| OutFront
OUT WEST. Syed Asif Hassan will travel to Los
Angeles this month for the North American conference
of Al-Fatiha, the U.S.-based organization dedicated
to GLBT Muslims. Hassan, a Rice University graduate
student in physics, serves on the national board.
For the February 13–16 event, Hassan is
helping to coordinate the first queer Muslim film
festival. He will also speak on two panels—one
on the history and state of the Al-Fatiha movement
and another on Sufism. “That’s one
of the more inclusive communities,” Hassan
explains. “There are Sufi congregations
that are accepting of the full spectrum of queer.”
Photographed by John Conroy
THE MARRYING KIND. On February 13, 30 gay and
lesbian couples will converge at the county clerk’s
office to request marriage licenses. This observance
of Freedom To Marry Day—the annual day of
action calling for equality in matrimonial laws,
organized by an array national GLBT rights groups
and locally by Stonewall Law Association of Greater
Houston—will surely get noticed. One of
the couples, Stephanie Welch (l) and Cindy Scott,
had a commitment ceremony in 1999. Now they seek
to legalize their union. “I think it’s
going to take a nationwide effort to push marriage
equality through,” Scott says.
Photographed by David Lewis
JOINING THE CORPS. Georges Zemanek, until recently
the chairman of STAG (Some Transgenders Are Guys),
begins duty this month with AmeriCorps, the national
service program. Before leaving for the three-week
orientation camp in Florida, the 2003 University
of St. Thomas graduate reported that he didn’t
yet know his assignment. His first choice: working
with the urban homeless. “That issue is
such a problem, and one we ignore,” he said.
After his one-year volunteer stint, Zemanek, who
is 23, plans to enter graduate school to continue
his French studies.
Photographed by Yvonne Feece
If you have any comments about this article,
please email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
|