Why Were LGBT Jewish Pride Flags Banned at Chicago’s Pride Parade?

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LGBT Jewish Pride Flags Banned at Chicago Festivities

Over the weekend, news spread that Jewish Pride Flags were banned from the Pride Parade in Chicago. Apparently, the decision was made by organizers per a report in Windy City Times. FYI: a Jewish Pride flag is a rainbow flag adorned with the Star of David.

Group members of the Dyke march asked three individuals carrying the Jewish Pride flags to leave, according to one of Jewish pride members.

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“It was a flag from my congregation which celebrates my queer, Jewish identity which I have done for over a decade marching in the Dyke March with the same flag,” Laurel Grauer, Wider Bridge Midwest manager, told Windy City Times.

Grauer revealed that she and her friends were harassed a several times because of the flags they held.

Daily Caller shared:

“The Windy City Times looked for a response from a Dyke March collective member who claimed the Jewish pride women were asked to leave the parade because their flags “made people feel unsafe,” and the march was “anti-Zionist” and “pro-Palestinian.”

Newsweek reported that though Israel supports LGBT rights, LGBT activists often brush off Israel’s good will toward the LGBT community as  “pink washing,” instead accusing the Jewish state of attempting to detract from the continuing issues between the Palestinians and Israel.

Grauer was not the only Jewish individual harassed at the LGBT march. Windy Times found an Iranian Jewish woman who said she too was asked to leave the march.

“I was here as a proud Jew in all of my identities,” Shoshany-Anderson stated. “The Dyke March is supposed to be intersectional. I don’t know why my identity is excluded from that. I felt that, as a Jew, I am not welcome here.”

To our knowledge, this was the first time the flags were banned from a Pride event in Chicago.