Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
17 MIN LESEZEIT

From The Editor

GCN hits the streets just a day before the Pope arrives in Ireland for the World Meeting of Families (WMOF), the theme of which “all are welcome” needs to be changed to “all are welcome, except for some”. Those ‘some’ are Catholic LGBT+ organisations who had their applications for paid-for exhibition stands at the event ignored until the last minute, and then were told that there’s not enough space for them. At exactly the same time as they got the official rejection, other organisations were being off ered stands, free of charge, which suggests there was actually a surfeit of space.

The way the Global Network of Rainbow Catholics (GNRC) and We Are Church (which promotes same-sex marriage) were treated by the organisers of WMOF is indicative of a Church which is reluctant to even broach the complexities of its relationship to gay Catholics, never mind question or revise its teaching that homosexual people are objectively disordered and homosexual acts are intrinsically immoral and contrary to the natural law.

Lesen Sie den vollständigen Artikel und viele weitere in dieser Ausgabe von GCN
Kaufoptionen unten
Wenn Sie die Ausgabe besitzen, Anmelden um den vollständigen Artikel jetzt zu lesen.
Digitale Einzelausgabe 345
 
KOSTENLOS
JETZT KAUFEN
Diese Ausgabe und andere ältere Ausgaben sind nicht in einer neuen Abonnement. Das Abonnement enthält die letzte reguläre Ausgabe und die während des Abonnements erscheinenden neuen Ausgaben. GCN

Dieser Artikel stammt aus...


View Issues
GCN
345
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


Editor’s Letter
We Asked The Team
What show are you dyin' to see at this year's Fring Festival?
Focál Up!
Here We Go Again!
Here’s your official warning, brain boxes – bury those noses in your queer bibles because GCN's My Big Fat Gay Pub Quiz: Here We Go Again! is on the way.
Synth You Been Gone
Putting some zip into the dog days of September, PureGrand releases his new EP Swallow Your Doubt.
Super Mario
The final whistle has blown on the World Cup leaving queer fans of a kick-around jonesing for a footie fix. That's where Mario comes in.
Cast Your Mind
When you’ve consumed every episode of GCN’s very own Q+A Podcast, wrap your listeners around the awesome mná on the even awesome-r podcast – The State Of Us.
A Quickie with...
We have the new single from Jack O’Rourke, with its references to Greek mythology, huge chorus and sheer queer attitude, playing on a loop in GCN Towers.
Tutu Much
The all-male, high comedy ballet troupe Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo are preparing to swan dive onto the stage of the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre as part of this year’s Dublin Theatre Festival.
Queer View Mirror
Ahead of the pope’s shindig for some kinds of families, a colleague was interviewing Mary McAleese...
Following The Camino
Jane Casey is neither religious nor the ‘outdoorsy’ type, so how did walking 117KM through rural Spain on the Camino de Santiago turn out to be so her kind of thing, that she can’t wait to do it again?
The Book Guy
What’s keeping Stephen Boylan up at night this month?
Feature: Music
Modern Anthem 010: Cher's Comeback
With her part in the new Mama Mia! and a tour in the ring, Cher is on a bit of a renewed rol, but it’s not her first time at the comeback rodeo. Exactly 20 years ago she reinvigorated a lagging music career with a song that would go on to be both a record-breaking hit and the apotheosis of her gay appeal.
The Verdict
Years & Years difficult second album?
Interview
Surviving Eddy
As a stage adaptation of The End of Eddy, Édouard Louis bestselling autobiographical novel about anti-gay bullying, comes to the Dublin Theatre Festival, its director Stewart Laing talks to Brian Finnegan about his own reasons for taking on the project, toxic masculinity, and young people finding self-empowerment
Seeking Sanctuary
When aircraft engineer Sinan Shwaili and a group of fellow activists put up posters in Baghdad, hoping to help other LGBTs, little did they know that their lives would instantly fall apart.
Acting Up In Amsterdam
Robbie Lawlor of ACT UP Dublin shares his most powerful moments of the 22nd International AIDS Conference in Amsterdam, AIDS 2018, at which protests and radical messages were the order of the day
Glitterati
“The closure of The Dragon, and the curtain closing on The Panti Show both had a big impact on the community.” So says, Beth Hayden, founding member of Glitter HOLE, a gang of performers who mix their response to a percieved lack of drag diversity with radical queer politics. So what we can expect from the inauguaral Glitter HOLE Fringe show, The Fianna Fellatio Party?
Pink Fringe
There’s a stellar line-up of happenings at the Dublin Fringe Festival with a troupe of shows made by and for queers. Here are some of the highlights.
TERF Wars
The hijacking of London Pride by a group of trans exclusionary radical feminists (TERFs) last month is indicative of the rise of what seems like a bitter division within the UK’s LGBT community. But in Ireland, TERFs and trans exclusionary rhetoric have barely been seen or heard.
Opinion: Kate Kiernan
Trans-exclusionary radical feminists reflect to us the woundedness of our own community, our desire to be ‘normal’.
Photo Essay
The Dreamers
Originally from Mongolia, 22 year-old self-taught photographer and creative director, Steven Peice got his first camera when he was 18.
Identities
As LGBT continues to expand to include ever diversifying letters and identities, more and more people are exploring beyond the narrow definitions of what it means to be lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.
OPINION: Doireann O’Malley
Humans are such diverse, queer creatures, and should be embraced for their dif erences rather than oppressed because of them
Community Chest
Inside Out
Winner of the Stewart Parker Award for her play The Half Of It, actress and writer Karen Cogan brings her dark comedy, Drip Feed, about growing up female and queer in 1990’s Ireland, to this year’s Dublin Fringe Festival
Shirley’s Burn Book
Christina Aguilera, Lindsay Lohan, Katie Price and Amber Heard need to get in the sea this month.