Dublin: Tens of thousands of revelers created a carnival atmosphere on the streets of Dublin today in the first gay Pride parade since Ireland became the first country in the world to vote for same-sex marriage.
The march was led by a float with a banner that read, "the future is equal", while participants waved rainbow flags under the overcast Dublin sky.
Others carried posters saying "Thank You" and "Yes", a reference to the historic referendum on May 22.
The parade was given added significance after the US Supreme Court ruled Friday that gay marriage is a legal right in all 50 states.
Ireland, a traditionally Catholic nation, voted 62.1 percent in favour of allowing marriage between two people "without distinction as to their sex", the first time anywhere that gay marriage has been legalised in a referendum.
"This year in particular we have so much to celebrate with the marriage referendum," Jason Flynn, chairman of Dublin Pride, told AFP.
"Pride this year will be a way of acknowledging that and sending out a 'thank you' to people for voting Yes."
He added: "We're not 'the other' anymore. It's no longer 'them and us'. We're fully part of society."
Organisers were expecting a record 60,000 people to participate in the parade, the centre-piece of the ten-day Pride festival.
"There's a real celebratory mood this year because of the historic events of last month and yesterday in the US," Robert Kirwan, 30, told AFP.
Marqa Kiewied, 33, who moved to Dublin from the Netherlands six years ago, said this was the most "special" Pride she has ever attended.
"It's kind of like it doesn't matter where you're from, who you are, you can just be yourself - and it's great," she said.
Senator David Norris, Ireland's most renowned gay rights activist, said Pride had come along way since he first attended a march in Dublin in 1974.
"The first march I was in there were eight of us, there's about 80,000 today, which is quite extraordinary," he told AFP at Merrion Square Park, where the parade concluded.
He said the US Supreme Court ruling was a very significant development.
"The Western world is moving in the direction of gay rights in a very substantial way, but of course the rest of the world is going the opposite direction and we have to remember that," he said.
The march was led by a float with a banner that read, "the future is equal", while participants waved rainbow flags under the overcast Dublin sky.
Others carried posters saying "Thank You" and "Yes", a reference to the historic referendum on May 22.
Ireland, a traditionally Catholic nation, voted 62.1 percent in favour of allowing marriage between two people "without distinction as to their sex", the first time anywhere that gay marriage has been legalised in a referendum.
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"Pride this year will be a way of acknowledging that and sending out a 'thank you' to people for voting Yes."
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Organisers were expecting a record 60,000 people to participate in the parade, the centre-piece of the ten-day Pride festival.
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Marqa Kiewied, 33, who moved to Dublin from the Netherlands six years ago, said this was the most "special" Pride she has ever attended.
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Senator David Norris, Ireland's most renowned gay rights activist, said Pride had come along way since he first attended a march in Dublin in 1974.
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He said the US Supreme Court ruling was a very significant development.
"The Western world is moving in the direction of gay rights in a very substantial way, but of course the rest of the world is going the opposite direction and we have to remember that," he said.
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