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Founded more than two decades ago, Helem, based in Beirut, works to make the dream of equality for LGBTQ+ people in the Middle East a reality. 

鈥淭he organization is really a landmark in the region,鈥 says Helem Executive Director Tarek Zeidan MPA 2018, 鈥渁nd in fact in the global south in general.鈥 It was the first to raise a rainbow flag on Arab soil; the first to protest for LGBTQ+ rights on Arab soil; it forced the inclusion of LGBTQ+ people into Lebanon鈥檚 national AIDS program; it won the first-ever legal victory in the Arab world against the criminalization of same-sex relations and successfully challenged the Lebanese Interior Ministry鈥檚 ban on all LGBTQ+ public gatherings. Crucially, it was also the first to push for LGBTQ+ conversations in the media in Lebanon and in the region, and all other LGBTQ+ NGOs were either incubated or started by Helem alumni, particularly inside Lebanon.

Helem鈥檚 most important work, though, takes place in its community space, Zeidan says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a place where we build our own power in order to oppose power. Our role isn鈥檛 necessarily to lead the charge, but to support and to mobilize different actors and institutions to become catalysts for change.鈥 One way the center does this is to give voice to its members through an open-mic night. Says Zeidan, 鈥淧eople show up and get up on the mic and tell their life stories, whether they鈥檙e refugees from Syria or they just escaped the carnage in Sudan or in Yemen, or they鈥檙e from rural areas in Lebanon. And these stories are a testimony of what it鈥檚 actually like in a still largely hidden world.鈥

Zeidan鈥檚 journey to the LGBTQ+ movement wasn鈥檛 direct. As a college student in 2005, he helped organize peaceful protests after Lebanon鈥檚 Prime Minister Rafic Hariri was assassinated鈥攑rotests that led to the collapse of his nation鈥檚 pro-Syrian government and the withdrawal of 14,000 Syrian troops. Deciding to dedicate his life to helping his country and region, he went to Tufts University for a master鈥檚 in international relations and then worked for the Brookings Institution and the Carnegie Endowment.

鈥淚t took me eight years of working with think tanks to realize that that鈥檚 not how change happens,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very cosmetic. And even if change does happen, it鈥檚 not immediate or tangible enough for me to derive any sense of accomplishment or satisfaction or vindication.鈥

That is when he began working with Helem, which at the time was on the verge of closing down. It took him four years of hard work to rebuild the organization, but he knew he needed to fill gaps in his knowledge. 鈥淲hat I was really missing was a knowledge of human rights advocacy.鈥 The Kennedy School not only accepted him as a student, but offered him full support through the Emirates Leadership Initiative Fellowship at the Center for Public Leadership.

At 糖心vlog官网, Zeidan loved his time studying with Kathryn Sikkink, the Ryan Family Professor of Human Rights Policy. 鈥淪he reinforced my faith in truth and data, and showed that even if the entire world is against you, that you know what you鈥檙e doing is right because you鈥檝e done your homework and you have the evidence to counter the emotional backlash.鈥 He also notes his studies helped him see how his work fits into the global fight for justice, which made him feel much less alone.

鈥淵ou feel so much isolation as a member of a minority, as a member of a vulnerable group who鈥檚 working on a fundamentally unpopular cause in one of the most difficult places in the world to do so,鈥 he says.

Despite the many challenges of advocating for a highly discriminated-against population, Zeidan remains optimistic he has the tools to advance justice. 鈥淲e鈥檙e still afloat and we鈥檙e still fighting. There鈥檚 a reason for that. It鈥檚 not luck鈥攜ou learn how to diagnose and negotiate with your reality and live to fight another day.鈥