During the month of June, America celebrates Gay Pride Month, four weeks that commemorate the brutal police raids against LGBT patrons at New York City’s landmark gay bar, the Stonewall Inn.
It was on June 28, 1969, that a courageous group of LGBT men and women stood up for the first time against a police force that for years had been physically and sexually assaulting them and publicly humiliating them for the crime of being themselves.
“The Stonewall riots were the beginning of our community fighting for an end to harassment and persecution by standing up for our human rights,” said Eric Sawyer, co-founder of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP), one of the most famous HIV/AIDS and LGBT activist groups in American history.
The rioting that took place that night at Stonewall, in response to a police raid earlier in the day, sparked several nights of protests, and ultimately, America’s gay civil rights movement.
“Stonewall empowered the LGBT community to fight for its dignity, and AIDS then forced the LGBT movement out of the closets and into the streets, creating an LGBT army fighting for their rights and equality – a war that is not yet won,” Sawyer said.









