Three times in Utrecht
Pink Saturday (Roze Zaterdag) is an national annual pride event that travels around the country. The festival was held in Utrecht three times. The first in 1986 attracted 9,000 participants. The last one in 2013 with 55,000 participants was the largest in the country.
International
Pink Saturday is held every year, usually on the last Saturday of June. On June 28, 1969, riots occurred in front of the Stonewall Inn bar in New York. Unlike previous police raids, transgender, lesbian, drag queen and gay men rioted against oppression and discrimination that night. ‘Stonewall’ has since been regarded internationally as the beginning of the modern gay movement (although there are some things to be said about it). A year later, on June 28, 1970, the first major Pride parades took place in Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, and San Francisco. That marked the beginning of Pride Parades in the world.
The Netherlands
Emancipation in the Netherlands was ahead of that in the US in the 1960s and 1970s. For example, the famous writer Gerard Reve was already open about his homosexuality on national TV in 1963, followed a year later by well-known designer and COC chairman Benno Premsela in a current affairs program about homosexuality. In 1965, writer Andreas Burnier won a literary prize with her novel in which the main character was a matter of course lesbian. On January 12, 1969, six months before the riots in New York, there was a protest against the discriminatory art. 248bis at the Binnenhof in The Hague, the heart of the Dutch democracy.
But unlike in the US, there were no major parades in the Netherlands until 1977, also because COC, the largest national LHBTI+-organization, did not want them. The first major demonstration took place in 1977. On June 25, Lesbian Nation organized a protest in Amsterdam against the hate campaigns of American singer Anita Bryant. About 2,000 people participated.
Pink Saturday in the Netherlands
Two years later, on 27 June 1979, there was a second large demonstration in Roermond against Bishop Gijsen's homophobic views. Four members of COC Limburg and a youth worker from Roermond, together the action group ROZA, organised the demonstration and were pleasantly surprised by the large turnout of 4,000 to 6,000 participants from all over the country. A petition signed by 8,814 people was presented at the bishop's palace.
The name 'Pink Saturday' had been coined by this action group ROZA. It already organised a smaller demonstration in Roermond on 14 April. This action fell in Holy Week, the time when Catholics celebrate Silent Saturday. Whereupon ROZA called this not-so-quiet day of action 'Pink Saturday'. Pink referred to the pink triangle that homosexuals had to wear as a mark in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany.
In 1980, there was a Pink Saturday in Amsterdam and since then Pink Saturday has travelled across the country. In 1982, the event in Amersfoort led to serious riots. These prompted the launch of the national LGBTQIA+ emancipation policy.
Utrecht
Utrecht organised Pink Saturday three times: in 1986, 1998 and 2013
1986
In 1984, the Utrecht city council asked the municipal executive to launch a gay-emancipation policy, which actually started the following year. As part of this, Utrecht was keen to bring The Pink Saturday to Utrecht, which succeeded a year later. Utrecht had its first Pink Saturday on 28 June 1986. A colourful procession moved through the city centre to the Wilhelminapark, where the final event was held. No riots, no aggression, as in Amersfoort in 1982, but celebration and joy. The theme was 'For more colour' referring to diversity in a broad sense. The event attracted some 9,000 participants.
1998
A second Pink Saturday took place in 1998 with the theme 'Mirrors & Tension'. The year before, the municipality organised De Roze Lente (The Pink Spring). This in turn led to the first Midsummer Canal Spectacle on Oudegracht between the three main gay bars (see window 1997 Pink Spring and Midzomergracht). That tasted like more and in the following year there were five pink spring days concluding with Pink Saturday and the second Midzomergracht Spectacle.
2013
The third was in 2013 and attracted 55,000 participants. This made it the largest Pink Saturday ever. The municipal policy officer for LGBTI+-matters, Kees van den Berg, had registered Utrecht as a candidate with the Pink Saturdays Netherlands Foundation, which annually designates the city where this event takes place. He then looked for an organization that wanted to organize the event. That became the PANN foundation, the city's successful LGBTQIA+ youth organisation.
PANN produced a bid book in six weeks. Utrecht was chosen on Pink Saturday in 2011 in Groningen over the other candidates Arnhem and Eindhoven. The proposal was innovative. No longer a parade, but a festival throughout the entire Utrecht city centre attractive for young people. A foundation was set up, RZ2013, which helped shape the event with many PANN volunteers and organizations from the city. Funds came from the province and municipality, but also from many national and local commercial and non-profit organizations.
The theme was “Just Come”. There were events on seven squares: Cathedral Square (main stage), City Hall Square (Stadhuisplein), Neude, Jacobskerkhof, Janskerkhof, Lepelenburg (with kids area) and Lucasbolwerk (information market). Minister Edith Schippers was at sports campus Olympos in the morning to launch the national rainbow sports campaign. Mayor Aleid Wolfsen and organizer Petra Luiken gave the starting shot together on Cathedral Square (Domplein). In the evening there were parties. The traditional ecumenical church celebration was in the Cathedral (Domkerk).
Evert van der Veen and Kees van den Berg
Pink Saturday 1998
Some participants in the parade through downtown Utrecht in a pink Chevrolet Bel Air on Smakkelaarsveld, during the Pink Saturday on June 26, 1998.
Pink Saturday 1998
Some participants in the procession through downtown Utrecht, near the Vredenburg viaduct, during the Pink Saturday 26 June 1998
Pink Saturday 1998
Some members of The Amsterdam Stetsons, a Gay Country and Western Dance club, practising their dance steps on the Smakkelaarsveld in Utrecht prior to the parade through the city centre of Utrecht, during the Pink Saturday 26 June 1998
Video impression of Pink Saturday Utrecht 2013 by DUIC
Sources
Interviews with organisers of Pink Saturday 2013, Petra Luiken and Simon Timmerman, 15 June 2023.
Andere tijden: Homo-emancipatie op radio en tv: https://www.anderetijden.nl/artikel/415/Homo-emancipatie-op-radio-en-tv
Zij aan Zij: Andreas Burnier https://www.zijaanzij.nl/encyclopedie/bekende-namen/576/burnier-andreas-1931—2002/
ILHIA: Gijsen en de eerste Roze Zaterdag https://withpride.ihlia.nl/story/gijsen-en-de-eerste-roze-zaterdag/
Video impression of Pink Saturday Utrecht 2013 by OUTTV
Videos
OUTTV: Events Pink Saturday 2013 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpxqyEmv2Ew
DUIC: Interview with councillor Gilbert Isabella and president Petra Luiken - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ceXZwHBqQeA
Kamkrant.co.uk: Impressions Pink Saturday Utrecht 2013 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NjOTQFy6GXc&t=3s