A brief history of Vancouver Pride
“I've always been really impressed with the way Vancouver Pride Society has respected our host nations in celebrating Pride,” Glenn says: “One thing that is noteworthy about our celebrations is that they don't happen in June. Why is that? Well, going back to our very first Pride celebrations, the Greater Vancouver Native Cultural Society (GVNCS) played a role. In June, they hadn't yet elected a new Chief and Princess. It was important to everyone that the newly elected Chief and Princess be a part of Pride, so organizers moved the events to August. I just love that.”
“In 2018, the first year that I was leading the tour, I watched the parade and I noticed that each of our three host nations (the Squamish, Musqueam, and Tsleil-Waututh nations) had their own floats. They were up front and center, leading the parade, along with the GVNCS. My heart swelled with pride. This is how it should be.”
The importance of Pride
“Pride has changed a lot over the years. It's become a celebration for the whole city. It's lost the flavor of protest and defiance,” Glenn says: “But I have to admit, I like the way it's turned into a city-wide celebration. Queer people have blazed the trail in this fight, but the victory is everybody's. All of us benefit from the freedoms that queer people have won. Even folks who aren't queer are more free to be different, unique, themselves. I'm proud that queer people have blazed this trail, but I'm glad that everyone can reap the rewards. Pride is for everybody.”