Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is
both the world’s largest LGBT+ event and one of Australia’s most famous
and well-loved events. From February 16th – March 4th 2018 hundreds of
thousands of people from around Australia and overseas celebrated “40
Years of Love”, as the first march took place on Saturday 24th June
1978. There are a variety of events to enjoy, like the Sydney Mardi Gras
Parade and Party, Bondi Beach Drag Races, Harbour Party, the academic
discussion panel Queer Thinking, Mardi Gras Film Festival, and Fair Day,
which over 70,000 people attend in Victoria Park, Sydney. This is also
New South Wales’ second-largest annual event in terms of economic
impact, which generates an annual income of about A$30 million for the
state each year.
This year’s Mardi Gras celebrated “40 Years of Love” with a huge
inflatable art installation, which will take pride of place at Taylor
Square. The creators describe the installation as “big, bold and sassy
artwork based on concepts of public protest, joyous celebration,
community activation and engagement”. It was announced as the winner of
the Taylor Square Public Art Project today by Lord Mayor Clover Moore.
Mardi
Gras does retain a political flavour from its beginnings, with many
marching groups and floats promoting LGBT+ rights issues or themes. The
annual event comes from humble beginnings of only 300 marchers,
protesting attempts to stop gay rights supporters and the Australian
visit of homophobic Festival of Light campaigner Mary Whitehouse. During
the march and in the months following, more protests and arrests took
place– but less than a year later, in April 1979, the Parliament of New
South Wales repealed the NSW Summary Offences Act legislation that had
allowed the arrests to be made and created a new Public Assemblies Act.
This was a major civil rights milestone beyond the gay community, and
thus the 2nd (now annual) Mardi Gras in 1979 had approx 3,000 people in
attendance and grew to the hundreds of thousands in the 2018 event.
Today the parade includes groups of uniformed Australian Defence Force
personnel, police officers from New South Wales State Police, as well as
interstate and federal police officers, firefighters and other
emergency services personnel from the Australian LGBT+ communities. You can read the full history here.
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