Karen-Christine Friele
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Karen Christine ("Kim") Friele (born May 27, 1935) is a Norwegian gay rights activist, famous for being among the first Norwegians to publicly admit to her sexuality. She acted as the leader for the previously secret organization Forbundet av 1948 between 1966 and 1971, and as its secretary general until 1989[1].
Friele was born Karen-Christine Wilhelmsen in Fana in Bergen, Norway. She attended the University of Cambridge and was employed from 1958 to 1971 at the information office for insurance. She was briefly married to a childhood friend, Ole Friele, jr., from 1959 to 1961.
In Norway, Friele is credited for having influenced the abolishment of criminalization of homosexual acts in 1972 and for declassifying homosexuality as a psychiatric condition in 1978. She and Wenche Lowzow, a noted politician in the Conservative Party were among the first to formalize their partnership when same-sex unions were allowed in 1993.
She has written several books on gay rights, her authorship starting in 1972.
A bust of her was unveiled in front of the Oslo City Hall in 2005, and is now placed at the main branch of Deichmanske Bibliotek, i.e. the Oslo Public Library.
Friele is now appointed a government scholarship awardee (Norwegian: statsstipendiat) and lives in Haugastøl, Norway
[edit] References
- ^ Aldrich, Robert; Garry Wotherspoon [2001]. Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II, Lisbeth Nilsen, Routledge, 149-150. ISBN 041522974X.