#FlyWashington Magazine Summer 2018 | Page 72

BY JAYNE CLARK THERE IS NO WAY TO MISS WASHINGTON, D.C.’S CAPITAL PRIDE WEEK. IT’S VIBRANT MIX OF BIG EVENTS, LOCAL PARTIES AND SMALL MOMENTS THAT EMBRACE THE DIVERSITY OF THE CITY AND PROMOTE AN INCLUSIVE CULTURE AS PART OF LGBTQ PRIDE MONTH. “Pride is for everybody. It’s about having pride in yourself and hopefully if you do, you’ll have pride in others and let them live their truth,” says Ryan Bos, executive director of the Capital Pride Alliance, which organizes the event. Scheduled for June 7-9, D.C.’s 43rd Capital Pride Week is one of the nation’s top five pride events and one of the few remaining whose main events are free — like a concert festival that features Alessia Cara, winner of the 2018 Best New Artist Grammy, and Troye Sivan. In 2017, more than 500,000 attended Capital Pride over the course of four days. But dozens of other North American cities, from Albuquerque to Yonkers, also stage annual pride events. The first was in 1970 in New York to mark the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall riots. In 1969, a series of spontaneous protests erupted in the days after a police raid on the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village. The demonstrations are considered a major catalyst that sparked the gay rights movement. HERE’S A GUIDE TO KEY 2018 CAPITAL PRIDE EVENTS. FLYWASHINGTON.COM 70 SUMMER 2018 D.C. Pride Parade Credit: Courtesy of washington.org