Starting when she was eleven years old, demonstrating against the Vietnam War, Vaid was also a street activist. causes and, in consecutive five-year stints with the Ford Foundation and the Arcus Foundation, allocated millions more. and chaired the board of the political arm of Planned Parenthood. She co-founded the American LGBTQ+ Museum of History and Culture, which was inaugurated in New York City last year. Anti-Poverty Action Network and the National L.G.B.T./H.I.V. She started LPAC, the first lesbian political-action committee a think tank called Justice Work the Donors of Color Network the National L.G.B.T.Q. organizers, and, in conjunction with it, the National Religious Leadership Roundtable, a network of progressive religious leaders. She started the Creating Change conference, an annual activist gathering and a training ground for young L.G.B.T.Q. Task Force), where she served as the executive director from 1989 to 1992-the first woman of color to lead a national gay-and-lesbian organization. For a decade, she was affiliated with the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force (now the National L.G.B.T.Q. She was, almost certainly, the most prolific L.G.B.T.Q. Vaid, who died of cancer on May 14th, in Manhattan, at the age of sixty-three, wasn’t the head of all the gays, but only because that job does not exist. She realized that he was, unknowingly, talking about her. As evidence, he offered-and, at this point, Vaid would turn on a distinctly Indian English pronunciation, “an Indian woman is the head of all the gays.” Vaid was so confused that the man had to repeat his claim. As she told the story, the organizer claimed that the reasons the association had been turned away had nothing to do with homophobia. Vaid went to the Queens office of one of the parade organizers to make her case. In 1992, Urvashi Vaid, a thirty-three-year-old Indian American lesbian activist, was campaigning for the South Asian Lesbian and Gay Association to be included in the annual India Day Parade in New York City.