News

Cambridge Residents Slam Council Proposal to Delay Bike Lane Construction

News

‘Gender-Affirming Slay Fest’: Harvard College QSA Hosts Annual Queer Prom

News

‘Not Being Nerds’: Harvard Students Dance to Tinashe at Yardfest

News

Wrongful Death Trial Against CAMHS Employee Over 2015 Student Suicide To Begin Tuesday

News

Cornel West, Harvard Affiliates Call for University to Divest from ‘Israeli Apartheid’ at Rally

Students Form Support Group for BGLTQ Athletes

Queer Undergraduate Athletes Do Sports is an undergraduate group formed in part by Schuyler Bailar '19.
Queer Undergraduate Athletes Do Sports is an undergraduate group formed in part by Schuyler Bailar '19. By Amy Y. Li
By Paula M. Barberi, Crimson Staff Writer

UPDATED: March 27, 2018 at 3:50 p.m.

Two Harvard students have founded a support group for BGLTQ-identifying student-athletes—dubbed Queer Undergraduate Athletes That Do Sports, or QUADS—which held its first meeting in mid-February.

Co-founders and teammates on the men’s varsity swim and dive team Schuyler M. Bailar ’19 and David J. Pfeifer ’18 say the group is the first of its kind on Harvard’s campus. Bailar and Pfeifer both identify as BGLTQ, and Bailar—the first openly transgender student-athlete to compete on an NCAA Division 1 men’s team—has earned national attention for his advocacy for BGLTQ students.

Bailar and Pfeifer founded the group in February; the co-founders said the group has already earned official recognition from Harvard, meaning it has the right to reserve and use College spaces, among other privileges. Bailar and Pfeifer said they worked with Sheehan D. Scarborough ’07, the director of the BGLTQ Office of Student Life, to form QUADS.

Bailar said both he and Pfeifer come from a “place of advocacy” that inspired them to create a space for BGLTQ-identifying athletes at Harvard.

“There's a lot of groups for queer people, but a lot of them, I think, focus on queer student life,” Bailar said. “Being an athlete is a totally different space, especially for queer people, because there's a lot more of gender performed through sport that can be violated to some degree.”

Pfeifer said the idea for the group came to him after he noticed he wasn’t the only openly BGLTQ individual on his team.

“I was thinking to myself that it doesn't seem right that there are people who are alone on their sports teams, or people who possibly are LGBTQ but don't feel comfortable because there's nobody else,” Pfeifer said. “So I kind of felt the necessity to form a group out of that, out of, you know, me feeling lucky to have LGBTQ teammates.”

Pfeifer and Bailar initially publicized the group by inviting friends to join. Eventually, though, Pfeifer reached out to the captains of every one of Harvard’s 42 varsity athletic teams. Pfeifer said 10 people attended the organization’s first meeting last month, but added that at least 24 students have so far expressed interest in joining QUADS.

Before officially becoming a member of QUADS, students must sign a confidentiality agreement, according to Bailar. He said the agreement helps ensure students feel comfortable and the identities of closeted athletes remain private.

“The membership won't be publicized unless you explicitly say so,” Pfeifer said. “So we're trying to kind of really foster that and drive that point home that, you know, it's a place where you can be yourself.”

QUADS will serve as a place to allow athlete-focused discussions about being BGLTQ as well as athlete-focused support for BGLTQ-identifying student athletes, Pfeifer said. Bailar encouraged allies to come to QUADS meetings, too.

The group plans to hold its next meeting April 8, according to Pfiefer.

Bailar said the founding of QUADS holds personal meaning for him.

“I think sports are a huge part of health and happiness for a lot of people,” he said. “If kids can't do the sport that they love or feel that they have to suffer or hide themselves because of their sport, or vice versa—can't be yourself because of your sport or can't do your sport because of yourself—that's a huge part of life there that doesn't exist there and a part of happiness that you don't get.”

“It means a lot to me to be able to be open about this,” he added.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags
Student GroupsLGBTQDepartment of AthleticsFront Middle Feature