Chris Bearchell


Chris died this morning at Vancouver General Hospital. She had been struggling this past decade with breast cancer, which returned recently after several years of remission. During that time she realized a long held dream, building a log cabin on Lasqueti Island and making a home there that rivaled the one she created in Toronto on Walnut Avenue.

I'm biased by our close friendship but I can't think of anyone who has made more of a contribution to the Canadian lesbian and gay movement.

Here's her entry in the Canadian Lesbian & Gay Archives National Portrait Collection, Konnie's official photograph and some of my own.




Chris Bearchell's career as a dyke dynamo covers nearly three decades. Chris began writing for Toronto's Body Politic ('BP') in 1975, often as the 'only lesbian'; she joined the governing collective in 1978 and stayed until the paper's demise in 1987. Hugely influential, and an unrelenting activist, she co-founded the Lesbian Organization of Toronto (LOOT), was key player with the Coalition for Gay Rights in Ontario, and acted as Chair of the Committee to Defend John Damien, a racing steward fired in 1975 solely for being gay.

Even after the BP's demise, her influence did not wane. She did television with the Gay Offensive Collection, den-mothered a vibrant team of news writers and wrote editorials. She worked on an AIDS project with inner-city youth and worked with Maggie's, a prostitute's rights group and drop-in. An astute analyst of pornography, she made her own - and passionately opposed censorship. She has consistently fought for the rights of queer kids, whatever their orientation. Chris lived her politics not just at the office or out on the street (she is credited with coining the famed 'No More Shit' chant at the 1981 demo following Toronto's bathhouse raids), but at home. Gay and lesbian group households, many connected with the BP, were hotbeds of community activism and political education, and Chris lived in more than one collective ménage.

In 2002, she appeared in Nancy Nicol's documentary film Stand Together, a history of the lesbian & gay rights movement in Ontario from 1967 to 1987. Unrelenting, loud, and infinitely proud, Chris' influence continues to be felt in Canada's queer community.







Posted: Sun - February 18, 2007 at 12:18 PM          


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