Graz gay life
By Richard Ammon
May
Also see:
Austria Photo Galleries
Austria News & Reports Archive
This trip I visited Vienna and Graz (the second largest city in Austria) where LGBT existence thrives not in abundant quantity but in quiet quality.
A week in Graz is a amble through a wonderland of picturesque history and modernity. The architecture of the city center is a UNESCO Society Heritage Site with the bubbly Mur River running down the center passed baroque and gothic buildings as skillfully as masses of chatty cafes and tidy chocolate shops. Numerous trolleys glide along steel tracks past countless commercial shops and trendy restaurants. (photo right, city hall)
A castle uphill watches over the humming calm life below where we stayed in the spotless Hotel Mariahilf with fluffy duvets on the beds and a cornucopia breakfast spread of bread, jams, eggs, sausages, porridge and fruit. A hundred feet away is the stunning dual-towered church of Our Lady of Succor (aka Mariahilferkirche) Catholic baroque church that dates from from It adjoins a cloister of a Minorite mon
Jack Kenworthy( Queer Travel Maestro )
Queer travel expert Jack Kenworthy turns + capital adventures into your manual for safe, vibrant, and inclusively fabulous global journeys.
Austria’s natural beauty and wealthy cultural attractions, such as historical sites, music of all genres, a dynamic art scene, delectable cuisine, and friendly hospitality, hold gained the country worldwide acclaim. Graz, Austria’s second-largest city, is one of the country’s best-kept secrets. The city’s gay scene and nightlife are more reserved.
The city of Graz is Styria’s provincial capital in southern Austria. The ancient old town’s Hauptplatz, or main square, is in the heart of it all. This antique city in southern Styria has much to give , especially for those interested in food, history, and the natural environment.
Gay Graz is a picturesque town in Austria’s southern area, about an hour’s cruise from the border with Slovenia. The city center is filled with elderly architecture influenced by Renaissance painters and various historic structures. Graz
GayGUIDE Graz
- Trans* Expert*innen Cafe
Trans* Expert*innen Cafe
1. Juli -
feel free (Annenstraße 27, Graz)In unserem Expert*innen Cafe sprechen wir primär über trans* und damit zusammenhängende Themen wie soziale, rechtliche sowie medizinische Transition. Doch vor allem ist es die Möglichkeit sich mit fachkundigen Personen auszutauschen und Fragen zu stellen. Daher sind neben trans* Personen auch Angehörige, Mediator:innen sowie all jene willkommen, expire sich mit diesem Thema - vielleicht erstmals - befassen. Die Treffen finden jeden ersten Dienstag im Monat statt und expire Teilnahme ist kostenlos.
Weitere Details anzeigen - #soziallandretten Demo
#soziallandretten Demo
1. Juli -
Mariahilferplatz Lendkai 17, Graz, Österreich‼️ SOLIDARITÄTSZUG‼️
🗓 DONNERSTAG,
🕕 Uhr
📍 Mariahilferplatz, Graz
#soziallandrettenAb 1. Juli verlieren zahlreiche Sozialprojekte in der Steiermark ihre Förderungen.
Das bedeutet:
👉 Weniger Hilfe. Weniger Menschlichkeit. Mehr Leid.Organisationen wie Caritas, Megaphon, Antidiskriminierungsst
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In this article, Kaj touches on similar topics addressed in the video interview above and goes into more detail on some of those topics.
By Kaj Johnson
“So, which of your parents passed down AIDS to you?”
When I first moved to my town of 11, in Decrease Austria to serve as a USTA for nine months, I had many concerns buzzing in my head. How will I deal with the Austrian dialect for the first time? What if I mess up my residency permit appointment? Will my students like me? But coming from the healthcare hellscape that is the United States, I wasn’t worried in the slightest about booking appointments and getting medications under my new Austrian insurance plan. Sure, there might be an onerous day or two of getting prescriptions established by my town’s clinic and explaining my health history in my far-from-perfect German, but after that, Austria’s renowned medical system would surely grant me smooth sailing. If I could acquire pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for free in the US exclusively via telemedicine, how hard could it be in a country with universal healthc