Links
for Gay Denmark
If you find
a bad or better link
please
contact me
Legal
and Political Info
International
Gay and Lesbian
Human
Rights Commission
International
Lesbian and Gay Assoc.
Amnesty
International
Human
Rights Watch
Country
Information
Greenland
Culture Guide
Wonderful
Copenhagen
Embassy,
Washington, DC
Visit
Denmark
Denmark
Factbook
Lonely
Planet: Denmark Info
Denmark
History
Denmark
Sexuality
Guidebooks
Lonely
Planet Guide to Denmark
Spartacus
Gay
Guide
Gay
Guides on the Net
Damron
Guides
Gay
Info Exchange
Lonely
Planet Thorn Tree
Gay
Greenland
Qaamaneq (site not active)
Gay
Denmark
Gay
Guide to Denmark
Gay
Copenhagen
LBL-National
LGBT Association (English)
LBL (Danish)
Copenhagen
Pride
Gay
Film Festival
Copenhagen
Gay Life
Pan
Club
Copenhagen
Gay Center (shop/sauna)
Stop
AIDS
Denmark
Gay History
Scandigayvia.com
Danish
'Boyfriend' Dating Site
Gay
Magazines/Media
Pan
Guide to Gay & Lesbian Denmark
(no
web site)
Out & About
QX
Se Mag
Porno
and Gay Culture
Other LGBT Travel Links
Lesbigay Travel Info/ News
Rex Wochner Lesbigay News
Gay Reading (webzine)
365Gay.com (webzine)
Gay.com/Planet Out.com News
Gay Today.com
Gay Wired (news/scene/trave/)
Advocate Magazine
Gay and Lesbian Review
Our World Magazine
Out and About Travel Letter (USA)
Out Traveler Magazine
QT Travel Magazine
Gay Travel News
Gay Travel Site
Venturing Out Travel Stories
Passport Magazine
The Grey Gay Guide
Gay Places
Gay Travel Plus
BootsnAll Resources
Queery.com
Fridae.com
Lesbian.com
LGBT Travel Writers
Jan Morris (The Grande Dame)
Jan Morris (BBC Bio)
Martinforeman.com
Peter Tatchell (Activist & Writer)
Bruce Chatwin
Sasha Alyson
LGBT Travel Books (Essays/Stories)
Wonderlands
Lesbian Travels
Gay Travels
Travelers' Journals (mixed)
TravelPod.com
(New LGBT Forum)
Worldsurface.com
Lonely Planet Thorn Tree
Lesbigay Travel Tours
Intnl. G/L Travel Association
Bluway Gay Travel
David Tours
Hans Ebensten Deluxe Tours
RSVP Vacations
Damron Guides and Travel
Gay Travel Plus
Gay.com/Planet Out Travel
Utopia Tours (Asia)
Alyson Adventures
Friends Travel
Gay Away
Venture Out
bGay Travel
Orbitz G/L Travel
Now Voyager
Innovative Gay Travel
Above and Beyond Tours
Pride Holidays
Gay Jet
Purple Roofs Travel
Gay Crawler
Hermes Tours
Gay Family Vacations (with kids)
Olivia Cruises & Resorts
R Family Vacations
Camp Lavender Hill
Camp It Up
Rainbow Family Camp
Home / Contact / Stories, News & Reports / Photos
Worldwide Gay Life,
Sites and Insights Gay Greenland
(Denmark):
Also see: From
OutTraveler Magazine Greenland:
a dream at the top of the world:
Affluence, modernity, tolerance, and civil unions: Forget everything
you've
ever thought about thought about remote, icy Greenland.
The world's largest island is at the forefront of the 21st century
in
more ways than one. In
the 21st century, Greenland
is
unmistakably Danish. The government of Denmark subsidizes Greenland
to the tune of thousands of dollars per inhabitant per year,
bolstering this corner of the subsistence-economy Arctic. Denmark's
benevolent
colonialism at times seemed misguided, as in the 1960s, when
Danes tried relocating the Inuit in apartment towers in Nuuk
in an effort
to reduce village poverty. Unanticipated consequences included
the breakup of traditional extended families and destruction
of their
hunting lifestyle. And
Denmark has left firm cultural marks here too, the most progressive
being same-sex civil unions: In 1989 Denmark became the first country
in the world
to recognize such partnerships, and Greenland followed suit
in 1996. After
Antarctica, Greenland is the largest reservoir of
fresh water on earth, holding about 10% of the world's
supply. As I stood
shivering on the hard, Windex-blue ice, which felt like cold
concrete under my feet, the enormity of the place struck
me. The giant sky
went on into the universe and, as the sun set, I could feel
its darkness ready to enfold the land, to conquer it once
and for
all. The very
northern reaches of Greenland can exist in winter darkness
for months at a time without respite, and I could sense what
that
heavy blanket
of unending night must feel like. This
thawing island is becoming ground zero for studying
the devastating effects of global warming. And on top of such
environmental problems, the world's largest oil companies
are eyeing Disko Bay's
offshore oil and gas reserves for possible drilling -- which
could be very beneficial to Greenland's economy, but potentially
ruinous
to its number 1 tourist destination. Towards
the end of my trip I was in the town of Sisimiut, listening to an
elderly
woman, Alma Olsen, inside her comfy home. Surrounding houses,
all painted in traditionally bright primary colors, seemed
aggressively cheery
amid the aloof whiteness outside. Homemade cakes and coffee
were before us, part of the tradition of kaffemik, or coffee
parties.
No one in
Greenland would ever not offer something to guests. The tradition
of sharing resources -- food, hunting equipment, housing,
everything --
with neighbors for mutual survival is still very much alive
here, despite the fact that stores carry everything from
imported fruit
to DVDs. I somehow understood. Traveling to Greenland makes you feel like you've perhaps experienced how the earth really is -- and how it has been through the epochs. Humankind was now finally making a permanent mark here at the end of the world, melting this last bastion of pure earth. But I also saw how this frozen fortress, in all its unfathomable limitlessness, would somehow persevere. |