LGBT Pride Month Is Here
With the growth of the Gay Pride movement, symbols such as pink triangles, intended by the Nazis as badges of shame, became badges of honor. The Greek lambda (λ), the lowercase version of the 11th letter of the Greek alphabet, was first adopted as a symbol of gay liberation by the New York Gay Activists Alliance. It later was picked up by many other groups—local, national, and international—but what it signifies remains mysterious. Whatever its meaning, one is bound to see the lambda at most gay events. Still, the rainbow flag is arguably the most visible symbol of gay pride—seen on bumper stickers, clothing, pens, and a great variety of other items.
Unlike the meaning of lambda, the history of the rainbow flag is relatively fixed. It was designed in 1978 by Gilbert Baker, reportedly at the behest of gay activist and city official Harvey Milk, who thought that the movement needed a logo. The original-purpose flag was constructed by Baker with hand-dyed fabric. It consisted of eight stripes: hot pink (for sexuality), red (life), orange (healing), yellow (sunlight), green (nature), turquoise (magic/art), indigo (serenity/harmony), and violet (spirit). When it came to manufacturing that flag, however, hot pink was not readily available, and that stripe fell to pragmatism. Eventually the two blues, turquoise and indigo, became one medium (or royal) blue, and the six-stripe flag became the standard. Variants are still seen, of course, and even the original eight-stripe version is now being manufactured. Whether or not you fly this flag yourself, we hope you make time this June to celebrate diversity and the ability to be yourself and the richness and comfort these two qualities bring to our lives.
LGBT Pride Month Is Here
Reviewed by faster share
on
June 04, 2018
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Reviewed by faster share
on
June 04, 2018
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