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Last chance to sign up for charity place in The Grand Brighton Half Marathon

Charity places in The Grand Brighton Half Marathon close on Sunday, January 28 so runners need to sign up now to avoid missing out.

The 28th Brighton Half Marathon takes place on Sunday, February 25. General entries to the race sold out in October and charity places are now the only way to enter.

You can choose to run for over 30 partner charities, including local charities RISE, Chestnut Tree House and The Sussex Beacon, plus national charities including Alzheimer’s Society and WaterAid.

This year the race has a brand-new headline sponsor in The Grand, the city’s iconic seafront hotel, which is also on the course route.

The race is organised by Brighton-based charity The Sussex Beacon, who provides specialist support and care for people living with HIV through both inpatient and outpatient services and helps hundreds of people living with HIV in Sussex and the race is the charity’s largest annual event.

The Grand Brighton Half Marathon has become one of the most popular races in the UK since its first event in the 1990s. The 13.1-mile route takes runners from Brighton’s famous pier through the centre of the city, before heading along the seafront past The Grand hotel.

Martin Harrigan
Martin Harrigan

Race Director, Martin Harrigan, said: “At this time of year we are often asked by runners whether there are spaces left in the race and the answer is yes – via a charity place. Each and every one of our partner charities do incredible work and last year the event raised over £1 million for charitable causes, which is a breathtaking figure. We also encourage those who signed up for a general entry place to fundraise for a cause close to their heart – whether it’s £5 or £500, every little helps!”

 

London remembers ‘Section 28’ – 30 Years on

2018 marks the 30th anniversary of ‘Section 28’– which banned the promotion of homosexuality in public institutions, which lasted until 2003.

 

Tomorrow, Thursday January 18 to commemorate it, London’s LGBT+ communities are hosting ‘Jenny STILL f*cking lives with Eric and Martin’ – an appropriation of the banned textbook Jenny lives with Eric and Martin.

The night is a celebration of the activists who overturned ‘Section 28’ in person – including sharings from the National Union of Teachers (NUT) and the legendary lesbian activists who abseiled into the House of Lords.

The evening will also be the U.K. premier of  ‘We Have Rather Been Invaded’ (2017) made up of archival materials and interviews with those affected by ‘Section 28’ including Linda Bellos, Femi Otitoju, Max Biddulph, Sunil Gupta and Nazmia Jamal.

We Have Rather Been Invaded (2017) is a new 40-minute, single-screen video made by Ed Webb-Ingall that looks at the legacy of Section 28, the role of activism and our understanding of this piece of legislation thirty years on.

Rather than paint a rosy picture that ‘Section 28’ and the general police-state of education is something of the past it highlights that the struggle continues. Indeed, many believe that with the lurch to the right since Thatcher – the situation for LGBTQIA+ empowerment is far worse today than was thirty years ago.

Since Section 28, even though a lot progress has been made in the way queerness is accepted, the teaching of queer sex still remains stigmatised and its history often ignored.

Hosted by emerging comedian and presenter Sapphire McIntosh the event will catalyse 2018 as a year to celebrate queer culture and bring to life London’s history of ‘Section 28’ activism.

Followed by performances by Pornceptual it will take you on an informative journey of queer sex, something that most queer people have been denied.


Event: London remembers ‘Section 28’ – 30 Years on

Where: Limewharf Arts Hub,  Vyner St, London E2 9DJ

When: Thursday, January 18

Time: 6pm welcome – show starts at 6.30pm

Cost: £3 all profits go to the London LGBTQI+ Community Centre

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