Gay parade hawaii

The culmination of Bi Consciousness Week, Celebrate Bisexuality Sunlight on September 23 recognizes and celebrates bisexuality, attracted to both genders history, community, and customs. Celebrate Bisexuality Day is the brainchild of three bisexual … Continue reading Celebrate Bisexuality Day

According to Equality Forum,"The LGBT people is the only people worldwide that is not taught its history at home, in public schools or in religious institutions. LGBT History Month provides … Continue reading LGBT History Month

Each year between November 13 – 19, people and organizations around the country participate in Transgender Awareness Week to help increase understanding about transgender people and the issues members of … Continue reading Trans Knowledge Week



Honolulu Pride Parade: Waikiki’s Most Colorful Parade

Each year, Honolulu, the epicenter of Hawaii’s “Gathering Place” island of Oʻahu, gathers together all who represent and endorse LGBTQ rights and community for the annual Honolulu Identity festival and parade.

Created by the Hawaiʻi LGBT Legacy Foundation, the festivities grab place yearly in mid-late October and represent the Aloha State’s largest sapphic, gay, bisexual, gender non-conforming and queer society event.

Love, Friendship and Aloha

Last year’s 2016 gathering was a great success, bringing together the Islands’ richly diverse and thriving LGBTQ society alongside supporting friends, families and fans. What ensued was two nonstop weeks, filled to the gills with nice times and excellent vibes, centered on celebrating all things LGBTQ — specifically the bonds of love, friendship and absolute aloha that connects us all.

Over 3,000 Attendees

The apex of the event — the Honolulu Pride Parade — which first began in 1990 was attended by a plethora of locals and visitors alike, boasting more than 3,000 enthusiastic attendees cheering on a prismatic procession of 115 floats spanning every color of the rainbow, 60 parade entra

Honolulu Pride: LGBTQIA+ Events in June 2025

 

Photo: Tien Enga

 

The Golden Gays

Through July 6, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m.

Inspired by The Golden Girls, the latest production from Kumu Kahua Theatre follows the fierce and free-spirited Aunty Maria Lani Tunta and her found family of queens. As the queens face their golden years, can they grasp at a second chance? Additional shows were just added for Saturday, July 5, at 7 p.m. and Sunday, July 6, at 2 p.m.

 

 

$8–$28, Kumu Kahua Theatre, 46 Merchant St., Downtown, kumukahua.org, @kumukahua

 


SEE ALSO: Things to Do on O‘ahu in Summer 2025 (Part 1)


 

Queen’s Surf Beach Celebration

Wednesday, June 4, 4 to 6 p.m.

Join the community for the special unveiling of a new plaque commemorating Queen’s Surf Beach as a gathering place for Hawai‘i’s diverse LGBTQIA+ Māhū community. Following remarks by the mayor and special guests, you can enjoy a picnic on the lawn, make some brand-new friends and watch the sunset.

 

Free, 2777 Kalākaua Ave., Waikīkī, queerhistoriesofhawaii.org

Hawaii Has Much To Celebrate This Self-acceptance Month, But Also Much Still To Do

History offers potent lessons, but unless known, they can hardly be heeded.

Hawaii’s first Pride event was in 1974, four years after the Stonewall uprising that marks the beginning of the modern LGBTQ+ era. But Hawaii has a far longer history of respecting the value of every individual, and has emerged as one of the few places in the world where we continue to advance rather than regress.

It’s a complex and inspiring history that deserves to be better known.

That was the motivation for the Lei Pua Ala Gay Histories of Hawaii project, an endeavor to uncover, document and honor gender and sexual diversity across the uniquely multicultural landscape of Hawaii. Our premise is that homosexual people, like others, deserve to hold our stories marked and valued on the commemorative landscape.

Most people know that Hawaii was the birthplace of the marriage equality movement — an accomplishment that will hopefully be cemented in this November’s election by the removal of Section 23, a discriminatory provision added to the Hawaii Constitution in 1998. But that is only one of many, often unspoken, histories of Hawa