local News: PFLAG Winston-Salem to Host Awards Banquet, p.4 Opinion: Put Your Money Where Your Rights Are, p.8 Pride 2005 Lead by Sir Ian McKellen and other high-profile homosexuals, more than 25,000 people marched in London's gay-pride parade July 2. Wockner News photo by John Hein/ScotsGay GLBTs March Worldwide Three Marchers Stabbed in Jerusalem By Rex Wockner Contributing Writer With pride season in full swing, gays and lesbians have taken to the streets worldwide - including in Panama and Greece for the first time. The marches proceeded without incident except in Jerusalem, where a reli gious homophobe stabbed three marchers, and hundreds of protesters pelt ed marchers with bottles of urine and bags of feces. About 500 people marched in the first large-scale gay-pride parade in Athens. "The only way to safeguard our rights is for everyone to understand that homosexuality is a reality and that people should not behave as if we don't exist" marcher Maria Gouma told The Scotsman newspaper. About 300,000 people turned out for pride in Paris. The procession snaked from the Montparnasse train station to the Bastille. The parade was so massive that some marchers waited hours to step off from the Left Bank starting point. About 250 people marched in Kolkata (Calcutta), India, "dressed in gaudy, revealing domes," said Rediff.com. Police made no effort to halt the parade even though homosexuality is ille gal "We want to tell the world we exist," said Teesta, a 27-year-old student More than 125,000 people turned out for Toronto's 25th parade — indud continued on page 8 Spain, Canada Legalize Same Sex Marriage By Rex Wockner Contributing Writer Now there are four. Spain and Canada last week joined the Netherlands and Belgium in extending full marriage rights to same-sex couples. Spain legalized same-sex marriage and gay adoption on June 30. The vote in the Congress of Deputies was 187 to 147 with four absten tions. The Senate had rejected the bill, but it is the Congress that has final say. Gay couples were allowed to begin the process of get ting married on July 3, when the law change was pub lished in the Boletfo Qficial delEstado. < Hundreds of thousands of people celebrated at Madrid's gay-pride parade July 2. Today, Spanish society is responding to a group of people who for years have been humiliated, whose rights have been ignored, their dignity offended, their identity denied and their freedom restricted," Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said June 30. "Today Spanish society grants them the Somewhere between 97,000 and 2 million’peo-' pie turned out for the gay-pride parade in Madrid July 2, one day before Spain's new law legalizing same-sex marriage and gay adoption came into force. Police said there were 97,000 people; El Pais newspaper (Spain's largest) said 280,000; Reuters said "hundreds of thou sands" and organizers said 2 million. "The path of the parade, decided at the last moment by the police, was really complicated because we were in streets that were not big enough, and there was a collapse," said veteran gay activist Jordi Petit. Wockner News Service photo by Yves Bohic respect they deserve, recognizes their rights, restores their dignity, affirms their identity and restores their liberty. "We are not the first [country to do this] but I am sure we will not be the last," he said. "After us will come many other countries, driven, ladies and gen tlemen, by two unstoppable forces: freedom and equality. "[This is] a small change in wording that means an immense change in the lives of thousands of citizens. We are not legislating, ladies and gentlemen, for people who are far away and unknown to us. We are expanding opportunities for the happiness of our neighbors, our work colleagues, our friends, our relatives. 'It is true that [gays] are only a minor ity but their triumph is a triumph for everybody.... Their victory makes us all better, makes our society better." Gay campaigners were elated. "Finally, gays and lesbians are no longer second-class citizens," said the Spanish COLEGAS Federation of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals and Transsexuals. "We pridefully see our selves as citizens of this great nation that is Spain where liberty and equality have triumphed at last. "Gays and lesbians are now going to take a well-deserved rest after these past several months of suffering being viewed as strange animals — and hav ing ourselves and our families observed under a magnifying glass," the group said. The European Region of the International Lesbian and Gay Association called the law’s passage a blow to the Roman Catholic Church. "Spain proved that it is a modem and continued on page 9 For information on Crape Myrtle Festival XXV, see www.crapemyrtlefest.org