorities.

I am disturbed by what our Minister of Interior has just announced: “Lebanon is against perversion (his chosen term for homosexuality), which is considered a crime according to Lebanese law. I wonder, now that France allowed same-sex marriage would we allow them to enter our country”. How could I be more knowledgeable about our laws than our Defence Minister. Article 534 of the Lebanese Penal Code penalize any sexual act “against nature” by up to one year in prison and has been historically used to criminalize homosexuality. In 2009, a Lebanese judge in Batroun ruled against the use of article 534 to prosecute homosexuals. He clearly flaunts his ignorance when he questions whether Lebanon should allow The Gays to enter our holy nation, as if the door has been closed and the recent achievements in France on the human rights front will open that door!!! I stand speechless.

I am encouraged to speak out because I know how many want to and how little support they have to do so.

This is an adaptation of the Lebanese flag. The red says “7okouk” Arabic for “Rights”. I also like how the two red bars form an Equal sign. I wish they could have added to the flag what would represent the rights of womyn, foreign workers and refugees, all of whom are also at risk to suffer similar brutality in our rotten system.

I will keep this photo till May 17 2013: The International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHO)


Check out the English Version

بيان صادر عن الجمعية الطبيّة اللبنانية للصحة الجنسية 

هذا البيان من إعداد الهيئة الادارية للجمعية

د. رامي باز-  ريتا الحداد - عمر حرفوش - د. عمر فتال - د. حسن عبد الصمد

info@lebmash.org

  1. http://youtu.be/UXfb40nRazA
  2. https://now.mmedia.me/lb/en/reportsfeatures/transgender-club-victim-speaks-out
  3. http://youtu.be/AVcTrkZ4W2Y
  4. http://legal-agenda.com/article.php?id=356&folder=articles&lang=ar
  5. http://www.who.int/about/definition/en/print.html

Here is the Press Release by LebMASH (The Lebanese Medical Association for Sexual Health) regarding the Dekwaneh abuse case that I have previously blogged about.

For immediate release,

The Lebanese Medical Association for Sexual Health (LebMASH) strongly condemns the acts undertaken, based on orders from Mr. Shakhtoura, the Mayor of Dekwaneh on April 21st 2013. According to media reports1, personal accounts of victims2, and the mayor’s confession3 on national TV, individuals in Dekwaneh were targeted based on their perceived sexual orientation and gender identity. Three men and one transwoman were arrested and exposed to verbal, physical, and sexual abuse4.

We at LebMASH believe in the World Health Organization (WHO) definition5 of health as “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”

Societal oppression, discrimination, abuse, and homophobia/transphobia against members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community lead to a higher prevalence of psychological problems such as anxiety, depression, suicidal ideation and attempts, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and substance abuse. Such discrimination and abuse were apparent on April 21st, 2013.

The negative impact of this abuse extends beyond the individuals who were arrested. The abuse represents a threatening message sent to all LGBT individuals in Lebanon where many will fear becoming the next victim. Fear of persecution impacts one’s mental health negatively, especially in a country that still criminalizes “unnatural sexual acts” under Article 534 of the Lebanese Penal Code.

We, as health care providers and concerned citizens of Lebanon:

(1)   Call on our fellow healthcare professionals in Lebanon to speak up against these acts of abuse and their serious health consequences.

(2)   Call on the appropriate authorities to launch an immediate investigation into the events of April 21st, 2013. We insist that those who perpetuated the abuse are held accountable for their actions. We must ensure that they face appropriate legal consequences.

(3)   Call on the Lebanese parliament to eradicate the antiquated and unjust Article 534 of the Lebanese Penal Code.

The LebMASH Board - info@lebmash.org

  • Hasan Abdessamad, MD FRCSC FACOG – Obstetrician & Gynecologist
  • Rami Baz, MD – Pediatrician
  • Rita El-Haddad, BS – Psychology Doctoral Student
  • Omar Fattal, MD MPH – Psychiatrist
  • Omar Harfouch, BS – Medical Student

References:

  1. Raynbow YouTube: LBCI reports again on Dekwaneh arrest, closure of gay bar
  2. NOW News: Transgender club victim speaks out
  3. LBCI: اقفال احد ملاهي المثليين في الدكوانة
  4. Legal Agenda: فحوصات العار في الفضاء العام
  5. World Health Organization: WHO definition of Health

Imagine you get a phone call from your sister telling you she was arrested on a night out and her nude photos are already circulating online.

Imagine your closeted best-friend, who fears for his life if his family knew about his sexuality, has his name publicly posted on the door of a recently shut down gay bar.

It can happen to anyone of us or the people we love and care about, so we shall not remain silent.

The Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation, LBC TV, asked the public to submit their response to the human right abuses committed by Dekwaneh Mayor Antoine Chakhtoura on April 21 2013. That night, Chakhtoura ordered a raid on Ghost Bar that caters for gay bisexual and transgender clientele. His forces carried illegal detention of people. Victims were dragged to the municipality building, where they were insulted, interrogated, forced to undress and their photos were taken. The bar was shut down few days later and the full names and date of births of 4 detained victims were posted on its door.

A tranwoman victim reported to NOW that she was verbally, physically and sexually abused.

“They hit me and pushed me around and insulted me by using derogatory terms like ‘faggot’ and ‘half-a-man,’ then they asked demeaning questions such as how much do I make per hour and whether I enjoy ‘sucking on it,’ then asked me to strip naked and then took photographs of me.”

Here are the responses that LBC chose to broadcast:

http://www.hidepark.tv/VideoPlayer.aspx?id=MjcxOQ==

Here is my response:

 

Here is the segment of the news reporting on the abuse.

 

The mayor has already confessed to his crime on national TV:

“Of course we made them take off their clothes, we saw a scandalous situation and we had to know what these people were. Is it a woman or a man? It turned out to be a half-woman and half-man and I do not accept this in my Dekwaneh.”

So this mayor believes he can enforce his set of morals on the whole population. He played police by arresting people and he played the doctor by subjecting them to a physical. He is neither. This is a fine example of abuse of power and should be exposed and stopped.

Lebanese Lawyer Mr. Nizar Saghieh told NOW that the municipal police’s detainment of customers is illegal and should be looked into because it is a clear violation of the constitution. He urged the civil society to address the abuses as quickly as possible if the subjects decide not to sue.

Outrage is evident on social media are posters denouncing the mayor’s abuses are sprouting:

Image

Mayor of Dekwaneh Antoine Chakhtoura responsible for sexual abuses and racism

Image

To learn more and follow this story as it unfolds, follow the Lebanese LGBT Media Monitor on Facebook and @LebLGBTmonitor on Twitter.

You can also follow hashtag #DekAbuse that was created for this incident.

The #LebLGBT hashtag is always handy to follow any news related to the Lebanese LGBT movement.

Stay strong. Speak up


The country that gave Lebanon’s Penal Code article 534 now gave all its citizens the right to marry.

Article 534 criminalizes any “sexual act against nature” by up to one year in prison and has been used against homosexuals.

As France marks another historic achievement for human rights, Lebanese officials arrested 4 men and 2 transwomen in a Ghost bar in Dekwaneh, east of Beirut, just for their perceived sexual orientation and gender expression. The 6 were all Syrian nationals and also “breaking” the curfew enforced on Syrians in the municipality of Dekwaneh after 6 PM. The victims were humiliated, stripped down and even photographed, the nude photos taken by police were even provided to mainstream media and leaked to social media.

Ghost Bar was shut down. The men and women were now all released, but the trauma of such an experience will scar their lives for long. 

Congrats France, maybe it is time to colonize us again, perhaps this time you would leave us with a better set of penal and ethical codes.

http://youtu.be/CIDy3ltVqGI

On a happier note, today the Lebanese government signed the first ever civil marriage certificate. Nidal and Kholoud became the first couple to ever have a civil marriage on Lebanese soil. Khouloud said: “I tell everyone, no rights would be lost if fought for.”

PS: Before anyone jumps on my back, I am not really calling on France or any other country to “re-colonize” us for whatever reason.


Contrary to the virally spread news, marriage equality has not been fully attained today in New Zealand. A bill for legalisation was passed by Parliament (77 votes to 44) and awaits the formality of Royal Assent. If approved, same-sex marriage licenses would likely start being issues in August 2013.

This will make New Zealand the 12th country with marriage equality. The Netherlands was the first, in 2001, and it was later joined by Belgium, Spain, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, Portugal and Denmark. Argentina, Canada and South Africa are the three non-European countries in the group. Uruguay will be next after the president signs an amended bill that has been passed by the Chamber of Deputies on April 10 2013 (71 votes to 21).

Eyes are on the following countries: Andorra, Colombia, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg, Nepal, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom. In those countries the legal process has been initiated but equality is yet to be attained. Bills ensuring legal marriage rights to all citizens equally have been proposed, are pending, or have passed at least one legislative house.

In the United States of America, same-sex marriage is legally recognized in only nine states (Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont, and Washington) and the District of Columbia. Only 16% of the U.S. population live on these areas. Actually 39 states prohibit same-sex marriage (9 by statute and 30 in their constitutions). Even in states where marriage is legal for all, same-sex marriages are still mot federally recognized. The Defence of Marriage Act (DOMA), enacted in 1996, prevents the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages and allows each state to refuse recognition of same-sex marriages performed in other states. One section of DOMA has been found unconstitutional in eight federal courts. The issue is currently pending review by the Supreme Court.

In Lebanon, any talk about same-sex marriage is premature. We are yet to attain our rights to civil marriage. Yes. It’s sadly true. Even though Lebanon is a civil law country, matters related to personal status (heritage, marriage, divorce, etc.) are governed by a separate set of laws designed for each sectarian community: Muslim, Christian, Druze and Jewish. There is a system of religious courts having jurisdiction over personal status matters within their own communities. In some sects, even divorce is illegal. This adds more injustice and inequality among citizens of the same nation. Citizens with no belief system, those who seek inter-faith marriages or those who prefer the security of a civil marriage are denied their basic rights.


It is time we stand up against cultural terrorism and hate speech in Lebanese art. This Lebanese singer has been advocating for using violence against kids if you suspect them to be homosexual. He calls on womyn to stay home and serve their husband because there is no place for them outside home. Womyn should not pursue educational degrees according to Iskandar’s songs and should specialize in serving and pleasing their husbands at home. His lyrics are outrageous and offensive to say the least. A group of Lebanese feminists has protested his songs back in 2010. Recently a group of Arabs in Denmark successfully protested and were able to prevent him from singing his homophobic and violence-inciting song “Dod El 3onf”. No action has seemed to stop him and his hate speech appears to be persistent and escalating.

Raynbow and its Lebanese LGBT Media Monitor along with Helem Montreal are working on mobilizing protests against this artist’s performances in Canada. Here is a press release by Helem Montreal:

—-La version Française suivra—-

For immediate release,

An Open Letter

HELEM Montreal condemns the invitation of the Lebanese singer Mr. Mhamad Eskandar to perform in Canada. Mr. Eskandar, well known for his homophobic and sexist songs, will be performing at Place Vertu Center on September 1, 2012, and at restaurant Mazaj in Ottawa on September 2, 2012.

Montreal August 20, 2012 – HELEM Montreal issues this letter of protest today at a time of unprecedented repression and violation of basic human rights and dignity towards the LGBT community in Lebanon. In July 2012, Lebanese security authorities raided a cinema that was allegedly frequented by homosexuals. 36 men were arrested and imprisoned for several days pending investigation into their sexual orientation. The investigation consisted of a degrading anal exam during which a tool was used to detect bodily fluids and determine one’s sexual orientation. Lebanese authorities invoked Article 534 of the Lebanese Penal Code, which bars sexual relations that are “contradicting the laws of nature,” and can result in a prison term of up to one year.

Mr. Mhamad Eskandar released in 2012 a homophobic song entitled “Dod El 3enf” which translates to “Against Violence”; a slogan commonly used by the LGBT community in its advocacy against discrimination. The title was purposely used to ridicule the LGBT cause and advocacy efforts. The song starts by depicting two parents fighting because of their son’s sexual orientation and blaming the gay son for the disputes and separation of his parents. The song then describes the son as a “lover against violence” who resembles a female. Although he looks like a man, he displays the mannerism of a woman. The song also provides that from the time men stopped enlisting in the army, they became contaminated with a “disease of softness” and lost 50% of their masculinity. It also encourages the physical abuse of boys displaying any femininity. The video clip available on youtube is extremely repulsive and depicts every possible gay stereotype. It portrays men having sex in washrooms, and boys wearing high heels and playing with dolls. The video clip is available at the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uq9UpjGnl48 (MTV Lebanon removed this YouTube video on Aug 24 2012)

Mr. Eskandar has a long standing record of homophobic slurs and behaviour. HELEM Montreal condemns in the strongest possible terms the invitation for Mr. Eskandar to sing at a concert in Canada. Mr. Eskandar’s offensive art contradicts Canadian values and amounts to hate speech. It also contradicts the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and violates the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms, the Ontario Human Rights Code, and numerous provisions in the Canadian Criminal Code. In addition to bringing the artist’s appearance at the establishments where the concerts will take place to public attention, HELEM Montreal will ask federal and provincial authorities to hold the artist, promoters, and the establishments liable for any hateful or discriminatory conduct, verbal or otherwise, on the part of Mr. Eskandar that has the effect of exposing LGBT persons to hate, contempt, ridicule and homophobia. HELEM Montreal also reserves the right to seek any possible remedy, and exercise all legal recourses available under the law to defend LGBT rights and keep Canada free from hate speech and discrimination.

About HELEM
HELEM Montreal is a Lebanese Canadian LGBT, non-governmental, not-for-profit organization registered in Quebec since 2004. We lead a peaceful advocacy movement for the liberation of the Lebanese and Middle-Eastern LGBT community from all sorts of legal, social and cultural discrimination. For more information about our organization, please visit our website.

For more information: Sam K. Helem’s president at 514-781-1649

HELEM Canada ● Postal Office C, P.O. Box 353, Montreal QC, H2L 4K3
http://www.helem.net ● 514-781-1649 ● president@helem.net

_______________________________________

LETTRE OUVERTE

HELEM Montréal dénonce la venue du chanteur libanais M. Mhamad Eskandar au Canada. M. Eskandar bien connu pour ses chansons homophobes et sexistes se donnera en spectacle au centre place vertu à Montréal le 1er septembre 2012, et au restaurant Mazaj à Ottawa le 2 septembre 2012.

Montréal le 21 août, 2012 – HELEM Montréal envoi cette lettre de protestation aujourd’hui à un moment de répression sans précédent, et de violation des droits fondamentaux de la personne et de la dignité humaine à l’égard de la communauté LGBT au Liban. En Juillet 2012, les autorités de sécurité libanaises ont fermé un cinéma sous le prétexte qu’il aurait été fréquenté par des homosexuels. 36 hommes ont été arrêtés et détenus pendant plusieurs jours en attendant une enquête concernant leur orientation sexuelle. L’enquête consistait en un examen anal dégradant au cours de lequel un outil a été utilisé pour détecter les liquides corporels et déterminer l’orientation sexuelle de la personne en question. Les autorités libanaises ont invoqué l’article 534 du Code pénal libanais, qui interdit les relations sexuelles qui sont «en contradiction avec les lois de la nature», et qui pourrait entraîner une peine de prison pouvant aller jusqu’à un an.

M. Mhamad Eskandar a lancé en 2012 une chanson homophobe intitulée «Dod el 3enf » qui se traduit par «Contre la violence »; un slogan souvent utilisé par la communauté LGBT dans sa lutte contre la discrimination. Le titre a été utilisé affin de ridiculiser la cause LGBT et les efforts de lutte contre la discrimination. La chanson commence par décrire deux parents se disputer à cause de l’orientation sexuelle de leur fils et de blâmer le fils gai pour les différends et la séparation de ses parents. La chanson décrit ensuite le fils comme étant un «amant contre la violence » qui ressemble à une femme. Selon les paroles, le fils a le corps d’un homme, mais le comportement d’une femme. La chanson prévoit également qu’à partir du moment où les hommes ont arrêté leur service militaire obligatoire, ils ont été contaminés par « la maladie de la douceur » à cause de laquelle ils ont perdu 50 % de leur masculinité. La chanson encourage également l’abus physique des garçons qui manifestent un comportement féminin. Le clip vidéo disponible sur youtube est extrêmement répugnant et représente tous les stéréotypes possibles envers les gais. Il dépeint des hommes ayant des rapports sexuels dans les toilettes, et des garçons qui portent des talons hauts et qui jouent avec des poupées. Le clip vidéo est disponible sur le lien suivant: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uq9UpjGnl48 (MTV Lebanon removed this YouTube video on Aug 24 2012)

M. Eskandar à un passé bien documenté d’homophobe. Helem Montréal condamne l’invitation de M. Eskandar à chanter au Canada. L’art nauséeux de M. Eskandar contredit les valeurs canadiennes et encourage la propagande haineuse. Il contredit aussi la Charte canadienne des droits et des libertés et viole la Charte des droits et libertés de la personne du Québec, le Code des droits de la personne de l’Ontario, et le Code criminel du Canada. Helem Montréal se réserve le droit de demander aux autorités fédérales et provinciales de tenir l’artiste, les promoteurs et les établissements où il va performer responsables de tout comportement haineux ou discriminatoires, verbales ou non, de M. Eskandar qui a pour effet d’exposer les personnes LGBT à la haine, le mépris, le ridicule et l’homophobie. Helem Montréal se réserve également le droit d’exercer tous les recours juridiques possibles pour poursuivre M. Eskandar, les promoteurs et les établissements devant les tribunaux.

À propos d’HELEM
Helem Montréal est une organisation non-gouvernemental et sans but lucratif enregistré au Québec depuis 2004. Nous menons un mouvement de défense pacifique pour la libération des communautés libanaise et arabe LGBT de toutes sortes de discrimination juridique, sociale et culturelle. Pour plus d’informations sur notre organisation, veuillez visiter notre site internet.

Information : Sam K., président de Helem au 514-781-1649

HELEM Canada ● Postal Office C, P.O. Box 353, Montreal QC, H2L 4K3

Reblogged from Raynbow Blog:

----La version Française suivra----

For immediate release,

Open Letter

HELEM Montreal condemns the invitation of the Lebanese singer Mr. Mhamad Eskandar to perform in Canada. Mr. Eskandar, well known for his homophobic and sexist songs, will be performing at Place Vertu Center on September 1, 2012, and at restaurant Mazaj in Ottawa on September 2, 2012.

Montreal August 20, 2012 – HELEM Montreal issues this letter of protest today at a time of unprecedented repression and violation of basic human rights and dignity towards the LGBT community in Lebanon.

Read more… 1,268 more words

It is time we stand up against cultural terrorism and hate speech in Lebanese art. This Lebanese singer has been advocating for using violence against kids if you suspect them to be homosexual. He calls on womyn to stay home and serve their husband because there is no place for them outside home. Womyn should not pursue educational degrees according to Iskandar's songs and should specialize in serving and pleasing their husbands at home. His lyrics are outrageous and offensive to say the least. A group of Lebanese feminists has protested his songs back in 2010. Recently a group of Arabs protested his performance in a European country. No action has seemed to stop him and his hate speech appears to be persistent and escalating. Raynbow and its Lebanese LGBT Media Monitor along with Helem Montreal are working on mobilizing protests against this artist's performances in Canada.

Today I started #Lebanonissoschizophrenic hashtag on Twitter.

After a 14-day trans Canada road trip from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, I flew to Lebanon on July 1. I find it fascinating how we, Lebanese, learned to survive and even have fun in such a troubled country.

Here are few observations-turned-tweets I just sent out tonight:

  • Most foreigners want to visit Lebanon. Most Lebanese want to leave!

 

  • Lebanese womyn enjoy the freedom of going out in public wearing almost nothing but not the freedom of giving their nationality to their children!

 

  • They call it “The Green Lebanon” but most mountains are now eroded with construction!

 

  • The government fails to supply enough power to its citizens yet this is how lit Beirut waterfront is:

 

  • We have the most liberal online presence in the Arab world but the slowest Internet!

 

  • We have poor infrastructure that leads to horrible traffic jam as we drive to a live concert by Enrique Iglesias or Charles Aznavour!

 

  • Beirut is named the “gay capital” of the Middle East while article 534 still criminalizes homosexuality in Lebanon!

 

  • Security is at stake yet Lebanon has at least 6 international festivals running all at once. I can barely find a ticket to many of the concerts!

 

  • My friend borrows money from me and she drives a car I can never afford!

 

  • Everyone complains about the economy but new buildings are sprouting everywhere you look!

 

  • When a woman tells you she is getting a tattoo it is most likely for her eyebrow, eyelid, or lip contour!

 

  • Some pay hefty sums on plastic surgery but would not spare a dollar on a family doctor! Lebanon has one of the highest numbers of plastic surgeries per capita in the world. Banks advertise for loan specially customized for your plastic surgery needs and Lebanon is becoming a popular destination for plastic surgery tourism in the region.

 

  • We live in our parents’ house till we get married and we complain how our private matter is of their business!
  • A woman might pay half of her monthly income to buy a dress that she can only wear to one event.
  • Everyone claims to be secular and when a sectarian protest breaks the streets are full!

 

  • Our Lebanese society loves our legendary drag queen, Bassem Feghali, but despises any man who appears or acts feminine.

 

  • Most Lebanese have double nationalities yet we discriminate against foreign workers! Lebanon has a high rate of suicide among foreign domestic workers. Ethiopia has blacklisted Lebanon and prevents its citizens from flying there for work. To be allowed to leave Ethiopia, workers claim they are flying to Dubai but later get smuggled into Lebanon.

 

  • Most Lebanese will seek another nationality to find a new home somewhere else and after they immigrate all they think about is back home.

 

  • You can’t figure out how to hate it even if you try hard to.


The 29th Annual Conference of the Gay & Lesbian Medical Association (GLMA)
Sept 21 – 25, 2011
Atlanta, Georgia, USA

I was one of 375 healthcare professionals from across the United States and Canada who converged in Atlanta for the 29th annual GLMA conference, Sept 21 – 25, at the W Hotel Midtown.

The conference aims at improving healthcare for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) individuals. This is the largest such gathering of medical professionals in the world. With over 90 workshops and plenary sessions, this was one of GLMA’s largest Annual Conferences. Topics covered a broad spectrum of LGBT health issues. Attendees were updated  on most recent research and provided with tools to promote healthcare equality.

Besides the great educational value, the conference becomes an efficient networking tool. You strengthen old connections and create new ones. During a networking lunch, my friends Dr. Rami Baz, Dr. Brian Fitzsimmons and his partner Dr. Michael Farmer, and I shared the table with Dr. Matt Heinz, member of the House of Representatives in Arizona, and Dr. Desirey Bailey, president-elect for GLMA.

At the table, Dr. Heinz discussed his Lebanese heritage (his maternal grandfather comes from Dhour Shweir) and his experience as an openly gay politician in relatively conservative Arizona. On stage, he emphasized on the vital role physicians can play in policy making. He called upon other healthcare professionals to become politically active. Projecting from his personal experience, he believes in our potential as physicians to be essential catalysts for change. His speech was empowering.

The plenary session title “Encountering Ourselves and the Other: a Multi-faith Approach to Relational Centred Care” was intriguing. Judaism was represented by Rabbi Joshua Lesser, NHL (the organizer), Christianity by Reverend Laurie Robbins, MDiv, MA, and Buddhism by Pamela Ayo Yetunde. While the session was thought provoking and inspirational, it was disappointing to see Islam alienated. With the alarming growth of Islamophobia and further marginalization of this religious minority, it was essential to include Islam in the panel and throw a spotlight on the LGBT-affirming face of the Muslim faith.

Surgeon General Regina Benjamin spoke about the National Prevention Strategy and shared personal stories one of which highlighted her realization that cultural competency is imperative for healthcare providers. We also heard from Dr. Joycelyn Elders, the 15th Surgeon General under President Bill Clinton. I was actively tweeting their speeches that reflected the importance of reaching out to straight allies to better advance the cause.

This year’s achievement award winners included United States Representative John Lewis, Institute of Medicine (IOM), World Professional Association for Transgender Health, Atlanta Lesbian Health Initiative, Dr. C. Harris, and Harvard Medical School Kinsey Two-Sixers LGBT group.

The five-day meeting concluded with a fantastic Gala hosted by “fumerist” Kate Clinton at the famous Egyptian Ballroom of Atlanta’s “Fabulous Fox”. The historic Fox Theatre dazzled the crowd with its impressive mosque-like structure, minarets, onion domes, and an interior décor even more lavish than its façade.

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This multidisciplinary meeting is worth your time. If you are a physician or healthcare professional consider attending next year’s meeting in San Francisco, Sept. 2012.