The Castro: A Queer Pilgrimage

<p>There&rsquo;s a map of the Castro pinned to my wall, next to a calendar of the Black Nazarene, which my mother mounted because she thought I did not pray enough at night.</p> <p>But I do pray enough at night. I always remember to say thanks each time I turn the lights off, the Black Nazarene in the corner of my eye, stark in a sea of pained men, and the Castro-a blur of grids and green hues.</p> <p>I snatched the map on my way out of the Queer History museum. It was a museum built on stories that did not speak to me, the San Francisco Gay Men&rsquo;s Chorus, and the beginnings of AIDS in the west. It was Queer History in the eyes of the White Queers, and like all other narratives, I felt like an outsider to all its stories and spectacles.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/prismnpen/the-castro-a-queer-pilgrimage-bab6651c9cc3"><strong>Learn More</strong></a></p>