The LGBTI Elders Dance Club meets monthly at the Fitzroy Town Hall. Co-organised by performer Tristan Meecham and choreographer Bec Reid, it provides support for a marginalised section of an already marginalised group.LGBTI elders have a "lifetime of discrimination" to contend with, Meecham explains. The current same-sex marriage campaign is just one of many public and private struggles for recognition and freedom they've been forced to face over time, and the internalised bigotry "takes decades to overcome."
Going into it, this felt like a feelgood story. Being invited into a community's safe space is a privilege, and watching retirees tango to the tune of "I Will Survive" is life-affirming. Especially in the context of an immensely painful national debate over marriage rights.
It's the sadness that sticks, though. The lesbian couple in their sixties who have been in love for almost 40 years, and who politely and apologetically decline to be photographed together because they're worried about work finding out. The implicit acknowledgement that even if Australia legislates to allow same sex marriage this year, the new law will come decades too late for many. The overall sense that change comes slowly and painfully to this country, that it always has and maybe always will. The realisation that our lack of compassion is deeply ingrained.
Gordon, 81
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I've always thought young. I've tried to think of the people coming along, who have to put up with the damage we've caused. What my generation did to this world. Our generation are the worst generation, the ones who made the world what it is. It's true. But nobody mentions it. And you've got the generation behind me, who are in parliament right now, who have benefited from it and are keeping it going. Nobody has done anything about trying to stop it.
Kostas, 72
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Michelle, 64
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Janet

Max, 64
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