Felix Alvarez

Felix Alvarez OBE

Felix Alvarez, human & civil rights activist and campaigner.
Born Felix Alvarez
(1951-10-11) 11 October 1951
Gibraltar
Residence Gibraltar
Nationality British
Alma mater Goldsmiths, University of London
Occupation activist
Known for Founder of the Equality Rights Group
Parent(s) Felix Alvarez
Laura Parody
Relatives Emilio Alvarez

Felix Alvarez OBE (11 October 1951) is a Gibraltarian LGBT, human, civil rights and green activist.

Early life

Felix Alvarez was born at Old St. Bernard’s Hospital, Gibraltar, to Felix and Laura Alvarez (née Parody). As a young boy, he attended St. Anne’s Middle School in Gibraltar.

Alvarez's family moved to London in 1959, living first near the Dalston/Hoxton area of the East End of London but spending the majority of his life in the South London areas of Clapham and Tulse Hill. Alvarez grew up bilingual in English and Spanish as do most Gibraltarians. Yet the experience of being "foreign" in 1960s London was not easy for him or his family. He has vivid memories of tobacconist notice boards full of accommodation "to let" signs saying "no coloureds or dogs".

The experience of "being different" in an unaccepting society alerted him from an early age to the situation of the marginalised. As a teenager, Alvarez attended Wandsworth Comprehensive School, a progressive post-grammar school model, famous for its choir and close work with Benjamin Britten. It was during this period of his formative teenage years that, through personal contact, Alvarez joined Peter Hain in his Anti-Apartheid campaigns, work which he continued later at university as a young student in the early 1970s.

LGBT rights

In London

Returning to London after 3 years in a northern university, Alvarez discovered the Gay Liberation Front (GLF),[1] recently imported from the Stonewall riots of New York in the late 1960s. Becoming immediately involved in its activities, Alvarez was one of the founders of Britain’s first Gay Community Centres, where pioneering work was undertaken to establish phone counselling, information and advice, and weekly community meetings to raise self-esteem and channel gay and lesbian anger towards change rather than towards self-damage. At this time, Felix Alvarez worked with the Lambeth Community Law Centre and the Brixton Housing Advice Centre in Railton Road.

Alvarez went on to qualify in community and social work at Goldsmiths, University of London in 1978. Disillusioned with the downturn of fascist trends in London (with the rise of the British National Front), Alvarez took up the possibility of work in the Middle East on what he considered to be "an adventure" for 6 months. The adventure lasted 16 years, during which time Alvarez learnt Arabic and travelled the world.

In Gibraltar

In 1997, Alvarez returned to Gibraltar. One of his first undertakings on The Rock was to produce an in-depth study and MA thesis on bilingualism in the Gibraltar educational system from nursery schools all the way through to adult vocational training. This was entitled "Primary Code and Private Space: Choice in the Host Classroom". A copy was deposited with the John Mackintosh Hall and has become a reference point for international researchers regarding the impact of bilingualism in a community. The research contained implications for Gibraltar's educational policies which, to date, have not been taken note of.

Experiencing difficulties as a result of insurmountable bureaucracy and prejudice regarding his non-EU same-sex partner, Alvarez determined to start challenging discrimination of sexual minorities in Gibraltar. By this time Deputy Leader of a political party (the now defunct Independent Liberal Forum (ILF)), he persuaded his party to back him in the establishment of what was to be known as Gib Gay Rights (GGR). In a GBC television news broadcast on 4 September 2000, Alvarez announced that “the fear factor” was over as far as gay citizens were concerned. From then on, gay citizens would be demanding equal rights as full citizens of Gibraltar. As the work of the group expanded over the years, GGR has since become Gibraltar's foremost Human & Civil Rights organisation, and is currently known as Equality Rights Group (GGR). This is often abbreviated to ERG or ERG-GGR.

ERG's website can be located at www.equalitygib.org. Its official Facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/EqualityRightsGroupGgr and its Twitter account is: @equalitygib.

To date, under his Chairmanship, ERG has achieved the following:

Alvarez's vision has always been the establishment of comprehensive links across other areas of discrimination – whether disability, age, children's rights or any other area of social concern. This was clear from the start, even before his setting up of GGR, when he actively held meetings with lawyers and other individuals to create interest in the setting up of a Gibraltar branch of British human rights organisation "Liberty". Whilst that project did not prosper, Alvarez's vision has been comprehensive and unitary throughout. This has meant that GGR now considers itself a gay and human rights organisation. "Not only is a position of only fighting one's own corner fundamentally flawed from a human rights perspective,' says Alvarez, 'since human rights are indivisible in and of themselves, the issue of multiple discrimination is a very real one and noone can convince me, for example, that there are no gay people who are not disabled, nor of different ethnicities or migrant status, nor any other variety of elements. For the simple reason that human beings do not come in neat and exclusive packages: we are diverse. To lose sight of that is to lose sight of the core of what working in human rights is all about!'.

Alvarez continues to steer the development of human and civil rights in Gibraltar - to include the rights of sexual minorities without exception. To do so, and in addition to his already strong academic background (a B.A. and M.A. as well as qualifications in social and community work, in addition to in the teaching of English as a Second or Other Language) he undertook a law degree (LLB).

Committed to widening democracy, Alvarez continues to seek means by which more open and participative involvement of citizens concerned for human and civil rights can be furthered in the community of Gibraltar. In this, he says, 'my mind is constantly employed to avoid the possibility of satisfaction at what we have and what we have achieved - and to remain open at all times to change and improvement. Even if that should mean my being asked to leave at some point. It's the way it has to be! Clinging whether to power or to anything else is not the key to a dignified life whether at an individual or collective level!'

Alvarez's 'Honouring Gibraltar' Campaign:

Encompassing his vision of 'Rights for people - as well as The People', Alvarez has put forward a vision for Gibraltar which recognises the interconnection between Gibraltar's on-going political struggle for self-determination and identity and the applicability of a just society based on human and civil rights.

Building a team of like-minded individuals, Alvarez commenced a campaign in late 2013 to nominate Gibraltar and its citizens for an official Honour. Built around the George Cross award as a threshold, the aim of the Campaign is to bring to notice the plight and gallantry of a whole generation of mainly women who loyally sacrificed and underwent exceptional circumstances and danger during the course of their Evacuation in the 1940s. Taking them across the dangerous waters of the Atlantic, surrounded by U-boats, exchanged at gunpoint in Casablanca, Morocco, and accommodated in the very centre of the Blitz (when others were evacuated out!), Alvarez demands that 'our grandparents' and great-grandparents' story, largely unacknowledged, be known.It's an injustice that their gallantry, in circumstances of extreme danger, has not been heard. It is time this was corrected. And it is time that Britain honoured them!'

As Campaign Manager, Alvarez is currently lobbying for this cause, in addition to heading the human and civil rights organisation Equality Rights Group.

Awards

Alvarez was appointed an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire for services to the advancement of equality and human rights in Gibraltar in the 2013 Queen's Birthday Honours.[2]

The OBE investiture by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace took place on 10 October 2013.

Alvarez was also awarded the Gulf War Medal in late 1991 for his civilian services at the time of the first Gulf War in Iraq.

Relation

Alvarez's maternal grandfather was cousin to Emilio Alvarez, founding member of the Association for the Advancement of Civil Rights (AACR), a political party instrumental in granting the Gibraltarians greater civil rights.

See also

References

  1. "Felix Alvarez: Conquering His Fears to Further Human Rights", Vox Online, 16 February 2007, archived from the original on 11 October 2007, retrieved 26 November 2007
  2. "Caruana Heads Queen's Birthday Honours". Your Gibraltar TV. 14 June 2013. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.