Jewel Thais Williams
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Jewel Thais-Williams, activist and owner of legendary L.A. Black queer bar Jewel's Catch One, has died
Jewel Thais-Williams, owner of the legendary Los Angeles Black queer disco Jewels Catch One and an activist for HIV treatment and other causes, has died at age 86.Several social media posters said Thais-Williams died Monday night, and her death has now been confirmed by TV station KTLA.Thais-Williams, a lesbian, opened Jewels Catch One in the early 1970s because she saw that Black LGBTQ+ people in L.A. needed a space of their own. She had previously run a mixed club, where gay and straight Blacks and whites partied together. It was kind of a miracle, really, she once said.It was clear, though, that queer people of color needed a specific haven of their own, Chanelle Tyson wrote in The Advocate in 2018, when Thais-Williams was the Legacy Honoree for the publications Champions of Pride. Gay clubs often discriminated against Blacks and women at the time.Related: 41 Images from The Advocate's Champions of Pride Party That Put You Right ThereUnlike her first club, Catch Ones intention was gay from the start, Tyson wrote. It became so much more. In its prime, Catch Ones attendance swelled to 1,300 a night and attracted celebrities like Madonna, Sharon Stone, and Janet Jackson. As the climate of the world shifted, Catch One changed too, but over the staggering 42 years it was open, it always remained a safe and inclusive place for the black LGBT community. Eventually, it hosted the kind of integrated crowd that would have never been seen in a disco club before, she added.Thais-Williams was quick to respond to the AIDS crisis. She and her wife, Rue, established Rues House, which provided housing and services to women and children living with HIV or AIDS, in 1989. Thais-Williams had cofounded the Minority AIDS Project in 1987, and in 2001, she set up the Village Health Foundation, offering alternative treatments for HIV.She closed Catch One in 2015, when she was 76. The club had survived much, including an arson attack in 1985 that nearly destroyed it.The joy experienced at Jewels Catch One club was more than a weekend choice for fun; it was an act of defiance by black lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the face of clubs in West Hollywood where they felt unwanted because of their race, the Los Angeles Times reported upon the closing.Thais-Williams remained active, though, volunteering part-time at the Village Health Foundation. The 2016 documentary Jewels Catch One by filmmaker C. Fitz chronicled her life and that of the nightclub. In 2019, the intersection of Pico Boulevard and Norton Avenue in L.A., the location of the club, was dedicated by the Los Angeles City Council as Jewel Thais-Williams Square.Related: 7 must-see docs celebrating iconic Black LGBTQ+ historical figuresShe and her club are being remembered fondly. Jewels Catch One was a sanctuary. It was a major part of the throughline of my own coming-out journey, and it was one of the few places where men and women got together, actor-writer-producer Dalila Ali Rajah told The Advocate. She also had the healing practice that was on the same property that allowed people of all kinds to get inexpensive, accessible, natural, homeopathic and Chinese medicine, health care, acupuncture, all of those things that were often out of the reach of the Black community. And during the AIDS crisis, its immeasurable the amount of impact she had on everything. And during the time where we are losing so much, to have someone cross over feels so heavy. But it also means we have an ancestor working for us on the other side. Its just a hard thing to hold.I was 30 years old when I first walked into Jewels Catch One and found my life, activist Keith Boykin wrote on Instagram. That was the fall of 1995. While the club was frequented by celebrities, I never went to see a celebrity, he continued. I was there because Jewel created a safe space for the Black LGBTQ community at a time when AIDS, homophobia, and many of our own churches made us feel unwelcome. See on Instagram Jewel was the mother of a whole community of Black queer folks in L.A., writer Jasmyne Cannick posted on Instagram. Whether you knew her personally or not, you felt her. She made space for us long before it was trendy or safe. She saw us. She held us. See on Instagram Today the world celebrates the incredible life and legacy of Jewel Thais Williams, Holistic Healer, Community Activist, Philanthropist and Business Mogul. In The Meantime Mens Group, Inc. joins with the world community in remembering her contributions to all people, Jeffrey King, the groups founder, wrote on Facebook. We will call her name for eternity and beyond. Jewel Thais Williams! Close friends and community leaders are in the planning process of a community wide commemoration. More information forthcoming.Survivors include Thais-Williamss wife, Rue.In 2020, Thais-Williams shared this advice for struggling queer people in an interview with the LGBTQ History Project: "I would probably start with learning to love yourselves. Look in the mirror every day, and say I love you just as you are. There's a universal plan for everybody's presence here on this planet. ... I just think that everything goes according to plan. The important part is you just being willing to carry out whatever you wish in the end."Additional reporting by Tracy E. Gilchrist.
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