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Local Resources

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Nationwide evaluation measures how well Albuquerque supports the LGBTQ+ community

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The University of New Mexico has a flourishing LGBTQIA+ community as well as various resources for students on campus.

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Resources for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Questioning senior adults.

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Albuquerque celebrates diversity. Encounter enchanting art and performances, exquisite cuisine 

featuring the flavors of New Mexico, and high-desert landscapes.

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An expansive list of various resources for the Albuquerque area.

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Saints Ball is an Albuquerque-based alternative drag troupe that was founded by Allison Saint. Saints Ball is made up of queer and trans performers with a unique and creative way of doing drag that rejects pageantry, conventional femininity and tradition.

Resource Guides

Created by our own Madeline Griffin, explore two guides focused on:

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SHOWING! Thursday, May 11th 3:00 pm

SUB 3rd Floor - Acoma A

A 45 year old Latinx trans man returns to his birthplace - Albuquerque, New Mexico - in search for the origin of a secret lesbian code he learned when he identified as a teenage dyke in the 80s.​

The Whistle is a documentary film that tells the story of a secret code created by and shared among young lesbians in 1970s & 80s Albuquerque as a means of self-­identification and finding community. 

In the 1970s & 80s, a group of lesbian youth in Albuquerque had a particular way of finding each other and others like themselves. They created a special whistle that was both hard to learn and easy to go unnoticed by unsuspecting bystanders. It would go on to be known by their peers and by those who came up and out after them as the “dyke whistle.” The dyke whistle was a right of passage taught to newly out dykes by their peers. It was used to find friends in a crowd, to find out if other young women were also lesbians, and was used as a sort of friendly nod to groups of lesbians passing by at the mall or at the State Fair. Most importantly, it was a lifeline to community for many young lesbians coming up and out during that time. The dyke whistle was a safe way to identify oneself to fellow lesbians in public – without anyone else knowing and compromising one’s safety.

Director StormMiguel Florez is a queer Latinx trans man who came out and identified as a dyke in 1987 during his freshman year at Del Norte High School in Albuquerque. When Florez came out at the age of 15, a group of his lesbian peers took him under their wing and taught him how to navigate the stresses and the joys of being a young dyke in Albuquerque in the mid 1980s. They took Florez to house parties, introduced him to dykes from other high schools, cruised the parking lots of gay bars that they were too young to get into, and taught him slang like “wrecked” (the process of coming out as a dyke) and “1-4-3” (code for “I love you”).  And they taught him the dyke whistle. 

For this project, director StormMiguel Florez interviewed his peers who were also out in the 80s and his elders who were out in the 70s. These interviews explore what lesbian identity formation was like for Albuquerque youth in the 1970s & 80s, how participants came out, found each other, and built community with other young dykes, and how they navigated and survived discrimination from their families of origin, public schools, and straight classmates. 

The Whistle documents and reveals both humorous and heartbreaking stories, often told by participants in the same breath.

The director sought out to uncover the origin of the dyke whistle and found so much more in this important slice of New Mexico LGBTQ history. 

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Watch The Whistle here (57 minutes)

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