Outloud in Regent Park: Pride, Inclusion, and Community Regent Park Outloud 2025

Regent Park Outloud celebrates Pride with joy and purpose—uplifting 2SLGBTQ+ voices and building inclusive community unity. On June 13, the streets of Regent Park came alive with colour, music, and celebration as the third annual Regent Park Outloud festival brought together residents, artists, and allies to mark 2SLGBTQ+ Pride and community unity. Held along Regent Park Boulevard, the free outdoor event featured a vibrant mix of circus acts, exotic animals, storytelling corners, live DJs, art installations, local vendors and a drag performance. But beneath the festivities was a deeper civic purpose: fostering inclusion, visibility, and social cohesion in a neighbourhood shaped by change. “This started three years ago after our founder, Gail Lynch, heard about homophobia in the neighbourhood,” said co-organizer Joanne Herbert. “She said, ‘We need to have a Pride.’ And we did.” That first event in 2023 planted the seeds for a new tradition—one that centers the voices and experiences of 2SLGBTQ+ residents, many of whom live at the intersection of race, class, immigration, and queerness. In a diverse community like Regent Park, Outloud is more than celebration—it's resistance, representation, and reclamation. As Canada’s largest public housing revitalization, Regent Park is home to a complex mix of long-time social housing residents and newer, market-rate condo owners. This shifting landscape can pose challenges for community connection. Events like Outloud help bridge those divides, offering shared experiences that strengthen neighbourhood bonds and create a sense of belonging for all. This year’s festival included heartfelt remarks from MPP Kristyn Wong-Tam and Councillor Chris Moise, who praised Regent Parkers in showing how civic spaces can foster unity in the face of rising hate and division. Support from the Regent Park Social Development Plan (SDP), funded by the City of Toronto, and developers of the regent park revitalization, Daniels Corporation and Tridel, helped bring the event to life. T-shirts designed by local students at Nelson Mandela Park Public School added a grassroots creative touch. As music played and families danced into the evening, the message was clear: inclusion is not optional—it’s essential. And Pride, in Regent Park, is a powerful expression of civic love and community cohesion. By Dawar Naeem — Journalist at Focus Media Arts Centre

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