“The black and brown stripes are an inclusionary way to highlight black and brown LGBTQIA members within our community,” said one source involved with the flag-raising event who asked not to be named. The new permanent design will be, from top to bottom: black, brown, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple. Multiple sources closely connected with Thursday’s First Annual Pride Kick-Off at City Hall have confirmed to G Philly that the city’s Pride flag will add black and brown stripes below the traditional six-color rainbow layout.
Community members - including Kaleia Brown, Wordz the poet emcee, Denice Frohman and the Philadelphia Gay Men’s Chorus - will participate in song, dance and spoken-word performances.Image of new Pride flag via its designing company, Tierney. The ceremony will include remarks from Mayor Jim Kenney, Councilwoman Blondell Reynolds Brown and Councilman Derek Green. June 8 in the North Apron of City Hall, 1401 John F. The inaugural Pride Month Kick-Off, which will include the unveiling of the new flag, will be held 3:30-5 p.m. “We as a country and as a community, we have a long road to keep those goals but this flag and this event is a start and a commitment.” Hikes added that, while the new flag won’t necessarily end racism and discrimination, its symbolism is “a massive step in that direction.” More importantly, this flag is a step toward healing for our community and this genuine unity that so many of us are saying we want.” To me, this is a chance to stop saying ‘We’re inclusive’ and to actually begin showing it. This is an opportunity for the community to come together and celebrate not just Pride but also the community members whose voices and experiences that so often get overlooked. “This is going to take the nation by storm. “This is not going to just be in Philadelphia,” Hikes said. Hikes said she believes this flag is “historic on so many levels” and will expand beyond the city. I’m really excited to use this event to highlight people of transgender and gender-nonconforming experience highlight youth and people of color for their contributions to the LGBTQ-liberation movement.” “This year, I want to celebrate people who are too often left out of our narratives. “I feel that when we celebrate Pride Month and the LGBT community at large, we focus heavily on the same voices, identities and experiences,” Hikes said. You are us.’”įor the flag-raising ceremony, Hikes said the office chose people of color as presenters and performers. “The new design is a symbolic representation of Philadelphia’s commitment to centering the experiences, contributions, activism and dedication of black and brown members of our community,” Hikes said. Hikes said the extra stripes are “simple, but remarkable.” Tierney, a Philadelphia-based advertising agency, approached Hikes and the Office of LGBT Affairs with the new design. “When I see the flag, I feel like I see myself.” “Seeing an image like this flag instills so much pride in me as a queer black woman,” Hikes said. The new flag will expand on creator Gilbert Baker’s original design by including black and brown stripes to symbolize the LGBT community’s racial diversity. Amber Hikes, the city’s director of LGBT Affairs, said she teared up the first time she saw the new rainbow flag, which will be presented at City Hall Thursday.