Following a decades-long struggle to open up South Boston’s famed St. Patrick’s Day parade to LGBT organizations, a different Beantown celebration managed to break down that deep-rooted barrier. On Tuesday, a small contingent of the newly-formed group OutVets became the first LGBT organization in history to march in Boston’s Veterans Day parade.
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Though the marchers, dressed modestly in matching baseball caps and navy jackets, may have seemed like just another group in the procession, they reflected a growing acceptance of gays and lesbians in the U.S. military, as well as in the city of Boston.
“For the first time in our nation’s history, gay service members and veterans are playing on a more level playing field,” said Bryan Bishop, OutVets’ founder, in a statement. “And it is time we recognize those individuals who not only served under fire in a war or conflict but simultaneously fought a war of ideals with the very nation they were fighting, and in some cases dying, to protect.”
Massachusetts was the first state in the nation to legalize marriage equality, and became the first state last week to elect an openly gay attorney general. But Boston has a more complicated record when it comes to equality.
OutVets’ participation in Tuesday’s parade stood in stark contrast to the controversial and longstanding ban on LGBT groups in the South Boston St. Patrick’s Day parade, which became a flashpoint in the gay rights movement more than two decades ago. In 1992, St. Patrick’s Day parade organizers refused to allow Boston’s Irish-American Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Group to march, a decision which was ultimately upheld in a unanimous Supreme Court ruling.
Former Mayor Thomas M. Menino, who passed away last month, boycotted the St. Patrick’s Day parade throughout his entire time in office because of its exclusion of gays and lesbians. After weeks of negotiations fell through over whether to allow the LGBT group, MassEquality, to march this year, Mayor Martin J. Walsh ended up boycotting as well. He called OutVets’ participation in Tuesday’s parade a “groundbreaking historical moment,” according to the Associated Press. MassEquality also applauded the event.
“The inclusion of the OutVets contingent in the Boston Veteran’s Day Parade is consistent with the values of Boston and our great Commonwealth,” said KC Coredini, executive director of MassEquality, in an emailed statement to msnbc. “We hope that the organizers of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade will follow suit.”
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