WTOP is marking聽Pride Month聽by showcasing the people, places and important issues in the LGBTQ+ communities in the D.C. area. Check back all throughout June as we share these stories, on air and online.
Students from all around the D.C. region went to the Torpedo Factory in Old Town Alexandria in Virginia for .
Amy Cannava, senior program manager for Safe Space NOVA, has spearheaded the event since its beginning in 2018.
鈥淲e welcome any youth 鈥 rising ninth grade through age 20. If you’re old enough to drink, you’re old enough to find entertainment elsewhere,鈥 said a smiling Cannava.
The school psychologist described the Pride prom as a labor of love.
鈥淚t warms my heart to provide an opportunity for young people, especially in the sociopolitical climate, to come to a place where they can be who they are, dress as they want, dance and date with whomever they want to be with and love and just feel affirmed, supported and inclusive all night,鈥 said Cannava.
The planning starts in the fall and ramps up in January. There are student volunteers who help with the event, including student ambassador Sarah Yonker.
鈥淭here are just so many kids who feel unheard, unseen, unloved,鈥 said Yonker. 鈥淲ith Pride Prom, we are able to create a welcoming, loving space where everybody is a queen or a king or royalty.鈥
Yonker, who recently graduated from high school, also brought her parents along to help volunteer.
Both of Yonker鈥檚 parents served in the Marines and wore “free hug” t-shirts.
鈥淚 know a lot of kids have it really rough and can’t even tell their parents how they feel, but my parents have shown me nothing but love, and it means the world to me,鈥 said Yonker.
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