
This weekend launches the annual Boston Black Pride festival, a weeklong celebration of QTBIPOC culture and community. Organized by the Boston Lesbigay Urban Foundation, the programming includes events of all kinds, from a pride parade and a music and arts festival to an R&B brunch and a fitness class.
The idea for Boston Black Pride was born during the pandemic. “A lot of our social engagement spaces were closing down, and there wasn’t a lot of representation of our Black and brown community members in the other LGBTQ spaces that were available,” said Eilakeisha Spencer, deputy executive director of the celebration and co-founder and director of operations at the Boston Lesbigay Urban Foundation. “We wanted to curate something different, and we wanted to bring Black pride here to the city of Boston.”
As the sixth year of the festival, 2025 marks the fifth year it has been hosted in person. Each year the festival has grown. The headlining performance at the music and arts festival in 2024 garnered a crowd of almost 2,000, Spencer said. Festivalgoers came to Boston from New York, Connecticut, Washington D.C., Chicago and California.
This year there is new programing, including a paint night focused on elders in the community, honoring the work they’ve done to pave the way for a new generation of Black queer folks. The Black Pride Parade was introduced
last year and will return on the schedule this year. Individuals,
nonprofits and organizations are welcome to participate in the parade.
Boston-based
artist YaMainRegret has been performing during the music and arts
festival for the last four years. She began as a poet and built a flow
from there.
“There’s
so many pride events that go on every year and I feel like I personally
never got recognized at these events,” said YaMainRegret. “Boston Black
Pride is very community oriented.”
YaMainRegret
will join 24 other artists, including headliner Dej Loaf, as well as
hosts C’Evan and Amanda Shea and DJs Jackie Mason and Nojokez at the
free music and arts festival at the Shattuck Grove Picnic Area in
Franklin Park on Sunday, July 6. The festival runs from noon to 8 p.m.;
the parade is earlier, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Boston
Black Pride runs from June 29 to July 6. The full program schedule can
be found on the Boston Lesbigay Urban Foundation website.
Spencer
says the goal is to celebrate and uplift the whole community. There are
events targeted toward youth and now toward elders, as well as everyone
in between. In a landscape where many pride events are more about
rainbow décor than positive change, Spencer hopes to see genuine
connection build during the weeklong program.
“Oftentimes
we are the ones that are left out,” said Spencer. “We are the
marginalized community within a marginalized community, so it is super
important for us to curate a space in the city of Boston to lift up our
community members and to bring them a sense of joy.”
LEARN MORE AT
lesbigayurbanfoundation.org/boston-events