Diversity S e pecial dition July 17, 2019 Page 11 photo by D anny p eterson /t he p ortlanD o bserver An Aging with Pride discussion group at the Q Center’s library draws participants Margaret Ann Jones (from left), Peggy Hackenbruck, Ricki Coleman, Janet Martinez, and Busch. Thanks to a community fundraising camping, the library ceiling will undergo repairs, along with other upgrades in the next year, the first maintenance done to the Q Center building in 10 years. On Stronger Footing C ontinueD from f ront mated to be completed by June of next year, the first upgrade to the building in 10 years, Busch said. Whitten said the organization is launching a “Colorguard” mem- bership program this month that is especially geared for community members to make monthly contri- butions of $10 or more to help keep the facilities and services running. Their goal is to recruit 40 monthly donors by the end of summer. Ricki Coleman, a retired former Q Center volunteer, said she looks forward to the continued support for helping keep a valuable com- munity resource open. The Q Center was created to provide a culturally diverse and emotionally and physical- ly safe place for members of the LGBTQ+ community, an outreach that helped Coleman find foot- ing as a trans-woman when she moved to Portland 11 years ago. The fact that the Q Center, which was founded in 2005, had a phone number for people in the LGBTQ+ community to call and find resourc- es, was fundamental to starting a life here, Coleman explained. She later volunteered to answer similar calls for people interested in moving to Portland on behalf of the Q Center, as a receptionist. “They ask about housing, they ask about the community in gen- eral: is it safe to be out and vis- ible? And then people who walk through the door the first time, that is, that’s pretty special. That’s what gets me right here,” Cole- man said, tapping her chest. Margaret Ann Jones, a senior African American community activist and co-chair of the Resil- ience Campaign, said the Q Cen- ter was key to finding acceptance. “As a woman of color, as a black woman, there are not a lot of places I go into my own commu- nity, to the black community here. There are a lot of us that have been rejected by our families and all like that. So this is where I’ve come, my chosen family I’ve met here,” said Jones, who came to Portland in 1992. “This is my port in the storm, so to speak, when things get insane out in the larg- er community, where I know that because I’m a black woman and because I’m a lesbian woman that I’m not accepted in a lot of places, but I’m accepted here. This is my place, my safe place.” Jones added that she’s devel- oping a discussion group at the Q Center to cover topics for people of color, such as police shootings and other topic where people “will not be judged and share what they feel.” “And be supportive,” added Peggy Hackenbruck, also a mem- ber of the senior LGBTQ+ com- munity. “I come here for activities, for community, and just feeling like it is such an important place in Portland, so that we have a place to meet and have lots of activities going on,” Hackenbruck said. The Q Center has been a great place for LGBTQ+ seniors to re- ceive services through their Ag- ing with Pride program, which provides information, education, and social events for the elderly. Hackenbruck, in addition, is also part of a Services and Advocacy for Gay Elders program at north- west Portland’s Friendly House, the only other program geared to- ward queer seniors in the city, of which Jones is also a member. Hackenbruck, Jones, and oth- ers meet regularly at the Q Cen- ter’s Aging with Pride discussion group in its library, which is filled with donated LGBTQ+ literature, which Hackenbruck said is anoth- er valuable asset for gay commu- nity members. “If I were coming out now— I’m 76 now—If I were coming out now, I could come in here and read the things that are about who I am and the stuff I couldn’t read 40 years ago when I was coming out,” she said. “We can just be ourselves, with- out ridicule, without judgment, without censure,” Busch added. In addition to serving the LGBTQ+ senior community, pro- viding information and referrals, and fronting fiscal sponsorship of other, smaller nonprofits whose aim complements their mission, the Q Center also hosts nearly 50 support groups and provides spac- es available for rent, which have often been utilized by Mississippi Business Association, for example. Films that are not in wide release or that hold an import- ant milestone for the LGBTQ+ community are also sometimes screened at the center, Coleman added. The Q Center also raises aware- photo C ourtesy Q C enter Community activist Margaret Ann Jones said coming to the Q Center helped her find acceptance as a black lesbian woman. ness on how to deal with hate crimes and what constitutes the mentality that fosters violence. Q Center Program Coordinator Page Smith facilitated pubic discus- sions on the topics in the wake of back-to-back bias assaults in the community. To find out more about the Q Center, located at 4115 N. Missis- sippi Ave, visit pdxqcenter.org or call 503-234-7837. Funerals ~ Memorial Services ~ Cremation ~ Preplanning “Dedicated to providing excellent service and superior care of your loved one” Funeral Home staff available 24 hours 503-249-1788 Terry Family Funeral Home 2337 N Williams Ave, Portland, Or 97227 www.terryfamilyfuneralhome.com