Debryanskaya was born on 10 June 1953 in
Sverdlovsk Oblast,
Soviet Union. She has been described as provincial and uneducated, since she did not finish college. Prior to living as a lesbian, Debryanskaya was in a heterosexual relationship with Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian philosopher and political agitator. She met him when she was 30 years old. Both were said to have hated the Soviet regime.
Activism In 1987, Debryanskaya,
Valeriya Novodvorskaya and
Sergei Grigoryants co-founded the first official political opposition party in the
Soviet Union Democratic Union. However, she was later expelled from the party for "amoral behavior". She was also a member of the Establishment of Trust between East and West. Debryanskaya helped establish the gay and lesbian rights movement in Russia in the early 1990s. This was possible due to
Mikhail Gorbachev's
glasnost policy, which lifted some restrictions on the freedom of the press and freedom of expression. With
Roman Kalinin and eight others, she founded the Moscow Organization of Sexual Minorities. This organization, later renamed Moscow Gay and Lesbian Union, published
Tema, a newspaper that helped advance its goals such as the repeal of Article 21, the law that criminalised consensual homosexual activity. One of her notable initiatives was the organization of a controversial pride parade in Moscow, which drew international attention to sexual minorities in the city. About 200 activists were arrested, including Debryanskaya and Alexeyev. Debryanskaya wrote and directed
auteur films. Several of her initiatives were supported by international funding and, when these sources dwindled, nightclub owners. Later in life, Debryanskaya became an entrepreneur. She owned a lesbian bar called
Dietrich, which was stolen by Maksim Kozlouvskiy, her landlord. In December 2015, Kozlouvskiy warned everyone to leave the club to avoid an imminent police raid. Debryanskaya gave the keys to Kozlouvskiy and fled, but no police came. The landlord took over the establishment, saying it would be converted into a "natural nightclub". == References ==