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The LGBT community is generationally fractured, but one organization thinks it can fix that

Keeping up with younger generations of queer people has been a struggle for 72-year-old Hector Zuazo

Hector Zuazo used to spent a lot of around young people. But since the 72-year-old retired from teaching, keeping up with the younger generations of queer people has been a struggle.

And that’s not surprising.

Loneliness and isolation are huge problems for senior citizens. But those problems are even more pronounced for America’s 1.5 million LGBT elders, who are twice as likely to live alone, and four times less likely to have kids.

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To combat those statistics, one organization tried to change that by putting together an intergenerational LGBT speed mentorship pairing event this year. Zuazo was among the attendees.

“It's a great idea because we need to make young people realize what we went through and what we need to back each other up,” Zuazo told VICE News on the day before the event.

The event, which took place in Miami in April, was organized by SAGE, America’s largest organization dedicated to queer elders. And for Michael Adams, SAGE’s CEO, the need for this kind of an event is imperative.

That's because the LGBT community isn’t built around traditional family structures, he says, pointing to the fact that both young and old members are often estranged from their families. And, “We have the fact that we lived through — and fought through, and died through — the AIDS epidemic, where we lost a whole generation of people,” Adams told VICE News. “This is an experiment in how we bring all that back together.”

At the end of the night, Hector, who attended the event with his husband, Bob, had formed connections with two younger men, who he hoped to meet with again. The first could help him with technology, he explained, whereas the second wanted to learn how to cook.

Another attendee, 30-year-old Anthony Black, said he learned about the event through a young friend, also hoped to keep in touch with some of the mentors with which he’d been paired. “I think my biggest takeaway is that I can hang out with people of any age,” he said.

VICE News traveled to Miami to document one of SAGE’s very first LGBT speed mentorship pairing events.

This segment originally aired June 14, 2018 on VICE News Tonight on HBO.