Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center

The Center's facade on 13th Street
Founded December 1, 1983 (1983-12-01)
Focus Health and Wellness Programs, Community Center, Celebrates LGBTQ cultural contributions, Center for organizing.
Location
Coordinates 40°44′18″N 74°00′04″W / 40.738255°N 74.001123°W / 40.738255; -74.001123
Website www.gaycenter.org

The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center, commonly called The Center, is a nonprofit organization serving the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) population of New York City and nearby communities. The center is located in the West Village at 208 West 13th Street, an historic building which formerly housed the High School for Food Trades.

History

In December 1983, the New York City Board of Estimates approved the sale of the former Food and Maritime Trades High School, located at 208 West 13th Street, to the Lesbian & Gay Community Services Center, Inc., for $1.5 million. In its first year, 60 groups met regularly at the center. Today more than 300 groups call the center home.

Programs produced by the center include Center Wellness, an Adult Services Department working with people with AIDS, struggling with substance abuse issues, mental health challenges and much more; Youth Services, an activities-based program for LGBT youth; Center Cultural Programs, presenting established and emerging artists, writers, and activitist to the community; Center Families, the Center's family project; and the Pat Parker/Vito Russo Center Library, New York City's largest LGBT lending library.

In 1985, the center became temporary home to the Harvey Milk High School, a program of the Hetrick-Martin Institute. The Lesbian Switchboard became a permanent tenant after it was evicted from its former home, and Dignity, a Catholic gay and lesbian religious organization, sought refuge when it was expelled from Catholic churches.

The availability of meeting space was a major organizing tool for the LGBT movement in the 1980s and early 1990s. Groups that have expanded throughout the nation, such as the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP), Queer Nation, Lesbian Avengers, and Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), had their inception at the center. At one point in the early 1990s the Center was hosting regular meetings for more than three hundred groups.[1]

Facilities and Activities

Every week, 6,000 people visit the center, and more than 300 groups meet in the building. These groups range from political activist organizations to social clubs. The center also frequently hosts speeches, performances, workshops, and commercially sponsored information sessions.

Numerous Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and other twelve-step recovery groups meet at the center. The center's Mental Health and Social Services division also sponsors support groups focused on coming out, transgender issues, bereavement, and other topics of concern to the LGBT community.

The center also houses Y.E.S., the Youth Enrichment Services. This organization provides services and support for queer and questioning youth. Programs such as both a young men's and a young women's discussion group, a gender exploration group, a safe schools network, and a variety of support groups are available to youth free of charge.

The center also hosts and documents the artistic and historic contributions of members of the LGBT Community in its archives, and its lending library has the largest selection of LBGT materials in New York. The center's cultural program includes the Campbell Soady Gallery, named in honor of major donors William Campbell and William Soady. The Gallery exhibitis artwork that celebrates the diversity of LGBT life and supports the work of emerging queerartists. The center is also home to a repository of manuscripts, personal papers, organizational files and records of the center itself. Archivist Rich Wandel oversees this all-volunteer project.

In 2014 the center also became home to The Bureau of General Services Queer Division, an independent bookstore that hosts LGBT related events.

Israeli Apartheid Week controversy

In February 2011, the center became embroiled in a controversy over a pro-Palestinian group that was to have a party in the building on March 5 during "Israeli Apartheid Week." The group, Siegebusters, planned to train activists and raise funds for another vessel to break the Israeli naval blockade of Gaza.[2][3][4] Advocate columnist and porn producer Michael Lucas threatened a boycott, claiming that Israel is the only gay-friendly country in the Middle East, that the group was anti-Semitic, and that LGBT people in the Palestinian territories are tortured and killed.[2][3] The center cancelled the party, stating that Siegebusters was not an LGBT-related group.[5] Siegebusters protested the decision by organizing an online petition; whereas Lucas hailed the decision in an interview with The Jerusalem Post.[4]

In May 2011, the center announced that it would allow the group Queers Against Israeli Apartheid to meet in their building.[6] The Center defended the move, stating that it "provides space for a variety of LGBT voices in our community to engage in conversations on a range of topics."[6] In the beginning of June 2011, the Center decided to place a "moratorium" on renting space to "groups that organize around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."[7]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.