Today's Out Spotlight is a group who believes LGBT young people need to be respected and cared for on the same basis as all other young people, and that when they are safe and supported in their families, schools & society they will thrive as healthy and equal citizens. Today's Out Spotlight is BeLonG To.
BeLonG To is a national organization for Irish Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered (LGBT) young people, between the ages of 14 and 23.
They provide direct youth work services to LGBT young people in Dublin and support LGBT youth groups all around the country. They support spaces where LGBT young people can meet each other, get involved in activities and see that their identities and selves are valuable and important.
Their belief is that the when LGBT young people experience problems this is are largely due to negative societal attitudes, they work to change these attitudes by training teachers and youth workers, running awareness campaigns in schools and youth services and working with government departments to ensure that LGBT young people are heard so that positive social change can occur.
BeLonG To grew out of a voluntary youth group – OutYouth – which had been meeting in Dublin on and off for over 15 years. The group was run by young people for young people with the support of Gay Switchboard Dublin. While OutYouth was often an excellent group and a model of youth work, sustaining its work was often difficult. Because it totally relied on the voluntary commitment and leadership capacity of young volunteers the group at times became unstable and even closed when youth leaders moved away or were no longer able to commit their energies.
In its final years a small number of very committed youth facilitators ran the group but also worked closely with a consultant who was brought in by Gay Switchboard Dublin to explore possible supports for the group. Part of that explorations was a community roundtable discussion to about putting together a sustainability plan for the group. The group got drew participation from most LGBT community groups in Dublin as well as City of Dublin Youth Services Board. Out of the meeting a smaller working group was formed, of individuals and representatives from OutYouth, The Gay Men’s Health Project, Gay Switchboard Dublin, Gay HIV Strategies, OUThouse and the City of Dublin Youth Services Board.
This steering group worked for two years developing policies and pocedures and funding proposals. Through this work the Youth Affairs Section of the Department of Education and Science committed to fund a new LGBT youth project. This funding was to be be administered by the City of Dublin Youth Services Board.
In March 2003 the new youth project opened for business with one full time youth worker. Soon after the name BeLonG To was adopted. In 2004 they launch Ireland first national LGBT youth awareness campaign So Gay! It was supported by the Equality Authorty, The Institute of Guidance Counsellors and Léargas. In 2005 BeLonG To had their second full time yourth worker and worked with Ire;and's Social Personal and Health Education support service to develop designated training for teachers on working with LGBT young people. This training was then rolled out around the country.
In September 2006 they held a Homophobic Bullying Seminar in partnership with the Children’s Research Centre TCD – first of its kind in Ireland. The next month The Stop Homophobic Bullying in School Campaign, was launched by Minister for State in Education Sile De Valera. It was a partnership campaign with the Equality Authority and significantly, was endorsed by the TUI, ASTI, The National Association of Principals, the Gardai, Irish Secondary Students Union and the National Parents Council. It was the largest LGBT campaign of any kind at that time. As in 2006 BeLonG To partnered with the Anti-Bullying Centre in TCD to deliver the first Irish study on LGBT young people’s experience of homophobic bullying in school. They also joined forces with the National Drugs Strategy Team and the North Inner City Drugs Task Force to carry out national research on drug use amongst LGBT young people and to develop the first and only LGBT specific drugs education and prevention service. And in response to young people presenting to BeLonG To with suicidal ideation BeLonG To delivered a submission to the National Suicide Review Group. As a result of this as well as ongoing BeLonG To campaigning, LGBT young people were included as a designated ‘at risk’ group in ReachOut, the governments ten year strategy on suicide prevention.
By further working with the HSE’s National Office for Suicide Prevention, in 2007 BeLonG To was funded to deliver a National Development Project to establish LGBT youth supports to young people around the country. The organization also produces a manual on how to set up and run an LGBT youth group. Using this resource BeLonG To develops a network of 12 LGBT youth groups in the the coming years.
In 2008 BeLonG To were appointed to The National Youth Work Advisory Committee which advises the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs on the direction of services and policy for young people in Ireland. That same year Ireland's President Mary McAleese addressed BeLonG To’s National LGBT Youth Forum in Galway, where she stated:
‘By working together ... we can overcome the bias and hostility experienced by many young gay people throughout the country. No-one should have to suffer on account of their sexual orientation.’
That same year they had established their first accredited LGBT Youth Group – Shout! In Galway and opened its Online Support Service at Christmas, operating each weekend throughout the year to support young LGBT people in dealing with any issues they may have.
In 2009 BeLonG To and GLEN were co-commissioners of Supporting LGBT Lives – a national study into LGBT mental health and wellbeing, with a special emphasis on young people. This report was launched by the Minister for Health and Children. They supported the work of a number of Oireachtas groups, this included supporting the Joint Working Group on Early School Leaving, presenting to the Oireachtas Committee on the high levels of suicide, and presenting to the Committee on Education on the experiences of LGBT young people in school.
The Office for the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs (OMCYA)and BeLonG To produce ‘Homophobic Bullying Guidelines for the Youth Sector’. BeLonG advocated to having LGBT people in included in the National Drugs Strategy as a group that need greater support and working in partnership with the National Association of Principals & Deputy Principals, the Equality Authority and GLEN to deliver training to principals and schools to assist them in addressing homophobia and homophobic bullying in Irish schools. Their second accredited LGBT Youth Group in Limerick was created.
In 2010 BeLonG To launched the first ever LGBT Awareess week in Ireland, Stand Up! Show support for your LGBT friends. The first year of the campaign focuses on the Youth Work Sector. The 2013 campaign was last just last week.
Michael Barron, the director of BeLonG To, was been invited to the White House for a series of meeting with senior administration officials marking St. Patrick’s Day.
The unprecedented invitation came in recognition of BeLonG To’s groundbreaking work nationally and internationally to combat bullying in schools and to support LGBT young people facing harassment and discrimination.
Showing posts with label BeLonG To. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BeLonG To. Show all posts
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Out Spotlight
Beannachtaí na Féile Pádraig oraibh!
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Labels: BeLonG To, Happy St. Patrick's Day, Out Spotlight
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