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29 lesbians who are loud, proud and making the world better

Lesbian Visibility Week: 19 lesbians making the world a better place

DIVA publisher Linda Riley “both to celebrate lesbians and show solidarity with all LGBT+ women and non-binary people in our community”. So, what better way to celebrate Lesbian Visibility Week than by honouring lesbians who are proud, visible and making the world a better place for our whole community? Whether you’re a lesbian or not, take note of these incredible women-loving women. Billie Jean King. Seventy-seven-year-old former world-class tennis player who has used her platform to speak up for the rights of trans athletes. Baroness Elizabeth Barker. Lesbian peer and Albert Kennedy Trust ambassador who recently spoke out in the UK’s House of Lords in defence of an inclusive maternity bill.

Lesbian nun called on by God to celebrate being LGBT

Sister Janet Rozzano spent 25 years as a nun before coming out as a lesbian. (Envato) A nun has explained why she feels she is called by God to “affirm and celebrate” her lesbian identity in the Catholic church. Sister Janet Rozzano is part of Sisters of Mercy, an international community of Catholic nuns who “take vows of poverty, chastity, obedience and service”, since 1956. She described her journey, “filled with both struggles and joys”, in an op-ed published by Reuters,ahead of a new anthology titled  Rozzano said it wasn’t until she was in her 40s, and had already spent 25 years as a nun, that she “began to deal with and integrate [her] sexual identity”.

In Love Tenderly, LGBTQ sisters share joys and struggles of self-discovery

Mercy Sr. Janet Rozzano discovered she was a lesbian gradually. During the 1960s and 70s, she became emotionally close with several women, describing her feelings in journal entries filled with both fear and joy, as she wrote in an essay published in When she gathered the courage to come out, other women in her community supported her, Rozzano told Global Sisters Report. Soon, she became an advocate for other LGBTQ Catholics. I came to see my telling people coming out to them as a ministry in itself, Rozzano said. Her impact reached fellow Sisters of Mercy, including Sr. Mary Kay Dobrovolny, who describes herself in the book as unapologetically and enthusiastically queer.

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