Friendsgiving and Trans Day of Remembrance 2024

Family is built not born! You and yours are invited to join us for our Annual Friendsgiving Potluck! Bring some delicious good to share, on Sunday November 17th, 1-3 pm at Wander Berkshires.

Free and welcome to all members of the LGTBQ+ Community and Allies! Please come to meet, socialize, make connections, and eat good food.

Berkshire Stonewall Community Coalition will be bringing lots of turkey, but please do RSVP if you can to let us know about how many to expect and what you expect to bring. (Last minute friends who didn’t get around to RSVPing also invited.)

RSVP Here: also get more location and parking information

Please join BSCC at Wander on November 17th from 4-5 pm for a Transgender day of remembrance service and candlelight vigil after our friends-giving event.

Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDoR) was started by Gwendolyn Ann Smith in 1999 as vigil to honor the memory of Rita Hester, Chanelle Picket, and Monique Thomas. All three Black, transgender women were murdered in eastern Massachusetts within 3 years of each other. The day has since grown to be recognized internationally.

TDoR highlights the losses in our community due to transphobic bigotry and violence. It is observed annually on November 20th.

Please honor and stand with the transgender community on this day and every day. This event is free and open to the whole community

Also from Seeing Rainbows: Trans Day of Remembrance “Existence is Resistance” Celebration on November 20th

Proceeds to benefit the Trans Mutual Aid Fund. MC’d by local drag artists Sativo Green and Jayde Violet, Singer-songwriter Wylder Ayres, jepyang electronic music. open stage — all are welcome! Catering from Steeple City Social. BYOB / Non-alcoholic beverages available for purchase from WANDER. Questions? Please contact us at info@seeingrainbows.org. REGISTER HERE. Pay-what-you-can. $20 suggested. $40 sponsors another’s attendance.

Upcoming Queer History Viewings!

June 13th, 7pm at Arrowhead in Pittsfield, MA Berkshire Queer History Project hosts an eclectic screening with never-seen-before clips, spanning the rainbow. This opportunity has been made possible by Mass Cultural Council.

Address: 780 Holmes Road in Pittsfield, Massachusetts

June 25th, 7pm at David M. Hunt Library in Falls Village, CT Join Berkshire Queer History Project in the Greater Berkshires as the David M. Hunt Library hosts its first Pride Screening. Included are clips of interviews by LGBT+ people, for LGBT+ people.

Address:
63 Main Street, Falls Village, CT 06031

A statement from the board of Berkshire Stonewall Community Coalition (BSCC):

Berkshire Stonewall Community Coalition recently undertook a strategic planning process that involved interviews with board members, other local LGBTQ+ leaders, and a survey open to the general queer community. While the survey results were designed to be shared with other local Berkshire LGBTQ+ organizations and projects, the interviews were private conversations. 

Informal interview notes were recorded by the consultant carrying out our strategic planning, and anonymized when shared with BSCC. Transphobic comments about a former board member, JV Hampton-VanSant, were shared outside of BSCC and attributed to another former board member, Andrew Fitch. However, our strategic planning consultant has stated that her notes from Andrew Fitch’s interview were not included in the information provided to BSCC. 

First and foremost, BSCC would like to apologize to all who have been affected by this information. Transphobia in any situation is concerning, but hearing transphobia from within our own community is deeply upsetting. It has been a wakeup call to all of us that although the LGBTQ+ community can be affirming, welcoming, and a critical support system for many people, we are not and have not historically been a united front. Our experiences are often disparate, changing based on many factors – gender, gender expression, race, class, location, religion, and many other intersections of identity. Although we come from different backgrounds and carry different stories this does not mean that we cannot learn from others, understand their experiences, and most importantly, support each other. 

The growing issue of transphobia in the United States is one that we must face together, with support from all parts of the queer community. Intolerance is sweeping through our nation, our government, and our homes and communities. This is a moment in which allies are needed more than ever, as trans people’s rights and humanity are being called into question. Rather than dividing ourselves, we need to find ways to come together, to learn and to educate, to find common ground and to repair our connections rather than splintering further. Understanding the importance of acknowledging mistakes in order to grow, we would like to apologize for the breach of confidentiality that took place within our organization.

In light of the recent worries of transphobia, we would also like to call on North Adams Pride, our fiscal sponsee and partner, to acknowledge their problematic language around bathrooms at the Northern Lights Ball. Although there were all gender bathrooms available, the email that went out to attendees and was posted in the building also stated that there would be “cisgendered bathrooms” available as well. This language is exclusionary and harmful to our community, implying that trans people are not allowed to occupy the same space as cis people. 

Although this has been a painful moment for many of us, we would like to use it as an opportunity to learn and grow. BSCC is committed to building trust and care in our communities and we ask North Adams Pride and all our fellow organizations serving the LGBTQ+ community to acknowledge that we all make mistakes, but we are all capable of learning and doing better in the future. We look forward to continuing to build a stronger, united community together.

LGBTQ Community Survey results:

Linked here is a slideshow of 80 slides with graphs and charts from the survey completed this past December & January, with 50 respondants from the LGBTQ community in the Berkshires.

We have more information from our survey to share with local LGBTQ organizations and partners, and interested folks can also contact us at berkshirestonewall@gmail.com

Stonewall Pride Potluck Picnic

Continue celebrating Pride on Wednesday, June 21 as the Berkshire Stonewall Community Coalition resumes its potluck picnics. Come to the picnic area at Hancock Shaker Village, 1843 West Housatonic Street, Pittsfield at 5 pm with food to share and your own plate and utensils. The Village welcomes us free of charge to the first of its Sunset Celebrations, featuring lawn games, a food truck, and a cash bar, as well as the serene beauty of sunset over the historic buildings and fields. It’s the longest day of the year!

Please RSVP on eventbrite, so we know how many people to expect!

Join us at Berkshire Booked and Queer!

This Sunday is our first gathering for Berkshire Booked and Queer, online at 7 pm. Come join us online to talk about Emily Dickinson’s poetry this month, and to meet & make new friends! Check out more information and sign up for the mailing list here.

Participate to your enjoyment. Is that taking notes? Reading a few poems? lots of them? Marathoning everything? Do you just want to drop in at first and spectate people talking? Be our guest.


A BOOK.


He ate and drank the precious words,
His spirit grew robust;
He knew no more that he was poor,
Nor that his frame was dust.
He danced along the dingy days,
And this bequest of wings
Was but a book. What liberty
A loosened spirit brings! 


VII.

Wild nights! Wild nights!
Were I with thee,
Wild nights should be
Our luxury!

Futile the winds
To a heart in port, —
Done with the compass,
Done with the chart.

Rowing in Eden!
Ah! the sea!
Might I but moor
To-night in thee!

Resources for Trans Texan Youth

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” – MLK, Jr.
Stonewall Family, there is trouble brewing in Texas for transgender youth and their families. We are urging people to offer aid. There are local organizations such as Equality Texas, Transgender Education Network of Texas, and ACLU of Texas who are doing the work and connecting people with resources.
Jorgeson Pittman LLP is providing legal services who are affected by Gov. Greg Abbott’s child endangering actions.
Black Transwomen, Inc is a Texas-based organization uplifting Black Transwomen.
Further Resources for Trans Youth:
https://www.txtranskids.org/additional_resources
https://www.transtexas.org/resources
https://www.transfam.net/
https://www.equalitytexas.org/community-resources/
https://blacktranswomen.org/emergency-aid/
Please help, if you can.

-From JV Hampton-Van Sant, vice-president Berkshire Stonewall