Founded in
1990 under the name “Just For Us,” COLAGE (originally Children of Lesbians and
Gays Everywhere) began with a group of six young people with lesbian and gay
parents. The experience at their first meeting was revolutionary, and they
wanted to share similar experiences with other COLAGErs. In 1996, the
organization explicitly added work with children of bisexual and transgender
parents to its mission, and queerspawn, a term of self-identification lovingly
adopted by some members of our community, became widely used.
During the
late 1990s and early 2000s, COLAGE leadership became increasingly aware of the
needs of a new generation of COLAGErs. These were children of the “gayby boom,”
whose parents had chosen to form families after coming out – often through
adoption or reproductive technology – creating new forms of families with
intention. As so many of these youth were people of color, COLAGE adopted a new
strategic plan that specifically included an anti-racist, social justice
platform.
Amidst
intensifying debates on marriage equality, LGBTQ+ parents – and their children
– were increasingly thrust into the public eye, dramatically increasing
awareness of LGBTQ+ families. Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, COLAGE expanded
programming to meet the needs of these increasingly visible families as
COLAGErs supported marriage equality fights state-by-state and in the Supreme
Court.
Today, COLAGE
stands as the only national organization dedicated to the empowerment of youth
in LGBTQ+ families, and celebrates thirty years of this work. We are busy
building the foundation for COLAGE’s next thirty years as the hub of community
and activism for and by children of queer parents!
Join us as we
shape the next generation of COLAGE.