Celebrating National Pride Month in Ottawa | Page 26 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: June 1, 2026 - 13:46

Stay informed

Celebrating National Pride Month in Ottawa

June 1, 2026
This month, Ottawa joins communities across Canada in celebrating National Pride Month. June is a time to uplift the voices, histories and contributions of 2SLGBTQQIA+ people.

This month, Ottawa joins communities across Canada in celebrating National Pride Month. June is a time to uplift the voices, histories and contributions of 2SLGBTQQIA+ people. It is both a celebration of progress and a moment of reflection to recognize the resilience of queer communities while also acknowledging that the path to equality continues.

Throughout June, residents and visitors are invited to take part in a range of activities that highlight the 2SLGBTQQIA+ experiences. 

Drag the Archive

Drag the Archive is an exhibition that brings Ottawa’s queer history to life through collaboration, research and art.

Peaches LaTour se produisant sur scène.Photo, album de Peaches LaTourArchives de la Ville d’Ottawa | CA028540

Developed by Carleton University students in partnership with the City of Ottawa Equity Team and the City of Ottawa Archives, Drag the Archive offers a powerful visual exploration of queer identity and expression. Through photography, the exhibition shines a spotlight on drag performer Paul “Peaches Latour” Fournier and queer rights advocate, editor, journalist and diplomat Philip Hannan.

Their stories are on display until Saturday, December 12 at the City of Ottawa Archives’ Gallery 112 located in the James K. Bartleman Centre (100 Tallwood Drive). They depict the depth and diversity of not just Ottawa’s queer past, but of Canada’s. The project celebrates drag performance and queer gender expression across the country. Through carefully curated selections of archival records, students bring forward a powerful visual narrative that highlights local histories while connecting them to broader traditions of queer gender expression.

Photo, Armando/Armandette collectionCity of Ottawa Archives | CA028548 History of Gays Ottawa

The Historical Society of Ottawa will be hosting The Historical Society of Ottawa presents: "History of Gays of Ottawa"  at the Main branch of Ottawa Public Library on Saturday, June 20 at 1:30 pm. The talk explores Gays of Ottawa (1971–1995), the city’s first 2SLGBTQQIA+ organization, highlighting its role in providing social services, leading activism and awareness efforts and building community.

While Pride Month is nationally recognized in June, Ottawa’s Pride celebrations take place in August. In 1971, activists gathered on Parliament Hill on August 28 to present the federal government with a list of ten demands for equal rights. Known as the “We Demand” rally, it marked one of Canada’s first major public demonstrations for 2SLGBTQQIA+ rights and laid the groundwork for decades of advocacy and progress. 

Pride in Ottawa brings both celebration and reflection. From archival exhibits to community gatherings, the city offers countless opportunities to learn, connect, and most importantly, take pride.



Unpublished Newswire

 
A limp hand sticks out through the bars of a metal fence, where a man is lying unconscious on the hot pavement. Read More
June 19, 2026 - 04:00 | Olivia Belovich | Ottawa Citizen
OTTAWA — It took Corey Tochor three years to get to this week. The Conservative MP turned heads on Parliament Hill when, in the midst of the House of Commons’ final dizzying days of passing legislation before adjourning for the summer, he emerged with an idea: What if psilocybin and psilocin, the active ingredients in what are otherwise known as magic mushrooms, were easier to access for those using it in therapy? “I didn’t get involved in politics for this,” Tochor told National Post in an interview. “But Thomas came into my office and really tweaked me that, wait a minute, there...
June 19, 2026 - 04:00 | Stephanie Taylor | National Post
The workers who prepare reports on debates and other documents related to business inside the House of Commons have received a retroactive higher wage adjustment for 2023 through arbitration, among other decisions. Read More
June 19, 2026 - 04:00 | Matteo Cimellaro | Ottawa Citizen