Joe Rose (activist)

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Joe Rose (December 27, 1965 – March 19, 1989) was a Canadian LGBT rights and HIV/AIDS activist whose homophobic murder was a pivotal moment for the LGBT rights movement in Quebec.[1]

While attending Dawson College, Rose founded Etcetera, the college's LGBT association, in 1985.[2] Rose studied nursing, and as a person living with AIDS, he wanted to found a Montreal chapter of ACT UP.[3]

Murder

On March 19, 1989, he and a friend were travelling on a Société de transport de la Communauté urbaine de Montréal (STCUM) night bus returning to his home in an HIV/AIDS hospice. Rose, who was slight in build and disabled by AIDS symptoms, and who dyed his hair pink, was set upon along with the friend by a group of four youths shouting homophobic slurs.[4] They beat and stabbed him to death inside the bus. His friend suffered minor injuries; when emergency personnel arrived, they found him trying to resuscitate Rose.[3]

Three minors, aged 14, 15, and 15, and Patrick Moise, aged 19, were ultimately charged and convicted in Rose's death. The youths were sentenced to varying terms in youth custody;[5] Moise was sentenced to 7 years in prison.[6] Rose's parents sued the STCUM for the driver's failure to activate the emergency signal,[7] and were awarded $25,000.[8]

Impact

Cultural depictions

References

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