Oakland Black Pride Festival offers safe space for Black and queer folks

Oakland Black Pride festival goer. Photo courtesy of Bryon Malik Photo: www.bryonmalikphoto.com

Many cities and towns, big and small, have gay pride celebrations. Why is there a need for Black Pride in addition to or in lieu of? Why would a town formerly referred to as a “chocolate city” have a need for more than one Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Queer or Questioning + (LGBTQ+) Pride celebration?

“We don’t want to have to code switch anymore.”

Olaywa Austin

“We don’t want to have to code switch anymore,” according to the Oakland Black Pride (OBP) Founder Olaywa Austin. They added that “Pride” gatherings were created so that people can be their most authentic self, free of judgment. “We don’t have to justify our existence in that space,” Austin said of Black Pride events.

Which is why they created OBP three years ago. Austin, an Oakland native, attended a Black Pride celebration in Rochester, NY in 2019 and decided to launch a Black Pride for Oakland in 2020. Although there were already Black-centered events alongside Oakland Pride/Pridefest, founded in 2010, Austin still felt a need to provide Black Pride.

Austin, who uses the pronouns she and/or they, did not feel completely included in existing Gay Pride events. She also liked the idea of a collaborative community event that was intentionally set up and supportive, not just a celebration and or parade. One that acknowledged the Black beginnings of Pride marches and parades, due to forefolks and trailblazers like Marsha P. Johnson, a gay rights activist who participated in the resistance at the Stonewall Inn and beyond.

Oakland’s Black Pride (OBP) is a four day-event that culminates with a ball or a cookout. OBP includes a breaking bread fundraiser. This meal features a chef that is Black or a person of color, alongside an upcoming chef that is queer or trans and a Black, Indigenous, or Person of Color, in order to feature and promote their career. OBP also includes/features a kickball tournament, pub crawl, and expo, with workshops and panel discussions.

One of the most heavily attended workshops was one called “How to Navigate Grief and Loss Through Joy.” Seeing a need for this type of event affirmed the “need for these types of spaces,” Austin said. OBP started and hosts a multi–day program to allow multiple ways for the LGBTQ+ community to engage. The expo also included a kids corner and food trucks serving soul food and cajun food. 

Having relatable food, meaningful workshops, supporting Black business and entrepreneurship, was all a part of the mission, according to its founder.

Donations and volunteers fuel Oakland Black Pride, a non-profit organization. Beyond the Black Pride Festival, held the last weekend of June, there are also monthly social circles and a holiday expo held in December.

Though it is created to be an inclusive space by and for Black people, it is not an exclusive space. Oakland’s Black Pride supports and welcomes allies, those who do or don’t identify as Black or queer, yet support its mission.

OBP is a series of events, collaborative and community driven. It showcases and supports LGBTQ Black folks and is growing. Volunteers and feedback are welcome.

Cheers! Celebrating Oakland Black Pride. Photo courtesy of Bryon Malik Photo: www.bryonmalikphoto.com.

“For so much of our history on this land, we have not been able to come together at the intersections of being of African descent and being queer identified in ways that are visible and celebrated.”

Eric Avery

Eric Avery attended for his first time this year. He attended both the bar crawl and the expo. “I had a great time at both!” he exclaimed. “Bars aren’t really my thing, but I feel like having so many folks of color there made it more comfortable. I felt like I could be myself. It was just so welcoming,” he said.

“At the expo, it was just so cool to see folks expressing their artistry,” Avery said. “Organizing, healing, building wealth, just doing so many rad projects.” He said that he enjoyed the,“powerful expression of creativity and innovative energy that is in this community, because it has always existed, historically.” He was excited to see “the Oakland specific version.”

Women dance at Oakland Black Pride. Photo courtesy of Bryon Malik Photo: www.bryonmalikphoto.com

Black Pride celebrations offer a space for many people whose identities have intersections and who have not been made to feel welcome in this country because of who they are. “For so much of our history on this land, we have not been able to come together at the intersections of being of African descent and being queer identified in ways that are visible and celebrated,” Avery said. After moving to Oakland this year, attending made him feel welcome..

Dominic Jones attended past Oakland Black Pride events. He was happy to be able to celebrate Pride in a way that “felt like Oakland.” The same weekend San Francisco Pride was happening, he went to a party in downtown Oakland. “It was more comfortable,” Jones said. He said Black Pride events are important to “have a safe space for people who are both Black and Queer.”

Even though Oakland has been throwing Black centered queer events year round and during Oakland Pride, it is important to some Oaklanders that Oakland have its own Black Pride. A place where people can gather around things that matter to them and their community and celebrate in meaningful, yet relaxed ways. Like Austin mentioned, queer Black people have to do enough code switching in this society. For attendees and its founder, it is important that intentional time and space be made to celebrate, honor, and elevate their lives and experiences.


All photos courtesy of Bryon Malik Photo: www.bryonmalikphoto.com

Author Profile

Tanna Samone was born in “The City” and raised in “The Town.” She has gratefully served both San Francisco and Oakland in Emergency Medical Services and Education. Community journalism is community service. Oakland Voices is an opportunity for her to serve information for and from its residents, her neighbors.

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