Outdoor edition of Afro-queer film festival brings live performances, screenings to Little Burgundy - Action News
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Montreal

Outdoor edition of Afro-queer film festival brings live performances, screenings to Little Burgundy

Normally a winter festival that takes place during Black History Month,Massimadi Montral is taking to the streets this weekend and next to bring live performances and film screenings to Little Burgundy.

Festival's director says he wants to create a place where Black queer people feel they belong

On Saturday, people in Daisy-Peterson-Sweeney park in Little Burgundy were treated to a theatrical performance created by Dieuvela Etienne, inspired by Haitian traditions around voodoo. (Submitted by Laurent Lafontant)

Normally a winter festival that takes place during Black History Month,Massimadi Montral is taking to the streets this weekend to bring live performances and film screenings to Little Burgundy.

Laurent Lafontant, the festival's director, told CBC's Daybreak that since the 2021 edition of the event was held online due to the pandemic, organizing an in-person event was an opportunity to bring community members together.

He said the event was made possible by a grant from the City of Montreal aimed at cultural development.

"We decided to have an open-air event to find the sense of community so that people can be together and experience anAfro-queer event."

Laurent Lafontant is the director of the Massimadi Montral festival. (Submitted by Laurent Lafontant)

Lafontantsaid the event, which runs from Sept. 11 to 18, will include outdoor film projections, live performances, art installationsand a drag show highlighting Black artists.

The site is equipped with three wooden cabins, decorated by Montreal artist Kezna Dalz, also known by her artist nameTeenadult.

The cabins house an audio and video system for the continuous viewing of a cycle of short films.

Events are happening atParc Daisy-Peterson-Sweeney, which borders the Lachine Canal.Lafontantsaid the location is ameaningful reference to the diversity of Little Burgundy.

"We are having this event in a neighbourhood that was once occupied by a majority of Black people," he said. "So it can bring back the history of the place."

Lafontantsaid that whilehosting a virtual festival provided a way to keep the annual event running despite COVID-19 restrictions and for it to reach a wider audience outside of Montreal, it "cannot replace the physical event."

"Our main goal is to take our place in the public sphere, in the city, so that people can see us," he said. "Avirtual event can have the effect of erasure from the public space."

Montreal artist Kezna Dalz, also known by her artist name Teenadult, decorated the cabins in the park for the event. She also created some supersized chess sets for the park installation. (Submitted by Laurent Lafontant)

In curating an event that is aimed at showcasing art from Queer Black creators,Lafontant said he's trying to give a voice and a platform togroups who have historically been marginalized.

"Queerness in the Black community has been ignored for a long time," he said.

He wants to provide a space where people who identify as LGBTQ+find "a sense of belongingto the Black community."

"In the mainstream queer LGBT community, diversity is also invisible, so it's a place where people who have those two identities, who are somehow invisible, can have a space where they can feel that those identities are welcome."


The free event runs from Sept. 11 to 18 atParc Daisy-Peterson-Sweeney in Little Burgundy. More information can be found here.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

With files from CBC Daybreak