But then, what it also provides is a broader community, it is bringing people together, it is that sense of belonging that gets created whenever you're in a collective space,” she said. “It's no different than taking our young people to something in the arts. Last year, one of the queens dressed as a Christmas tree. Upchurch said the kids have fun and get a chance to marvel at the holiday-themed pageantry, eccentric hairstyles, wigs, makeup and costumes. If somebody is not oriented towards queerness, transness, or non-binary, no one can make them be that,” she said. “I cannot overstate enough, you cannot make somebody be something they're not. She said some fear exposure to LGBTQ people will turn their kid gay, queer or trans. Upchurch said many people who harbor hate often don’t have personal experience with an LGBTQ person. To keep the atmosphere safe for kids, Ryan is urging people who agree with her to watch it stream from home Saturday and resist the urge to counter protest the group. Just as parents wouldn’t let their elementary school-aged child tune into something rated R, Ryan says drag performers don’t use racy, adult themes in child-oriented events like story times. But around here, our story times are pretty G-rated,” Ryan said. Drag is a lot of things to a lot of people. Ryan equates different types of drag with the different types of ratings for films in the movie industry. I don't know what there is to fear,” Upchurch said. “It would make sense if we were showing kids things that were just wholly inappropriate that we just know, across the board, we all agree is not appropriate, or was violent or in some way harming other people. Upchurch said she doesn’t understand the pushback. Any children in attendance would be there with a guardian, likely with a parent’s consent. The event requires the purchase of a ticket and is being held as a fundraiser, not as something the school kids have to attend. It's mean, for lack of a more sophisticated word, it's a form of bullying,” Upchurch said. She said the social media post and the attitude displayed by the group toward the community is a form of violence. “It feels really loud right now,” Upchurch said. and lately, it’s like the volume’s been turned up. She said there’s often a veil of anti-LQBTQ rhetoric and violence in the U.S. “It's had a whole entire community on edge since they posted that,” said Erin Upchurch, the executive director of Kaleidoscope Youth Center in Columbus. The Proud Boys post states they expect the Saturday event to be “wild.” Columbus police indicate they’ll have a presence there.įactions of the group have showed up at similar events in other areas, often appearing armed in videos of the interactions. “Even though there's some of that noise going on around, the LGBTQ community knows this noise, lives with this noise and goes about our business anyway, like we normally do,” she said. More than 500 people have bought in-person or live-streaming tickets to the event at the First Unitarian Universalist Church in Clintonville. Ryan said she prefers not to detail security plans, but arrangements are being made to keep it safe for participants. For us, we're really just focused on putting on a fun, safe event,” Ryan said. It's one of those things where I, where we, can't control that. Known as the Proud Boys, the group made a post on social media indicating they’d be at the event. This time around, the event garnered some extra attention from a group with a presence in Central Ohio that’s classified as extremist by the FBI and as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Outside and with little fanfare, and a lot of fun,” said Cheryl Ryan, the manager of the school which is run by its own board of directors, partially made up of the parents of students. This won’t be the first time Red Oak Community School hosted a holiday-themed event featuring local drag queens Mikayla Denise, Bianca Debonair and Ava Aurora Foxx. A fundraiser for a local, independent community school has drawn the attention of a group known for hateful rhetoric against the LGBTQ community, but the school’s leadership said they won’t be bullied into canceling Saturday’s family-friendly story hour featuring performances from drag queens.
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