Leading LGBT+ Advocacy Group Withdraws Support for DC Dyke March Over Jewish Pride Flag Ban
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by Algemeiner Staff

Marchers in a Tel Aviv Gay Pride Parade. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.
A leading LGBT+ organization in the US on Friday withdrew its support from the 2019 Dyke March in Washington, DC, following the organizers’ decision to ban “pro-Israel paraphernalia,” including Jewish symbols such as the Star of David, from the event.
In a statement, National LGBTQ Task Force Executive Director Rea Carey said that her organization — founded in 1973 to combat homophobic prejudice and discrimination — could no longer support Friday’s Dyke March because of the prohibition.
Carey said that the Task Force had originally agreed to be a march partner because of its “stated focus area that is the crisis of housing displacement and gentrification in the District of Columbia.”
However, she continued, upon “learning of the decision by DC Dyke March organizers to discourage attendees from carrying the Jewish pride flag, the National LGBTQ Task Force withdrew our support for the DC Dyke March.”
Stressed Carey: “The Jewish Pride Flag is a symbol that represents the greater LGBTQ Jewish community — around the world and of many perspectives.”
Carey added that the Task Force was additionally “disappointed that this action distracts from the appropriate and needed focus on DC residents and housing policies that favor gentrification.”
Several LGBT+ rights activists and Jewish groups took to social media to praise the Task Force’s stand.
True intersectionality.
— davidrlurie (@davidrlurie) June 7, 2019
https://twitter.com/kaplanrobbie/status/1136605922401378306
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