#JusticeforMuhsin: Gay Imam remembered at Cape Town Pride
Pride parade celebrates queerness, love and inclusion
FC Truter walked with the Interfaith Queer Collective, wearing a #JusticeForMuhsin badge on his shoulder in memory of murdered gay Imam Muhsin Hendricks.
“There’s a big anti-gender movement on the continent which is using faith as a weapon against queer people. We believe the resources of faith offer a lot for inclusion, love and justice,” said Louis van der Riet of the Interfaith Queer Collective. Van der Riet was one of hundreds at the Cape Town Pride Parade on Saturday morning.
The group, which stands for justice, peace and compassionate faith spaces, carried placards that read “Justice For Muhsin” in memory of Imam Muhsin Hendricks, who was murdered in Gqeberha last month. Hendricks is reported to have been the world’s first openly gay Imam. He was in Gqeberha to ordain a marriage.
Thousands of people walked along Somerset Road in Green Point on Saturday morning in celebration of queer identity.
A placard commemorates murdered members of the LGBT+ community.
South Africa is among a handful of African countries where queerness is not criminalised, but placards carried on Saturday highlighted the discrimination still faced by queer people in the country, calling for inclusivity and an end to hate speech and violence.
Rainbow LGBT+ and pink-white-and-blue transgender pride flags were waved alongside Palestine flags.
Members of SWEAT joined the parade on Saturday.
Organisations participating in the parade included the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation’s LGBT+ Health Division, Gender Dynamix, and the Sex Workers Education & Advocacy Taskforce (SWEAT).
Trans and gender rights organisation Gender Dynamix marched in white, blue and pink - the colours of the trans pride flag.
Pride started in New York in 1970 to commemorate the violent police raids on gay bars which sparked the Stonewall movement. The first pride event in South Africa was held in Johannesburg in 1990. The march called for the decriminalisation of homosexuality and an end to apartheid. Cape Town had its first pride parade in 1993. In 1996, equality and non-discrimination were enshrined in the South African Constitution.
Keshia Jansen celebrates Cape Town Pride.
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