The We Demand Rally was the first large scale gay rights demonstration in Canada. The rally occurred on August 28, 1971 in Ottawa, and was organized by the gay rights activist groups Toronto Gay Action (TGA) and Community Homophile Association of Toronto (CHAT). There was a parallel rally in Vancouver that was organized in solidarity with the rally by the Vancouver group Gay Alliance Toward Equality (GATE). The rally plays an important part in the history of queer equity-seeking and gay rights in Canada, as well as the history of feminism in Canada, and has had a lasting legacy in Canadian gay rights activism.
One of the catalysts for the demonstration was RCMP discrimination against homosexuals following the 1969 changes to the Criminal Code decriminalizing certain gay acts with the passing of bill C-150. Specifically, attempts to drive out gays and lesbians working in the civil service, government, and military, along with other forms of discrimination.[1] Up to this point, discrimination against sexuality was not legally prohibited and there was no way to complain through human rights commissions. Other issues which drove the protest were the inequality of the Divorce Act, which placed homosexuality in the same category of severity for reasons to divorce as rape or bestiality, and the Immigration Act which banned gay men from immigrating to Canada.
There is a history of gay activism, focusing on education and awareness,[2] in Canada before 1971, such as the work of Ted northe, however there were no large scale organizations or demonstrations up to this point.
The Ottawa rally was organized by the groups Toronto Gay Action (TGA) and the Community Homophile Association of Toronto (CHAT). The rally contained approximately 200 demonstrators, coming from TGA, CHAT and other homophile and gay rights activist groups. The rally began with a march to the steps of Parliament Hill in Ottawa. The rally had speeches given by demonstrators such as Charlie Hill of Toronto Gay Action, George Hislop and Pat Murphy of CHAT, Pierre Mason of Le front de libération des homosexuels, and John Williams of Cleveland, Ohio.[3] [4] The demonstrators mainly consisted of white cisgender gay men. There was only one woman, Cheri DiNovo, who signed the original list of demands. The demonstrators called for the end to RCMP surveillance on gay workers, the end to medical discrimination and intervention, amendments to divorce laws, and equal civil rights to be extended to gay people and lesbians.
There was a parallel rally[5] in Vancouver coordinated in solidarity and organized by Gay Alliance Toward Equality. Roedy Green, chairperson of GATE, spoke, as did representatives from Vancouver Gay Sisters and the GLF.[6] There is some debate as to the number of attendees, with sources citing between 20 and 159. [7] [8] [9]
The groups involved presented, as part of the demonstration, a 13-page document containing a list of demands to the Canadian Parliament, drafted by Herbert Spiers and Brian Waite of TGA with contributions from 12 gay activist groups across Canada under the name August 28 Gay Day Committee[10] and signed by members of TGA. The document contained ten main demands:[11]
As a direct result of the rally, the Immigration Act was amended, removing the ban on gay men from travelling and immigrating to Canada.[12] All of the original ten demands of the rally have since been met and the laws they addressed have since been amended.
The rally led to the creation of The Body Politic by Jearld Moldenhauer, demonstrator and photographer of the rally. Moldenhauer, with a few other activists, was driven to create the magazine as a result of significant edits and alterations to an article Moldenhauer wrote about the rally and its demands for the working-class counterculture magazine Guerilla.[13] The first issue of The Body Politic was published November/December 1971 and contained articles about the Ottawa rally and its demands[14] as well as the Vancouver rally,[15] and used a picture of the rally as its cover.
On August 28, 2011, a commemorative march organized by Queer Ontario called We Still Demand was held on Parliament Hill. The march was both celebrating reforms which have won since the original rally and protesting continued inequality and issues, such as having cops at Pride events and LGBT homelessness.[16]
A conference entitled "'We Demand': History/Sex/Activism in Canada/Nous demandons: Histoire/Sexe/Activisme au Canada" was hosted on August 28, 2011, commemorating the forty year anniversary of the march.[17]