#OnThisDay in 2001, four same-sex couples🏳️🌈tied the knot in Amsterdam's city hall, making history as the Netherlands 🇳🇱 became the first country to legalise gay marriage💒
Gert Kasteel & Dolf Pasker were one of those couples🤵🤵
“I’m very proud that it’s possible,” Gert said.
Before he could complete his sentence, Dolf added, “That we could play a little part of it. We made history.”
20 years after the first legal same-sex weddings in the Netherlands, gay marriage has taken off around the world🎉
Same-sex marriage is now legal in 28 UN member states 🌎
Europe led the way on same-sex marriage, with Belgium legalising it in 2003 🇧🇪
Spain and Canada were neck and neck🏃🏿♀️when it came to same-sex marriage legislation.
Canada's parliament passed a bill two days before Spain's in June 2005, but the law came into effect in Spain sooner 🥂
South Africa legalised same-sex marriage in 2006 and is still the only African country to have done so 🇿🇦
Argentina was the first Latin American country to allow same-sex weddings in 2010 🇦🇷
Taiwan became the first place in Asia to allow same-sex marriages in 2019 🇹🇼
In May 2020, Costa Rica became the first country in Central America to let same-sex couples marry 🇨🇷
Almost a third of adults globally think gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to marry, according to a 2016 @ILGAWORLD survey of almost 100,000 people in 65 countries💒
So where do things stand in the Netherlands 20 years on?
There are now 20,000 married same-sex couples in the country👭🏽👨🏽🤝👨🏼
In fact, gay and lesbian couples represent 1.7% of all couples who have married in the Netherlands in the last two decades 💍
Do you have any memories of same-sex marriages that you’d like to share?🏳️🌈
If so, reply below👇
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From Taiwan 🇹🇼 to Brazil 🇧🇷, these are some of the trans politicians working to make the 🌍 a better place for everyone, while creating visibility in places never seen before
In 2016, the lawyer was the first trans person to be elected to office in Venezuela 🇻🇪, and only the second in the Western hemisphere to be a member of a national legislature
Prior to her election, Adrián was already a prominent LGBT+ activist 🏳️🌈
In a year of both victories and defeats for trans people around the world, we take a look back at stories from the past 12 months that have covered their fight to be seen and heard.
"Everybody seems to think trans people don't think about having a family or the future. I want to show that the LGBT+ community are like anybody else."
Dao Minh Khang may be Vietnam's first trans father and wants acceptance for trans parents
First, some background. What is the Bechdel Test anyway?
It’s simple. To pass the test the film needs:
1⃣ At least two women in it...
2⃣ ...who talk to each other...
3⃣ ...about something other than a man
Its creator is @AlisonBechdel, a prominent cartoonist in the US. Her comics and graphic novels talk about everything from sexuality, gender roles and dysfunctional family life.
Her memoir “Fun Home,” based on her childhood, was adapted into a Broadway musical in 2013.
Allan Horsfall (1927 - 2012):
Often called the “grandfather of the modern gay rights movement in Britain”, he helped partially decriminalise male homosexuality in 1967 and founded the “Campaign for Homosexual Equality” to fight against stigma.
Lisa Power:
The first openly LGBT+ person to speak at the UN in 1991, she was out as a lesbian in the 1970s at a time when discrimination was common.
"Lesbians in 2019 are constantly vilified and excluded from the GBT community for stating their exclusive sexual preference." - @FrenchFem of #GetTheLOut
(1/3) @Openly is an impartial, independent news platform committed to reporting on all aspects of LGBT+ issues without bias. The opinion piece published on our site is not a news article and purely represents the views of the author.
(2/3) We do not endorse opinion. We are aware of the divisive nature of this issue, and the overwhelming feeling on this subject within the LGBT+ community, as reported on in our news piece here: