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Comings & Goings
Acosta takes new role at HRC


The Comings & Goings column is about sharing the professional successes of our community. We want to recognize those landing new jobs, new clients for their business, joining boards of organizations and other achievements. Please share your successes with us at [email protected].Ā

Congratulations to James Edward Cerasia, who has started work with the Bediz Group Realtors. He said, āI enjoy real estate because every day is different. Iām always meeting great new people and I never stop learning.ā
Previously, Cerasia worked with Keller Williams as a real estate agent. Many in the community know him from his time working for Mayor Bowser as Ward 2 liaison for the Mayorās Office of Community Relations and Services. He also worked for the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs.
Welcome to D.C. to Ty Litzelman who is here for the summer. He just landed two jobs as a waiter at both Freddieās Beach Bar and Federico Ristorante Italiano, both on 23rd Street in Arlington and both owned by the inimitable Freddie Lutz. While he is enjoying his time as a waiter he is still looking for a paid internship in the areas of real estate or finance.
Litzelman was president of his high school class and captain of both the Cross Country and Track & Field teams as well as activities coordinator of the Spanish Club. He also worked for four years as assistant manager at the Newton, Ill., Aquatics Center.
He is now a student at Indiana University in Bloomington, and aiming for a bachelorās degree in business. He is also a member of the United States Army National Guard where he is a Parachute Rigger, Private First Class.

Congratulations also to Lucas R. Acosta, who is beginning his position with the Human Rights Campaign as National Press Secretary for Campaigns. Acosta said, āI am excited to join the talented HRC team at this critical juncture when 10 million LGBTQ voters are poised to make the critical difference in 2020. Our community has been under constant attack by the Trump-Pence administration, and Iām glad to have the opportunity to be on the front lines as we leverage the power of our community to defeat the politics of hate.ā
Before joining HRC, Acosta was at the Democratic National Committee where he served as National Broadcast Media Manager & Director of LGBTQ Media. He also worked at Hillary for America as National Radio Broadcast Manager; at Marathon Strategies LLC as Senior Communications Associate; and for New York City Council member Ydanis Rodriguez as Legislative and Communications Director.
Acosta graduated with a bachelorās in political science and religious ethics from Middlebury College in Vermont. He was active in the Student Government Association as director of alumni relations and Wonnacott Commons senator.Ā


The nationās capital welcomed WorldPride this past weekend, a massive celebration that usually takes place in a different city every two years.
The Saturday parade attracted hundreds of thousands of people from around the world and the country. The state of Delaware, a few hours drive from D.C., saw participants in the parade, with CAMP Rehoboth, an LGBTQ community center in Rehoboth Beach, hosting a bus day trip.
Hope Vella sits on the board of directors and marched with CAMP Rehoboth. Vella said that although the parade took a long time to start and the temperature was hot, she was āon a cloudā from being there.
āIt didnāt matter to me how long it took to start. With the current changes that are in place regarding diversity and inclusion, I wanted my face there,ā Vella said. āMy life is an intersection. I am a Black woman. I am a lesbian, and I have a disability. All of these things are trying to be erased ⦠I didnāt care how long it took. I didnāt care how far it was going to be. I was going to finish that parade. I didnāt care how hot it was.ā
The nearly two mile parade route didnāt feel as long because everyone was so happy interacting with the crowd, Vella said. The group gave out beads, buttons, and pins to parade watchers.
āThe World Pride celebration gave me hope because so many people came out. And the joy and the love that was between us ⦠That gave me hope,ā Vella said.
Vella said that people with disabilities are often overlooked. More than one in four Americans have disabilities, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Vella said it was important for her āto be out there and to be seen in my wholeness as a Black woman, as a lesbian, as a woman with a disability and to not be hiding. I want our society to understand that we exist in LGBTQ+ spaces also.ā
Retired Maj. Gen. Tammy Smith is involved with CAMP Rehoboth and marched with a coalition of LGBTQ military members. Smith said they were walking to give transgender military members visibility and to remind people why they are serving.
āWhen we are not visible, what is allowed to take our place is stereotypes,ā Smith said. āAnd so without visibility, people think all veterans are conservative and perhaps not open to full equality. Without visibility, they might think a small state with a farming background may be a place thatās unwelcoming, but when you actually meet the people who are from those places, it sets aside those stereotypes and the real authenticity is allowed to come forward.ā
During the parade, Smith said she saw trans military members in the parade make eye contact or fist bump with transgender people in the crowd.Ā
āThey were seen. Both sides were seen during that parade and I just felt privileged to be able to witness that,ā Smith said.
Smith said Delaware is a state that is about freedom and equality and is the first state for a reason. The LGBTQ community is engrained as part of life in the Rehoboth and Lewes areas.
āWhat pride means to me is that we must always be doing what is necessary to maintain our dignity as a community,ā Smith said. āWe canāt let what people with negative messaging might be tossing our way impact us and the celebration of Pride. I donāt see it as being self-promoting. I see it as an act of dignity and strength.ā
District of Columbia
Drag queens protest Trump at the Kennedy Center
President attended ‘Les MisĆ©rables’ opening night on Wednesday

On Wednesday night, four local drag performers attended the first night of the Kennedy Centerās season in full drag ā while President Donald Trump, an outspoken critic of drag, sat mere feet away.Ā
Three queens ā Tara Hoot, Vagenesis, and Mari Con Carne ā joined drag king Ricky RosĆ© to represent Qommittee, a volunteer network uniting drag artists to support and defend each other amid growing conservative attacks. They all sat down with the Washington Blade to discuss the event.
The drag performers were there to see the opening performance of āLes MisĆ©rablesā since Trumpās takeover of the historically non-partisan Kennedy Center. The story shows the power of love, compassion, and redemption in the face of social injustice, poverty, and oppression, set in late 19th century France.Ā
Dressed in full drag, the group walked into the theater together, fully aware they could be punished for doing so.
āIt was a little scary walking in because we don’t know what we’re going to walk into, but it was really helpful to be able to walk in with friends,ā said drag queen Vagenesis. āThe strongest response we received was from the staff who worked there. They were so excited and grateful to see us there. Over and over and over again, we heard āThank you so much for being here,ā āThank you for coming,ā from the Kennedy Center staff.ā
The staff werenāt the only ones who seemed happy at the act of defiance.
āWe walked in together so we would have an opportunity to get a response,ā said Tara Hoot, who has performed at the Kennedy Center in full drag before. āIt was all applause, cheers, and whistles, and remarkably it was half empty. I think that was season ticket holders kind of making their message in a different way.ā
Despite the love from the audience and staff, Mari Con Carne said she couldnāt help feeling unsettled when Trump walked in.
āI felt two things ā disgust and frustration,ā Carne said. āObviously, I don’t align with anything the man has to say or has to do. And the frustration came because I wanted to do more than just sit there. I wanted to walk up to him and speak my truth ā and speak for the voices that were being hurt by his actions right now.ā
They weren’t the only ones who felt this way according to Vagenesis:
āSomebody shouted āFuck Trumpā from the rafters. I’d like to think that our being there encouraged people to want to express themselves.ā
The group showing up in drag and expressing themselves was, they all agreed, an act of defiance.
āDrag has always been a protest, and it always will be a sort of resistance,ā Carne said, after pointing out her intersectional identity as āqueer, brown, Mexican immigrantā makes her existence that much more powerful as a statement. āMy identity, my art, my existence ā to be a protest.ā
Hoot, who is known for her drag story times, explained that protesting can look different than the traditional holding up signs and marching for some.Ā
āSometimes protesting is just us taking up space as drag artists,ā Hoot added. āI felt like being true to who you are ā it was an opportunity to live the message.ā
And that message, Ricky RosĆ© pointed out, was ingrained with the institution of the Kennedy Center and art itself ā it couldnāt be taken away, regardless of executive orders and drag bans
āThe Kennedy Center was founded more than 50 years ago as a place meant to celebrate the arts in its truest, extraordinary form,ā said Ricky RosĆ©. āPresident Kennedy himself even argued that culture has a great practical value in an age of conflict. He was quoted saying, āthe encouragement of art is political in the most profound sense, not as a weapon in the struggle, but as an instrument of understanding the futility of struggleā and I believe that is the basis of what the Kennedy Center was founded on, and should continue. And drag fits perfectly within it.ā
All four drag performers told the Washington Blade ā independently of one another ā that they donāt think Trump truly understood the musical he was watching.
“I don’t think the president understands any kind of plot that’s laid out in front of him,” Vagenesis said. “I’m interested to see what he thinks about “Les Mis,” a play about revolution against an oppressive regime. I get the feeling that he identifies with the the rebellion side of it, instead of the oppressor. I just feel like he doesn’t get it. I feel it goes right over his head.”
“Les MisĆ©rables” is running at the Kennedy Center until July 13.

The Comings & Goings column is about sharing the professional successes of our community. We want to recognize those landing new jobs, new clients for their business, joining boards of organizations and other achievements. Please share your successes with us at [email protected].Ā
Congratulations to Chrys Kefalas and Salah Czapary on their new venture, the Yala Greek Ice Cream Shop, which will open in Georgetown, at 3143 N St. N.W., around July 4.
Kefalas is the CEO and founder, Czapary is the co-founder/director of experience and operations. The third co-founder is Steve Shyn, COO. From what I hear Chrys and Salah will at times both be doing the scooping to the lucky people who stop by their shop. The wordĀ āYalaāĀ is a play on the Greek word for āmilk,ā and fittingly, Yala Greek Ice Cream is made using hand-crafted techniques passed down through three generations of Greek ice cream makers.Ā
Kefalas told the Blade, āThis is not frozen yogurt, just inspired by Greek flavors or a trendy twist on gelato. This is true Greek ice cream, finally making its American debut. It is crafted with farm-fresh milk from Maryland, Greek yogurt and honey, fruit preserves from the Mediterranean, and ingredients sourced directly from Greece, Italy, and the Middle East, including premium pistachios and sustainably harvested vanilla.āĀ
The two come from different backgrounds. Kefalas has a family in the restaurant business but is currently the head of the brand division at the National Association of Manufacturers. He is a former Justice Department attorney; worked as Attorney General Eric Holderās speech writer; Gov. Bob Erlichās counsel in Maryland; and ran for U.S. Senate in Maryland (endorsed by the Baltimore Sun). Born and raised in Baltimore, heās a Washingtonian of nine years. He told the Blade, āYala Ice Cream is a tribute, a legacy, and a love letter across generations.ā He spent his early years working in his grandfatherās restaurant in Baltimore, Illonaās. Kefalas hopes, āJust like Greek yogurt changed everything, Greek ice cream is going to set the new standard for ice cream. But, for us, it isnāt just about ice cream; itās about making my Papou, my grandfather, proud.āĀ
Many people in D.C. know Czapary. He is the son of a Palestinian refugee, and Hungarian immigrant, and a longtime Washington, D.C. resident. Czapary served as a police officer and community engagement leader with the MPD. He then ran for D.C. Council, and although didnāt win, was endorsed by the Washington Post. After that race, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser realized how accomplished he is and asked him to join her administration, where he served as director of the Mayorās Office of Nightlife and Culture.
Czapary told the Blade, āWeāre bringing the first authentic Greek ice cream shop to the U.S., and weāre doing it with heart. Weāre building a space where kindness, community, and a scoop of something extraordinary come together. Our Georgetown scoop shop is designed to be a welcoming haven where every guest feels a sense of belonging.”
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