You are reading

Queens Pride Parade and Festival to Take Place Sunday After 2-Year Hiatus

The 30th annual Queens Pride Parade and Multicultural Festival takes place Sunday Photo: Queens Pride Twitter @QueensPrideNYC

June 1, 2022 By Alexandra Adelina Nita

The 30th annual Queens Pride Parade and Multicultural Festival will be taking place in Jackson Heights Sunday and tens of thousands of people are expected to attend.

The event is scheduled for June 5 after a two-year hiatus, and is being organized under new leadership.

David Kilmnick, the president of the LGBT Network, which is organizing this year’s event, anticipates that more people will attend this year than ever before. The parade/festival is one of the oldest and largest LGBTQ celebrations in New York City.

The parade will begin at noon and make its way down 37th Avenue, starting at 89th Street and finishing at the intersection of 37th Avenue and 75th Street. The festival will be held where 37th Road meets 75th Street and go from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The parade will feature three grand marshals: city council speaker Adrienne E. Adams, and the nonprofits Colectivo Intercultural TRANSgrediendo and the Caribbean Equality Project.

The festival will feature singers, comedians, drag acts, and dance groups, as well as vendors, food options, and community and social booths.

The parade was founded by former Jackson Heights Council Member Daniel Dromm in 1993 to bring visibility to the LGBTQ community. The event was prompted by the death of Julio Rivera, a 29-year-old gay man who was killed in Jackson Heights as a result of a hate crime in 1990.

Danny Dromm at a past pride parade (Photo: Queens Pride)

The parade will pass by the corner of 37th Avenue and 78th Street, which is named “Julio Rivera Corner.”

“Queens Pride was started because of a brutal murder of Julio Rivera and the intense homophobia in our schools over teaching students about LGBT people,” Kilmnick said. “While we have made many gains in the last 3 decades, Pride remains one of the single most important events our community has every year.”

Dromm is still involved in the event. The LGBT Network created a new Community Advisory Council, which Dromm chairs. He will also join the grand marshals when the event begins.

“The Queens Pride Parade and Festival is integral to all other LGBTQ+ organizing in the borough. It must continue,” Dromm said. “As Queens Pride’s founder, I am proud to work with the LGBT Network and David Kilmnick to bring back Pride bigger and better than ever before.”

Adams said she was proud to be named a grand marshal.

“I am deeply honored to serve as grand marshal for the 30th anniversary celebration of Queens Pride,” Adams said. “Our beautiful and diverse LGBT community deserves to be supported, uplifted and celebrated.”

Colectivo was selected as a grand marshall for its work in improving the lives of the LGBTQ community. The organization, which was founded by the late Jackson Heights transgender and immigrant rights activist Lorena Borjas, provides legal counseling, free food and clothing, and education. It also aims to help marginalized members of the New York transgender community, including sex workers and those living with HIV.

Meanwhile, the Caribbean Equality Project is being recognized for its work serving the Caribbean LGBT community in New York City. The group was founded by Mohamed Q. Amin in 2015 in response to a bias attack of an activist in Richmond Hill.

The organization is currently fundraising for its 2022 COVID-19 Mutual Aid Relief Fund.

“I am honored to be a part of this new era of Queens Pride’s history- one that centers on racial justice, equity, and trans inclusivity,” said Amin, who is also a member of its Community Advisory Council. “As we continue to navigate the evolving challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic, we must keep creating spaces to celebrate our victories, tell our stories of embodied resilience, and honor those we’ve lost to pandemics after pandemics.”

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Jamaica man sentenced to life for brutal triple murder of girlfriend, her son and cousin in 2022: DA

A Jamaica man was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in Queens Supreme Court on Friday for the 2022 murders of his girlfriend, her son, and her cousin.

Travis Blake, 31, of 155th Street, was convicted by a jury last month of first-degree murder and other counts for the triple slaying in June 2022. The bodies of his victims were discovered with an array of puncture and blunt force wounds in a state of decomposition in their shared Jamaica home.

Hard Rock CEO outlines vendor opportunities for $8B Metropolitan Park casino project

May. 2, 2025 By Shane O’Brien

Hard Rock International Chairman and CEO Jim Allen addressed hundreds of Queens-based vendors and small business owners Thursday morning at the Queens Theatre, outlining how they could play a key role in shaping the proposed $8 billion Metropolitan Park casino and entertainment complex near Citi Field—if the project is awarded one of the three downstate gaming licenses up for grabs later this year.

Masked thieves steal thousands from senior woman in Murray Hill robbery: NYPD

Police from the 111th Precinct in Bayside are looking for two masked purse snatchers who targeted a 70-year-old woman on a residential street in Murray Hill and allegedly grabbed her pocketbook that contained thousands of dollars.

The grand larceny occurred just after 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 16, as the senior was walking near 45th Avenue and 196th Street, a block west of Francis Lewis Boulevard, just south of Northern Boulevard. The stranger approached her from behind and snatched the pocketbook from her hand and then fled the crime scene in a black Chevrolet traveling westbound toward Utopia Parkway. The woman was not injured during the encounter.

Beyond brunch: Unique ways to celebrate Mother’s Day in Queens

May. 2, 2025 By Jessica Militello

With Mother’s Day just over a week away, there’s still plenty of time to plan something meaningful in Queens to celebrate the special women in your life. While brunch or dinner is always a classic choice, there are also unique and memorable ways to mark the occasion with family and friends. From candle-making workshops and floral arranging classes to beer tastings and hands-on crafting, here are some fun and heartfelt ways to celebrate Mother’s Day right here in the community.

Long Islander gets 20 years in prison for ‘sadistic’ months-long crime spree in Queens: DA

A Long Island man was sentenced to 20 years in prison Wednesday in Queens Supreme Court after pleading guilty to kidnapping, robbery, and promoting prostitution for three separate incidents.

Gil Iphael, 25, of Copiague Street in Valley Stream, lured his victims to Queens locations for sex with the help of his co-defendant, then his victims were detained, assaulted, and robbed. In one instance, Iphael tried to cut off a man’s toe and threatened to mutilate his genitals.