Berlin’s queer community

GodXXX Noirphiles

Adrian Blount (better known as GodXXX Noirphiles):  “My gender non conforming and BIPOC friends are constantly attacked. Berlin may be liberal but it is not inclusive in any sense of the word.”

“[Coming from the States] I’d only seen cis gay men doing drag, so arriving to Berlin and seeing other genders perform, it was a huge deal to know that it was ok to do so as a femme person and to be able to reclaim and make a statement on my own femininity.”

PURRJA

“Drag is an inherently political act,” Purrja says, and it’s true—it’s at once an expression and rejection of gender and sexuality in its binary form. But Berlin’s drag especially goes beyond this as well, fostering a space for art and activism. “For a very long time I avoided political conversations because I never felt informed,” Purrja explains. “I always felt scared of making statements about things I believed in because I didn’t want to say the wrong thing, but I’m learning now being political is really important. There’s really a space for something deeper to happen on these stages. We’re all queer people, we’ve all experienced trauma, and while it’s amazing to highlight the good parts of our life, I think it’s also important to talk about the times when it’s not so great.”

Continue reading: BERLIN’S DRAG PERFORMERS ARE MAKING SPACE FOR QTBIPOC EXPRESSION (Sophie Power)