October is
LGBTQIA+
History Month!
Fun facts and reasons to be proud to be UU!
UU all rock!
LGBTQ History & Facts
for Unitarian Universalists
The first General Assembly resolution on this topic passed in 1970, urging the UUA to work to end discrimination against homosexuals and bisexuals. (Wow! 1970!)
The first resolution to affirm transgender individuals and identity passed at General Assembly in
2007 and urged the expression of this affirmation through employment practices, educational
efforts, congregational life, and public witness, as well as encouraging congregations to explore
the differences between sexual orientation and transgender identity.
Welcoming Congregations
Unitarian Universalism began teaching about gay issues to youth in 1971 in the UU curriculum
About Your Sexuality (now called Our Whole Lives).
In 1989, a General Assembly resolution urged the UUA to implement the Welcoming
Congregation program (proposed by the Common Vision Planning Committee and approved by
the UUA Board of Trustees), and the first edition of the curriculum was published in 1990.
First Parish of Brewster, MA, became the first recognized Welcoming Congregation in 1991. By
1996 there were 57 recognized Welcoming Congregations; in 2000 25% of all UU congregations
"...the majority of congregations that have not gone through the program have smaller
memberships, over 85% of Unitarian Universalists attend a Welcoming Congregation.
Freedom to Marry
The first ceremony of union performed by a UU minister for a same-gender couple was reportedly
done in the late 1950s. It became more commonplace in the late 1970s and early 1980s. (1950s! Wow Again! Are you prouud yet?)
Personal Fun Facts from Cat's Own Personal Fun Facts:
Only a Queer person could manage to be married three times in two years in Unitarian Universalist ceremonies to the same woman, without ever choosing to divorce! And then be unmarried without divorce! And then be remarried a fourth time, without ceremony, to the same woman by the Supreme Court!
First: Civil Union in Vermont, performed by UU minister in Vermont.
Second: Wedding in Eugene, Oregon, in my home church, performed by my own UU minister.
Third: Marriage ceremony in Portland, Oregon, complete with marriage license, performed by UU minister. Divorced, by the One Woman, One Man amendment to the Oregon Constitution. AKA: The right to impose your religious doctrines on others, or: Their church trumps our church!
Yay for freedom of religion! Who except Queer people get to be divorced by Constitutional Amendment!
Fourth: Supreme Court affirms right to marriage equality in 2015, in Obergefell v. Hodges. REmarried! By the Supreme Court!
For more information about the UU's support of LGBTQIA+ people, about why Welcoming Congregations matter, why they're larger than other UU congregations, or any other QUUeer questions, contact Cat Pivetti (equalrightscommittee@uucfm.org).
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