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Caroline Lucas MP to open World Aids Day Event on Brighton Level at 2pm

Caroline Lucas, MP for Brighton Pavilion, will be marking World AIDS Day this Sunday, December 1 at an event where the world’s largest AIDS awareness ribbon will be unveiled.

Caroline Lucas, MP
Caroline Lucas, MP

Caroline will be giving the opening speech at the ‘You, Me and HIV’ event at 2pm on Sunday December 1 on The Level in Brighton. AVERT, the Brighton World AIDS Day Community Partnership (a coalition of local HIV organisations), and several other international organisations have teamed up for the event.

Volunteers will lay out an AIDS awareness ribbon measuring 45 metres – the world’s largest, a symbol of awareness and support for people living with HIV, to remind passers-by that HIV is a daily reality for communities across the world and that it can affect anyone.

Caroline said: “I’m extremely proud to be taking part in World AIDS Day.

“WAD is about remembering those who have died, and supporting those for whom HIV and AIDS, along with the associated stigma, prejudice and financial hardship, remain a daily reality. Brighton and Hove has the highest prevalence of people with HIV outside of London and yet around one in five does not know he or she has the virus. If people are diagnosed and treated in time, they can now live a normal life span, and infectiousness can be reduced by 96%.

“The red ribbon is a reminder that we must continue to make this a priority. So on World Aids Day 2013 I want to particularly pay tribute to all the excellent prevention and early diagnosis work already happening in our city, as well as the continued commitment to further improvements.”

Caroline will be also be taking part in World AIDS Day events in Parliament this week, including meetings with the Terence Higgins Trust (THT), and members of the Halve It coalition, which is working to cut by half the proportion of people diagnosed late.

To find out more, CLICK HERE: 

World Aids Day: Sunday December 1: Candlelit vigil

The Brighton & Hove World AIDS Day community partnership is staging a candlelit vigil to mark this year’s World AIDS Day tomorrow, Sunday, December 1.

World Aids Day

Lunch Positive, the HIV charity who provide a free meal every Friday for people who are HIV positive, will be hosting a community café with hot drinks and a chance to meet volunteers from 4pm in New Steine Gardens. There will also be an opportunity to leave flowers and other tributes at the memorial.

The candle lit vigil and reading of the names of those lost to HIV and AIDS will take place in New Steine Gardens at 6pm. Names can be added to the reading list my emailing the Sussex Ecumenical HIV Chaplaincy: susshivchap@gmail.com. These names will also be kept for next year’s event.

A service of hope and solidarity organised by The Sussex Ecumenical HIV Chaplaincy will take place at Dorset Gardens Methodist Church at 7pm.

The partnership will also be working with AVERT, the Horsham-based international HIV and AIDS education and prevention charity, as Brighton will be hosting the world’s biggest red ribbon, which will be unfurled at 2pm on The Level in a ceremony hosted by Caroline Lucas MP.

The Brighton & Hove World AIDS Day community partnership comprises Bear Petrol, BHCC LGBT Community Safety Team, Lunch Positive, Gscene, Peer Action, Sussex Beacon, Terrence Higgins Trust Brighton, The Sussex Ecumenical HIV Chaplaincy and AVERT.

WORLD AIDS DAY CONCERT: ‘We all live together’: Sunday December 1

Tomorrow for the first time ever, all the local LGBTQ music groups (and a few of their friends) will be performing together in a concert on World Aids Day at St Mary’s Church in Kemptown, in support of Lunch Positive, the HIV charity and lunch club who provide a healthy lunch for positive people once a week.

World Aids Day Concert

The concept of the We All Live Together concert is to emphasise the importance of life and unity within the LGBT community.

Music groups performing include:

• Rainbow Chorus

• Actually Gay Men’s Chorus

• Actually Gay Women’s Chorus

• Brighton Belles (Gay Women’s Chorus)

• Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus

• Resound

• Theatre Workshop

• Qukelele

A spokesperson for the concert organisers said: “If we think about what our community has gone through during the HIV/ AIDS era (and what better time to do this than World Aids Day), it becomes more obvious how important it is that we find and learn new ways of supporting each other. In the early 1980’s (when very little was known about HIV/ AIDS) people were suffering and dying from mystery conditions and illnesses for which appropriate treatment and care was largely unavailable. It was at that time the local community right here in Brighton and Hove recognised the plight of an increasing number of its members and pulled together to successfully set up the Sussex Beacon in 1987 – a centre whose facilities and services are considered to this day to be amongst the best of their kind.”

“And whilst today the treatments available for HIV/ AIDS and related conditions have improved considerably, the stories of all those who have lived or are living with these and other conditions are a testament to how much, when all is said and done, we really do need each other.”

“As musicians, we work within our own diverse music groups to find ways to support our fellow members. Taking that one step further, the “We All Live Together” concert provides an opportunity for us all on this crucial day in our history to publicly work alongside each other as one much larger group of musicians set within a much wider community. In so doing, we hope to offer a conscious reminder to both ourselves and others of what can be achieved when we all pull together…”

WHAT: World Aids Day Concert: We all live together

WHERE: St Mary’s Church, Brighton

WHEN: Sunday, December 1

TIME:  3pm

COST: £5 tickets

To book tickets, CLICK HERE:

All profits from the concert will go to Lunch Positive

For more information, CLICK HERE:

To see Facebook Page, CLICK HERE:

STRANGER BY THE LAKE: Review

This is an unnerving psychological thriller which takes place entirely in an idyllic lakeside cruising ground.

stranger600

Its characters seem almost unmoored from society – we have almost no idea of how they live the rest of their lives – and so the cruising ground comes to represent a sort of alternative society. But one that finds itself in danger when one of the men is found drowned, perhaps murdered.

Franck (Pierre Deladonchamps) spends days at the lake, sunbathing, talking to friends, having sex. He soon becomes fixated with the coldly handsome Michel (Christophe Paou) whist also striking up a tentative friendship with a middle-aged man Henri (Patrick D’Assumçao). HenrI, who is the most fully realised character in the film, isn’t there for sex, but to stave off a loneliness which is evidently consuming him.

Alain Guiraudie, the film’s writer and director, seems to be advancing a thesis, but one that’s either deliberately ambiguous or perhaps just hard to fathom. A spoiler ahead, but it’s impossible to discuss the film without revealing one major plot point (although one revealed within the first 20 minutes). The movie depends on one character covering up a murder he has witnessed. This would be comprehensible if the crime had been committed by, say, a long-term partner. But Franck doesn’t tell anyone of what he saw simply because he has the hots for Michel. Which makes him complicit in the crime, and also partly responsible for further murders. As we don’t know Michel’s motives (is he mad or bad?) this, to me at least, makes Franck the real villain of the piece. A gay man who will willingly risk the lives of others to satisfy a sexual urge. The film seems too sophisticated to simply be saying that some gay men have so little regard for members of their community they’ll put them in mortal danger for a quick fuck (HIV+ men who don’t use condoms are morally wrong), however this could be a valid reading of the film.

The movie is also, at some level, a response to William Friedkin‘s Cruising. It has the same basic premise; and I feel one character’s anachronistic moustache and big hair points to an idea of something that originated in the late ’70s – but whether the killer represents Aids itself, or merely a character that seems to have wandered in off the set of Cruising – it’s hard to tell. The film has a fashionable non-ending which will certainly annoy some – but then a neat wrapping-up would have destroyed its ambiguous, enigmatic feel.

For more films being screened by Eyes Wide Shut, the Brighton gay film society, CLICK HERE:

Stranger by the lake: Duke at Komedia: Film Review

 

 

Lunch Positive celebrate World Aids Day with friends and supporters

Lunch Positive the HIV charity hosted a special lunch on November 29 to commemorate World AIDS Day.

Lunch Positive WAD lunch

The HIV lunch club welcomed 72 people including guests from partner organisations who support the LGBT community. Guests included Lawson Unit, Public Health, HIV Community Specialist Team, East Sussex Avenue Clinic, THT, HIV Chaplaincy, Peer Action, Dorset Gardens Methodist Church, MindOUT, CRI LGBT Brief Intervention, Gscene and Sussex Police LGBT Liaison.

Gary Pargeter, Volunteer Project Manager: “It’s important that we continue to recognise that despite improvements in HIV treatment, isolation, loneliness and stigma are still experienced by many people with HIV. There are still huge social and psychological challenges for people with HIV, and many still experience poorer health and well-being. We all enjoyed a fantastic gathering. It was hugely uplifting to have so many people join with us who celebrated the value and importance of togetherness. Our volunteer team did a fantastic job on what was one of our busiest lunch sessions.”

For more information about Lunch Positive, CLICK HERE:    

‘Hedwig and the Angry Inch’ auditions

A new production of Hedwig and the Angry Inch is being planned during next year’s Fringe Festival at the New Venture Theatre.

Hedwig & the Angry Inch

Told as an extended monologue by Hedwig during one of her concerts, she recounts her metamorphosis from the young East German “slip of a girly-boy” Hansel to the tragic Hedwig who escapes communist rule through a botched sex-change.

The musical and the film have attained cult status through the exploration of themes of gender and love that are profound and rocking at the same time.

Open auditions are being held on January 5 at the New Venture Theatre for all characters – actors (who can sing) and musicians for the band.

If your interested email: frankleon316@gmail.com OR moogsmail@googlemail.com for more information about the auditions and to book your audition slot and receive dialogue excerpts and score.

Hedwig & The Angry Inch

 

Tory MP delays Alan Turing pardon

John Leech the Lib Dem MP for Manchester Withington has spoken of his disappointment that a Tory MP’s objection to the bill to pardon Alan Turing made during its second reading in the House of Commons has delayed its progress until the new year.

John Leech MP, Lord Sharkey and William Jones who started the “Pardon Alan Turing” e-petition
John Leech MP, Lord Sharkey and William Jones who started the “Pardon Alan Turing” e-petition

Alan Turing played a key role in cracking the German Enigma Code in WW2, an act which helped swing the advantage in Britain’s favour and bring an end to the war.

In 1952 Turing was convicted of “gross indecency” because of his homosexuality and chemically castrated by the state. He took his own life two years later.

John Leech has led the campaign for Alan Turing to be granted a posthumous pardon describing him as “a Manchester hero and a national hero.”

The Parliamentary Bill, introduced by Liberal Democrat peer Lord Sharkey passed through the House of Lords in July this year. Manchester MP John Leech has been taking the Bill through its stages in the House of Commons.

John said: “I’m very disappointed that one solitary objection has delayed this Bill.  The persecution by the state for being gay is a scandal that shouldn’t be allowed to stand and it is only right that we are pushing for this posthumous pardon. Alan Turing was a Manchester hero and a national hero. He helped shorten the war and was then persecuted by the state for his sexuality. He should be pardoned and this would be a fitting way of saluting his memory. I will continue to push for a posthumous pardon for Alan Turing because I believe it is morally right.”

The Bill will be heard again for its second reading on February 28 2014.

‘To Russia with Love – Enough is Enough’ – Peter Tatchell to speak at demonstration in Brighton today

Peter Tatchell will be a guest speaker today along with Raphael Francis Fox (My Generation), Phelim McCafferty (Green Party), Russian and local activists at the solidarity demo, To Russia With Love, Brighton UK.

Peter Tatchell
Peter Tatchell

In Russia today, LGBTQ+ people and their allies are under attack, they are beaten, arrested and murdered. New anti-gay laws have effectively made it illegal to even mention the existence of LGBTQ+ people positively, let alone defend their human rights.

Currently being proposed is a law which would remove custody rights of gay parents of their own children.

The event takes place from noon in New Steine Gardens off St James Street in Kemptown.

For more information, CLICK HERE:    

What: To Russia with Love Demonstration

Where: New Steine Gardens

When: Saturday, November 30

Time: Noon

To Russian with love

 

 

Badger Cull Postponement welcomed by Hove MP Weatherley

The national pilot badger cull organised by Natural England will finish today, three weeks early and postponed until next year.

Mike Weatherley, MP
Mike Weatherley, MP

This will give campaigners time to highlight flaws in the present culling approach adopted and to press the Government to consider other options. The cull was allowed to try and stop the spread the spread of tuberculosis and other diseases.

Mike Weatherley, MP for Hove & Portslade is a strong support of animal rights and has pledged to vote against any attempt to repeal the Hunting Act. He has consistently voted in favour of animal rights and has supported a number of campaigns for better treatment of animals in the UK.

Mike said: “A break in the cull is obviously welcome news. I hope that this period of reflection can be used to consult more on the alternatives to a cull that will help reduce TB in cattle and that this matter can be discussed again soon in Parliament. My constituents take animal welfare extremely seriously and I am always keen to echo that sentiment when I represent them in the House of Commons.”

For more information about Mike’s Animal Welfare campaigns, CLICK HERE:

 

Brighton Gay Radio, World Aids Day 24 hour broadcast

Brighton Gay Radio the 24 hour local community radio station will be running a 24 hours World Aids Day broadcast special on Sunday, December 1.

Brighton Gay Radio

They will be playing music of remembrance and hope for the future, messages from celebrities, recordings of people talking of stigma and life experiences and a look back to mid 80s news reports around the time that early news stories about this new disease first started to emerge.

Information on testing and general health promotion will be broadcast along with lots of moving music from 80s Icons such as Elton John, Freddie Mercury, ABBA, Madonna and of course Jane McDonald.

To listen to Brighton Gay Radio, CLICK HERE:

 

 

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