Religious groups
led New York City's gay pride parade on Sunday, lending
gravity to an often outrageous event that also featured a
jumble of drag queens in feather boas, marching bands,
motorcycle-riding lesbians, rugby players, and samba
dancers.
''We stand for a
progressive religious voice,'' said Rabbi Sharon
Kleinbaum of New York City's Congregation Beth Simchat
Torah. ''Those who use religion to advocate an antigay
agenda, I believe, are blaspheming God's name.''
The annual
parade, one of dozens around the world, commemorates the
1969 Stonewall riots in which patrons at a Greenwich
Village gay bar fought back against a police raid.
Kleinbaum, who
heads the world's largest predominantly gay synagogue, and
the Reverend Troy Perry, founder of the Metropolitan
Community Church, were the New York parade's grand
marshals, waving from hers-and-his convertibles.
The march took
place days after the New York State assembly passed a bill
legalizing same-sex marriage, which Gov. Eliot Spitzer
supports. Although the bill is unlikely to pass the
Republican-controlled state senate anytime soon,
paradegoers said they were cheered by the assembly's
action.
''This is one
very important step toward full equality for all New
Yorkers,'' Kleinbaum said.
City council
speaker Christine Quinn, one of the nation's most prominent
openly gay elected officials, said she could not predict
when the senate might approve same-sex marriage.
''All
conventional wisdom in New York State on gay marriage is out
the window,'' she said. ''I think we are really doing
better than anyone would ever have thought we could be
doing on this.''
As in past years,
exhibitionists were also on display as the parade
inched down Fifth Avenue and into Greenwich Village. Some
revelers gyrated in bikini briefs and pranced in spike
heels
But the placement
of the Christian, Jewish, and Buddhist religious
organizations near the head of the march--ahead of
AIDS service groups and political advocacy
groups--gave them unaccustomed prominence.
A Buddhist group
carried signs that said ''Construct Dignity in Your
Heart'' and ''Don't Block Your Buddha.''
''We're all
Buddhas,'' said Hortense De Castro, a teacher from
Manhattan. ''It's just a matter of letting it come
out.''
The gay Catholic
group Dignity had a float and a giant rainbow flag. Jeff
Stone, secretary of the New York chapter, said he was
hopeful the church would someday change its stance
opposing homosexuality.
''We see that the
opinion of ordinary Catholics is changing,'' he said.
''Eventually what happens at the grass roots percolates up
in the church.''
Mayor Michael
Bloomberg marched with Quinn and other elected officials,
including Lt. Gov. David Paterson.
Toni Cinanni of
Perth, Australia, said she was surprised at the
prominence of the church groups.
''I thought the
religious groups had hijacked the parade,'' she said. ''I
couldn't put it together, religion and sexuality.''
New York's parade
featured contingents of gay police officers and
firefighters, as well as ethnic gay groups including South
Asians, Haitians, and American Indians. An Argentinian
and Uruguayan group featured an Eva Peron impersonator
in a flowing gown.
Tens of thousands
of people attended the march. Spectators lining Fifth
Avenue included gay people sporting rainbow flags and
curious tourists.
Andrew Stanley of
Shrewsbury, England, said the march was ''very
colorful.''
''I've never seen
one before,'' he said, ''but I think it's a good
idea.'' (Karen Matthews, AP)