DC Black Pride

In 1991, Welmore Cook, Theodore Kirkland, Ernest Hopkins and other community activists saw a need to address the spread of HIV/AIDS in the Black LGBTQ+ community in Washington, DC and launched the DC Black Pride (DCBP) over the Memorial Day weekend.

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Little did they know their mission to combat and educate the Black LGBTQ+ community on the spread of HIV/AIDS and promote better care and treatment options for those living with HIV/AIDS, would ignite a movement that would impact millions of Black LGBTQ+ women and men around the world. There has been incredible advances in LGBTQ+ rights in the United States and the world since the first Black Pride in 1991. Despite these human rights advances the need for DC Black Pride โ€“ and all Black Prides still exist. Unfortunately, far too many LGBTQ+ people of African descent still feel the pangs of homophobia and transphobia in their daily lives.

DCBP continues to be held annually during Memorial Day Weekend in our nationโ€™s capital. DCBP is the Black Pride that started the Black Pride Movement.

DC Black Pride Impact Reports