This Is Pride: Staten Islander, 28, is passionate about making healthcare accessible to all, including HIV se – SILive.com
(EDITOR’S NOTE: “This Is Pride” is a series of profiles and portraits featuring Staten Islanders who made history as part of the borough’s LGBTQ+ pride movement and important members of the community. If you have someone you would like to nominate for “This is Pride,” e-mail their name and a brief nomination to tips@siadvance.com.)
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — With the goal of making medical services accessible to all, Steven Stora, 28, has worked in HIV-related healthcare for the last five years.
Employed as a project manager at Northwell Health, Stora is determined to be part of the “change” that will one day make Staten Island “all-inclusive.”
“Through community action and visible outward acceptance, I think Staten Island can become a safer, more welcoming place for LGBTQ+ individuals,” said the St. George resident, who has worked for the Pride Center of Staten Island, and sits on city and state Department of Health committees.
As part of The Staten Island Advance/SILive.com’s “This Is Pride” series, we asked Stora his thoughts on the following questions:
What does it mean to be a LGBTQ+ Staten Islander?
“Being a gay Staten Islander is spending a lot of time on the ferry to Manhattan. (I’m only half kidding!) Being gay on Staten Island to me means paying it forward and being visible. I always wanted to do more, and make this Island more inclusive because that’s what teenage Steven would have needed to flourish, so I started working at the Pride Center of Staten Island to help make that change. It is much less alienating when you have places to go to be yourself, and see people like yourself thriving.”
What does pride mean to you?
“Pride to me is the radical act of unapologetic self-love and self-acceptance. It is a time to celebrate the BIPOC [Black, indigenous, and people of color] LGBTQ+ people who started the Gay Liberation Movement in 1969 with the Stonewall Riots. Pride is a community of shared experiences. It is also a time to mourn those we have lost through the years to violence, homophobia, suicide, transphobia, stigmatized healthcare and discrimination. Pride is a manifestation of love through the human experience.”
What do you love about being a Staten Islander?
“I love the sense of community Staten Island has. I feel like when everyone sets their minds to something it can be done. Hurricane Sandy comes to mind, seeing the resiliency of people helping one another through tragedy was beautiful and inspiring for what this Island is capable of.”
During Pride month, do you think about: What still needs to be done?
“A lot still needs to be done in the United States and on Staten Island. This year alone hundreds of anti-LGBTQ laws have been introduced to state legislation, which is incredibly concerning. … We need to foster a sense of communal empathy and get back to talking to each other, rather than listening to clickbait on social media. I will keep fighting for my rights and the rights of future LGBTQ+ generations. Happy Pride Staten Island!”
More “This Is Pride” stories:
This Is Pride: NYC Hip Hop artist, Emil Troy, 22, finds their groove on Staten Island
This Is Pride portrait: LGBTQ+ ally works to educate and ‘open minds’ of Staten Islanders
Here’s a timeline of LGBTQ+ history on Staten Island
This Is Pride portrait: This LGBTQ+ ally designs inclusive lingerie for transgender women
This Is Pride portrait: Nicholas Robinson, an activist for HIV awareness, prevention