In the days surrounding the March, a wide range of events serving different groups within the
LGBT community were held in and around Washington, DC. These included historical exhibits, religious services, lobbying events, social gatherings, art exhibits, political workshops, public service events, and candlelight vigils. The National Mall, from the Washington Monument to the Capitol, was packed on the day of the March. Even though over 1 million people were present at the event, park police falsely claimed that only 300,000 people were on the Mall, presumably because attendees were never static: The million attendees were milling about, marching, cheering alongside the parade route streets, observing the AIDS Quilt at the Washington Monument, and socializing. An alternative view is that the crowd was intentionally downsized by the authorities because of the radical changes being advocated. One of the performers, Deidre McCalla said "That is because women and people of color are invisible." contingent (Parents and Friends of Gays And Lesbians) Marching at MOW The march started around noon, from the White House, moved down to Pennsylvania Avenue, and then scattered onto the Mall near Seventh Street NW. The rally had many young, old, black, white, Latino, and Asian individuals who strode past the White House. Marchers were holding things like rainbow flags, banners, signs, red ribbons and pink triangles. Some marched in affiliated groups, such as
ACT UP,
Queer Nation,
PFLAG, HRC, professional associations, universities, and states. Marchers chanted messages such as the
ACT UP slogan "ACT UP! Fight Back! Fight AIDS!" and the
Queer Nation slogan "We're here. We're queer. We're fabulous. Get used to it." Some marchers chanted "End the Ban Now!" (opposing the ban on open lesbian and gay military service) and As marchers passed the White House they chanted "2-4-6-8, how do you know that Chelsea's straight?" referring to Chelsea Clinton in disappointment that President Clinton had not addressed the March. Overall, the mood of the march was peaceful with only five arrests for disorderly conduct. The day before the march, two demonstrations raised the issue of same-sex marriage. About 1,500 same-sex couples assembled at the
National Museum of Natural History with, according to
The Washington Post, "a dozen ministers, organ music, photographers and rice". A far smaller gathering of several same-sex couples protested in front of the
Internal Revenue Service building and performed a symbolic wedding ceremony titled "an Interfaith Ceremony of Commitment". According to the
Chicago Tribune, the demonstration's point was a demand "for full legal recognition of domestic partnerships" for tax purposes. Some women marched topless while men wore dresses to represent equality between genders. Around 2 p.m, hundreds of marchers performed a seven-minute "die-in" to symbolize the tragedy of AIDS in the LGBTQ+ community. Later that afternoon,
Larry Kramer, a gay activist and founder of the ACT UP group, spoke at the rally. He inspired the marchers with his statement, “.. But now, harder than ever; we must act up, fight back and fight AIDS.” By sunset, large crowds of gay men and lesbians were still gathered in the Mall, listening to speeches and dancing to music. The rally did not end until 7:20 p.m. The counter demonstrators signs said things like "God hates f*gs" "F*gs burn in hell" some marchers responded in silence, while other marchers chanted "Shame" over and over again as they passed the small band of counter demonstrators.
Melissa Etheridge,
RuPaul,
Nancy Pelosi,
Madonna,
Martina Navratilova,
Ian McKellen,
Eartha Kitt,
Lani Kaʻahumanu,
Urvashi Vaid,
Jesse Jackson, and Martha Wash.
Lani Kaʻahumanu was the only out bisexual to speak at the rally out of 18 total speakers; she had conceived and led a successful national campaign to have bisexual people included in the title of the march. Dorothy Hajdys-Clausen, the mother of
Allen R. Schindler Jr, also gave a speech. == Politics of the march ==