Soweto Pride Explained

Soweto Pride is an annual pride parade held in the Soweto historical black township in Johannesburg, South Africa. The inaugural Soweto Pride was held in 2004[1] and it happens annually, on the last Saturday of September.

The aim of Soweto Pride is to create a space for primarily black lesbian, queer, and trans women, as well as non-binary people, to participate in pride events, engage with the Soweto community, and unite their voices on issues that affect them.

History and community background

South Africa’s apartheid history and the remnants of the legacy of racism still manifest in the mainstream pride parades in South Africa’s major cities.[2]

South Africa is considered a haven for LGBTQIA+ people and a leader in ensuring their rights are protected and institutionalized through post-apartheid 1996 Constitution which in its bill of rights explicitly provides for the protection of people on the basis of their sexual orientation.[3] This made South Africa the first country in the world to protect individuals from discrimination based on sexual orientation constitutionally. Same-sex marriage has been legal since 2006.[4]

However, black lesbian, queer, trans and women in South Africa continue to face heightened violence, discrimination, marginalization and exclusion. Soweto pride started to create an alternative space for historically excluded black LGBTQIA+ South Africans and make visible their existences, stories and experiences in an affirming and safe environment.[5]

Soweto is a township with a predominantly black, working and middle-class population, and internationally known for the apartheid suppression of the Soweto uprising (1976). As demonstrated through political moments like the Soweto Uprising, the community has a long history of radical and alternative community organizing. This community background is central to the event, which aims to politically challenge white gay hegemony and gentrification in pride parades in Johannesburg, but also confront homophobia in townships.[6] [7]

From its inception Soweto Pride centered black lesbian women. In its further development over the years, the event has engaged the broader LGBTQI+ community, Soweto local civic society organisations, and the broader community. Currently Soweto Pride involves a network of allies, families and friends that joined the event in solidarity.

Organising and program

Soweto Pride is organised since 2004 by the Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW), a black, queer, feminist non-governmental organization. It has been continuously celebrated since then, under a specific theme every year.

It starts on 24 September, in the Heritage Day celebration, and continues with a program of several activities, like exhibitions, concerts, panels and film screenings. The pride march takes place on the last Saturday of September.[8]

Impact and social reception

Soweto Pride has grown by leaps and bounds since it began in 2004 both in the number and identities of the people who attend, visibility of the issues and impact on the community. The people who have joined in the march in the most recent years 2022 and 2023 include  black LGBTIQA+ people, their friends and families as well as other races who show up in solidarity with them and the Soweto community.[9] One of the organizers of Soweto Pride, and FEW co-founder Jade Madingwane said that "there are lesbians that have money and then there’s us. The “us” would be the black lesbians who are doing political work more than the white lesbians who are just corporate’ and are part of a wealthy, ‘apolitical’ elite."[10] This highlights the importance of organizing an alternative Pride event, rooted in the traditions of political pride events such as the Stonewall riots.

Official support has evolved, from initial resistance and a lack of recognition to acknowledgment and endorsement in recent years for Soweto Pride. This state support and recognition can be exemplified with the presence of  Minister of Justice and Correctional Services in the National Assembly, Ronald Lamola gracing the 2023 Soweto pride and emphasizing  that queer rights will always be human rights. Also several members of the City of Johannesburg have show up and support the event with the city mayors over the years joining the event including launching it in 2021.[11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nkonki . Anita . October 2, 2023 . Soweto Pride applauded as a vehicle for inclusivity .
  2. Web site: Isaacs . Lisa . Feb 2015 . SOUTH AFRICA: Cape Town Pride march ‘racist’ . 17 May 2024 . www.kuchutimes.com.
  3. Web site: 1996 . Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 . 17 May 2024 . Constitutional Court of South Africa.
  4. Web site: Gay and lesbian rights . 17 May 2024 . Constitutional Court of South Africa.
  5. Web site: Sive Mjindi . November 2022 . Celebrating Soweto Pride with Siphokazi Nombande . 17 May 2024 . exit.co.za.
  6. Conway . Daniel . Feb 2022 . Whose Lifestyle Matters at Johannesburg Pride? The Lifestylisation of LGBTQ+ Identities and the Gentrification of Activism . Sociology . en . 56 . 1 . 148–165 . 10.1177/00380385211024072 . 0038-0385 . Sage Journals Home.
  7. Conway, D. (2024). Conceptualising queer activist critiques of Pride in the Two-Thirds World: Queer activism and alternative Pride organising in South Africa, Mumbai, Hong Kong and Shanghai. Sexualities, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/13634607241248898
  8. Web site: SOWETO PRIDE, HERITAGE & FILM FESTIVAL . 2024-05-16 . few.org.za.
  9. Web site: 2022-11-02 . CELEBRATING SOWETO PRIDE WITH SIPHOKAZI NOMBANDE – Exit . 2024-05-16 . en-US.
  10. Conway . Daniel . 2024-04-22 . Conceptualising queer activist critiques of Pride in the Two-Thirds World: Queer activism and alternative Pride organising in South Africa, Mumbai, Hong Kong and Shanghai . Sexualities . en . 10.1177/13634607241248898 . 1363-4607. free .
  11. Web site: September 9, 2021 . City of Joburg launches Soweto Pride to support LGBTQ+ community .