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LGBTQ+ People in East Africa Are Showing Up for Themselves

Stories of hope, resistance, and resilience from East Africa’s queer community.

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In partnership with
Aga Khan University

While queer people across East Africa continue to face discrimination and violence, the community has also responded to many of its pressing challenges.

From revolutionizing ideas of faith, to designing sustainable futures outside of donor funded interventions, as well as improving their access to social services, this collection shows how LGBTQ+ people in a region plagued by intense and often brutal homophobia are radicalizing ideas of queerness and how it should present when confronted with violence.

Image by paul mansfield photography/Getty Images

LGBTI Activists Are Reclaiming Rwanda, One Neighborhood at a Time

Heather DockrayDanielle Villasana
Mashable

Caleb Okereke: “It will not be far-fetched for me to say Rwanda appears less than Uganda or Kenya when LGBTQ+ rights are mentioned in East Africa. In that light, this photo essay on bold queer Rwandese activists delighted my heart. The photos of them, even more so.”

Community Gardening Helps Queer Ugandans Heal From Trauma

Caleb Okereke
DW Akademie

CO: “I knew Shawn Mugisha, the central character in this piece and a trans Ugandan man, for a long time before I reported this article, and so I had seen their passion for LGBTQ+ Ugandans first hand. For the first time though, in reporting this piece, I saw it reflected in his commitment to design sustainable futures for queer Ugandans through agriculture while helping them heal from trauma. Shawn asks: ‘How do we survive?’ and I understand that to have mental and physical connotations.”

It Is Time for the Agro-Queer Conversation

Kevin Mwachiro
The Elephant

CO: “I am including this piece right after my feature on community gardening because it expounds on some of the ideas raised there. Writer Kevin Mwachiro takes us through the need for a realization of how agriculture can work to the benefit of queer people. If it feels urgent, it is because it is.”

The App Bringing Affirming and Discreet Healthcare to LGBTQ+ Ugandans

Minority Africa

CO: “When this story was pitched to me, I knew it was very important for what I believe to be quite obvious reasons. The less obvious one was the fact that it was an LGBTQ+ led intervention and it once more proved something I think I have always known; that in the face of systemic challenges, communities often rise up for themselves. And if they fail, they rise again.”

Gay, Out and On The Airwaves In Kinshasa

Christopher Clark
NPR

CO: “What happens when a gay IT technician in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital city decides to start a radio show to challenge attitudes towards LGBTQI+ people in the country? My answer is: easily a revolution.”

‘This Is Not Just My Win’: Trans Ugandan Wins Official Gender Change

Khatondi Soita Wepukhulu
openDemocracy

CO: “I will tell you specifically about how this story made waves outside of the news in Uganda: it was a big deal. Identification is a huge part of identity and for a trans woman in Uganda to have her National ID reflect her trans identity remains a big deal. In her own words; ‘My ID says that I am also here.’”

‘I Was Afraid I Was Going to Die’: Kenyan Survivor of ‘Conversion Therapy’

Khatondi Soita Wepukhulu
openDemocracy

CO: “Even though the headline says Kenya, this piece interviews LGBTQ+ people from Tanzania and Uganda as well. It is equal parts haunting as it is inspiring. I am personally averse to a celebration of survival in a manner that can numb us to the reason as to why violence shouldn’t exist in the first place, but everyone here, in these videos, in this article is worth celebrating. They survived.”

Caleb Okereke

Caleb Okereke is a Nigerian journalist and the Co-Founder and Managing Editor at Minority Africa, a digital publication covering minority rights from across Africa. As an independent journalist, he’s reported from East and Western Africa for CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera, The Guardian, NPR, VICE News, and the AFP. He has also worked as a correspondent for Heidi News.