NC Pride 2008

Thousands march for gay rights at Pride Parade
DURHAM -- Thousands of people converged on Ninth Street and Duke University's East Campus Saturday for the 24th annual N.C. Pride Parade & Festival.
The event to promote gay rights went off without a hitch and gave area political activists a chance to celebrate the progress they've made. "That old marginalization or alienation no longer applies to us," Chapel Hill Town Councilman Mark Kleinschmidt, one of the state's few openly gay elected officials, said in a speech before the parade. The pre-parade activity on East Campus seemed to bear that out. Businesses and churches alike were on hand to promote themselves to those in attendance. One company touted its expertise in retirement planning with advertisements featuring same-sex couples. Activists from area United Church of Christ congregations sought to recruit new members. "Our faith is 2,000 years old; our thinking is not," a placard on the United Church booth proclaimed. The church presence was a counterpoint to a protest that occurred later along the parade route at the corner of Main and Broad streets. As was the case in 2005 and 2006, a small group of people set up there with bullhorns and signs, proclaiming that homosexuality is a sin and that parade participants and spectators needed to repent. The group numbered about 40, a figure somewhat larger than those reported the last two years. In it, blacks outnumbered whites. Durham resident William Taylor Sr. was an early arrival and harangued people as they waited to cross Main Street on their way to the festival site. He carried a large sign proclaiming that "hell's fire" awaits homosexuals, lesbians, Masons, Shriners, Mormons, Moslems, Hindus, Buddhists, evolutionists, Catholics, Satanists, abortionists, Seventh Day Adventists, Jehovah's Witnesses, fornicators, idolaters, coveters, drunkards, prosperity preachers, thieves, rich people, liars, adulterers and lukewarm Christians. "I know you love lying with another woman," Taylor told one woman who was waiting for the crossing signal to change. "But God didn't create you to lie with another woman. It's an unnatural attraction." His message didn't go down well. "Thank you for screaming at me to start my morning," another woman said as she started across the street. After the parade started, there was a fair bit of crosstalk between protesters and parade participants. The protesters seemed particularly incensed whenever church groups like the delegations from Calvary United Methodist Church, Binkley Baptist Church and the Watts Street Baptist Church walked by. "What Bible do you read, hypocrites?" one shouted at the churchpeople. Most participants laughed off such comments, but one woman peeled off from the rest of her group, stopped in front of the protesters and snapped off a palm-down, stiff-arm-out salute of the type once used by the Nazis. Durham police were on hand and as the parade retraced its route back to East Campus, made a point of keeping marchers and the protesters separated by a full lane's worth of asphalt.RELATED INFORMATION
North Carolina Pride Marching Band Home Page












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