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Brighton bus named after community activist

Brighton & Hove Bus Company have named one of their new buses after community activist and LGBT campaigner Christopher Martyn Cooke.

Pictures left to right: Silvio Grasso, Brighton Gay Men's Chorus, Rev'd Andrew Woodward, St Mary's Church James Ledward, Gscene Magazine Steve Parry, Community Activist Mo Marsh, Labour Councillor for Moulsecoomb and Bevendean
Pictured left to right: Silvio Grasso, Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus; Rev’d Andrew Woodward, St Mary’s Church; James Ledward, Gscene Magazine; Steve Parry, community activist; Mo Marsh, Labour Councillor for Moulsecoomb and Bevendean

Chris died earlier this year following a fire in his flat on the 13th floor of the Essex Place tower block off Montague Street in Kemp Town.

Chris, a well-known activist in the Kemp Town and St James’s Street areas of Brighton campaigned both for the local neighbourhoods and gay rights and was connected with a large number of LGBT and generic community organisations.

He chaired the Eastern Road partnership and the tenants association at Essex Place. He worked tirelessly and effectively on neighbourhood and community policing. He was a founder member and the first chair of the St James’s Community Action Group and secretary of the area action group. He was active in the Friends of Queen’s Park and organised the Kemptown in Bloom contest.

James Ledward
James Ledward

Commissioning editor at Gscene, James Ledward, said: “Chris loved helping other people and was an effective advocate for all communities. He would just pick up the telephone to get things done quickly. St James Street and Kemptown has been a poorer rundown place since his passing.”

In recent times Chris had chaired the Brighton and Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum and supported the Gay Business Forum. He was a former trustee of Spectrum, the LGBT umbrella strategy group and had chaired the fund-raising committee of the Rainbow Fund. He was a columnist for the Kemptown Rag and a former community correspondent for the Argus.

All this and more besides was in addition to his full time job as head of finance and fund-raising at the Sussex Beacon in 2012.

Formerly City Council Leader, Queens Park Councillor and Chair of St James’s Action Group.

Simon Burgess
Simon Burgess

Simon Burgess, a former leader of the City Council, Queens Park Councillor and Chair of St James’s action group, added: “To name a no 1 after Chris is perfect. The bus will be travelling daily through the areas, and past the people, that Chris cared about so passionately. A truly appropriate and lovely way to mark his contribution to the community.”

Steve Parry
Steve Parry

Friend and activist Steve Parry, concluded: “It will be wonderful for people who were touched by Chris to say how much our Community benefited from his involvement. He was a genuine community activist who deserves our respect. He was also a lovely guy.”

There will be a memorial service for Chris at St Mary Church, St James Street, Kemptown on Sunday, June 19 at 3pm. Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus will sing at the event which has been organised by friends and colleagues of Chris.

For further details and to indicate your attendance, click here:

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BRIGHTON PRIDE: Uniting Nations: The Exhibition

Uniting Nations: The Exhibition a unique campaigning celebration of the global Pride movement.

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Through photographs, videos and oral testimony Uniting Nations will reflect upon the state of Pride today, the celebrations, events and demonstrations that unite everyone as we all follow in the footsteps of those brave few marching for equality in New York in the summer of 1970 as they commemorated the 1969 Stonewall riots.

Connecting us with Pride events across the globe, Uniting Nations: The Exhibition, curated by Kate Wildblood and Josephine Bourne, will be an explosion of colour and diversity as we salute the courage of the activists, organisers and participants of Pride events around the world.

Every year someone somewhere is taking their first steps with Pride. Be it as one of four million people celebrating at the world record beating Sao Paulo Brazil Gay Pride Parade in Brazil, as one of a few hundred defying the hatred at Uganda Pride in Kampala or as one of a dozen brave activists defying the authorities by attending a Pride event banned by legislators in Moscow, every step counts, because every step makes a difference.

To the personal and the public as Pride organisers, participants and LGBT+ activists confront stigma, fight back against hate crime and deliver hope. Hope that we as a global LGBT+ community can achieve full equality, under the law, within families, at work, through our health services and in education.

Be it the stunning spectacle of Bali Pride, the brilliance of Hong Kong Pride, the celebrations in Helsinki, the vitality of Arraial Lisboa Pride, the carnival of Union Diversidad in Panama, those opposing Sri Lanka’s archaic laws at Colombo Pride, the dreams and hopes of Åland Pride, the refugee rights campaigning of Antwerp Pride, the activists at Zagreb Pride declaring Croatia is a country for all, the spectrum of defiant Pride colours from Guyana, the brave few at Montego Bay Pride in Jamaica or the death defying voices of Iraqueer, Uniting Nations will highlight the successes and struggles of the global LGBT+ Pride movement as we all strive for full equality.

An exhibition to inspire Uniting Nations will remind us that the global LGBT+ community is still marching and campaigning for equality. A vital and enlightening part of Brighton Pride’s 2016 campaigning theme, Uniting Nations: The Exhibition will enable everyone to connect and hear those proud voices as we celebrate the bravery and diversity of the many Pride communities across the globe. Brighton Pride unites us as we unite nations under the rainbow flag of equality.

Kate Wildblood
Kate Wildblood

Co-curator Kate Wildblood, said: “After the success of last year’s BrightonPride25 exhibition Josephine and I are thrilled to be part of such an important campaigning project for Brighton Pride. Every year someone, somewhere is taking their first steps with Pride, organising their first event or march and campaigning for equality. Uniting Nations: The Exhibition will enable us all to connect and hear those proud voices as we celebrate the bravery and diversity of the many Pride communities across the globe”.

Paul Kemp
Paul Kemp

Pride Director Paul Kemp, added: “Along side the party and celebration, it is important not to trivialise the meaning behind Pride. Brighton Pride’s campaigning theme has become a priority for us as we endeavour to highlight the lives and struggles of LGBT+ people across the world as they strive for equality. Brighton & Hove Pride has evolved over the years with more communities coming together to help us raise funds for our local groups and to celebrate every aspect of our city, regardless of sexuality, race, gender, age or ability.

“Whilst in the UK we have come a long way with equality under the law, we must not forget those who’s human rights are still denied them.”


Event: Uniting Nations: The Exhibition

Where: Jubilee Library, Jubilee Square, Brighton BN1 1GE

When: July 22 – August 7, 2016

Open times: Library open 7 days a week from 10am-5pm with later opening (until 7pm) on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Entry: Free entry

To book tickets for Brighton Pride, click here:

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