Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta transfobia. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta transfobia. Mostrar todas as mensagens

domingo, 11 de agosto de 2013

Transgender teen killed by mob in Jamaica as country addresses long-standing discrimination


in: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/life/Transgender+teen+killed+Jamaica+country+addresses/8774929/story.html

Transgender teen killed by mob in Jamaica as country addresses long-standing discrimination
In this Aug. 5, 2013 photo, street graffiti with an anti-gay message covers part of a privacy wall in the Papine neighborhood of Kingston, Jamaica. Advocates say much of the homophobia is fueled by a nearly 150-year-old anti-sodomy law that bans anal sex as well as by dancehall reggae performers who flaunt anti-gay themes. The island’s main gay rights group estimated that two homosexual men were killed for their sexual orientation last year, and 36 were the victims of mob violence. (AP Photo/David McFadden)

 
Dwayne Jones was relentlessly teased in high school for being effeminate until he dropped out. His father not only kicked him out of the house at the age of 14 but also helped jeering neighbours push the youngster from the rough Jamaican slum where he grew up.

By age 16, the teenager was dead — beaten, stabbed, shot and run over by a car when he showed up at a street party dressed as a woman. His mistake: confiding to a friend that he was attending a "straight" party as a girl for the first time in his life.

"When I saw Dwayne's body, I started shaking and crying," said Khloe, one of three transgender friends who shared a derelict house with the teenager in the hills above the north coast city of Montego Bay. Like many transgender and gay people in Jamaica, Khloe wouldn't give a full name out of fear.

"It was horrible. It was so, so painful to see him like that."

International advocacy groups often portray this Caribbean island as the most hostile country in the Western Hemisphere for gay and transgender people. After two prominent gay rights activists were murdered, a researcher with the U.S.-based Human Rights Watch in 2006 called the environment in Jamaica for such groups "the worst any of us has ever seen."

Local activists have since disputed that label, but still say homophobia is pervasive. Dwayne's horrific July 22 murder has made headlines in newspapers on the island and stirred calls in some quarters for doing more to protect Jamaica's gay community, especially those who live on the streets and resort to sex work.

Advocates say much of the homophobia is fueled by a nearly 150-year-old anti-sodomy law that bans anal sex as well as by dancehall reggae performers who flaunt anti-gay themes. The island's main gay rights group estimated that two homosexual men were killed for their sexual orientation last year, and 36 were the victims of mob violence.

For years, Jamaica's gay community has lived so far underground that their parties and church services were held in secret locations. Many gays have stuck to a "don't ask, don't tell" policy of keeping their sexual orientation hidden to avoid scrutiny or protect loved ones.

"Judging by comments made on social media, most Jamaicans think Dwayne Jones brought his death on himself for wearing a dress and dancing in a society that has made it abundantly clear that homosexuals are neither to be seen nor heard," said Annie Paul, a blogger and publications officer at Jamaica's campus of the University of the West Indies.

Some say the hostility partly stems from the legacy of slavery when black men were sometimes sodomized as punishment or humiliation. Some historians believe that practice carried over into a general dread of homosexuality.

But in recent years, emboldened young people such as Dwayne have helped bring the island's gay and transgender community out of the shadows. A small group of gay runaways now rowdily congregates on the streets of Kingston's financial district.

Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller's government has also vowed to put the anti-sodomy law to a "conscience vote" in Parliament, and she said during her 2011 campaign that only merit would decide who got a Cabinet position in her government. By contrast, former Prime Minister Bruce Golding said in 2008 that he would never allow homosexuals in his Cabinet.

Dane Lewis, executive director of the Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals & Gays, said there were increasing "pockets of tolerance" on the island.

"We can say that we are becoming more tolerant. And thankfully that's because of people like Dwayne who have helped push the envelope," said Lewis, one of the few Jamaican gays who will publicly disclose his full name.

Yet rights groups still complain of the slow pace of the investigation into Jones' murder, despite the justice minister calling for a full probe.

Police spokesman Steve Brown said detectives working the case are struggling to overcome a chronic problem: a strong anti-informant culture that makes eyewitnesses to murders and other crimes too afraid or simply unwilling to come forward.

Even though some 300 people were at the dance party in the small riverside community of Irwin, police have yet to make a single arrest in Dwayne's murder. Police say witnesses have said they couldn't see the attackers' faces.

Dwayne was the centre of attraction shortly after arriving in a taxi at 2 a.m. with his two 23-year-old housemates, Khloe and Keke. Dwayne's expert dance moves, long legs and high cheekbones quickly made him the one that the guys were trying to get next to.

Like many Jamaican homosexuals, Dwayne was careful about confiding in others about his sexual orientation. But when he saw a girl he had known from church, he told her he was attending the party in drag.

Minutes later, according to Khloe and Keke, the girl's male friends gathered around Dwayne in the dimly-lit street asking: "Are you a woman or a man?" One man waved a lighter's flame near Dwayne's sneakers, asking whether a girl could have such big feet.

Then, his friends said, another man grabbed a lantern from an outdoor bar and walked over to Dwayne, shining the bright light over him from head to toe. "It's a man," he concluded, while the others hissed "batty boy" and other anti-gay epithets.

Khloe says she tried to steer him away from the crowd, whispering in Dwayne's ear: "Walk with me, walk with me." But Dwayne pulled away, loudly insisting to partygoers that he was a girl. When someone behind him snapped his bra strap, the teen panicked and raced down the street.

But he couldn't run fast enough to escape the mob.

The teenager was viciously assaulted and apparently half-conscious for some two hours before another sustained attack finished him off, according to Khloe, who was also beaten and nearly raped. She hid in a nearby church and then the surrounding woods, unable to call for help because she didn't have her cellphone.

Dwayne's father in the Montego Bay slum of North Gully didn't want to talk about his son's life or death. The teen's family wouldn't even claim the body, according to Dwayne's friends.

They remembered him as a spirited boy with a contagious laugh who dreamt of becoming a performer like Lady Gaga. He was also a street-smart hustler who resorted to sleeping in the bushes or on beaches when he became homeless. He won a local dancing competition during his time on the streets and was affectionately nicknamed "Gully Queen."

"He was the youngest of us but he was a diva," Khloe said. "He was always very feisty and joking around."

Inside their squatter house, Khloe and Keke said, they still talk to their dead friend.

"I'll be cooking in the kitchen and I'll say, 'Dwayne, you hungry?' or something like that," said Keke while sitting on the old mattress in her bedroom, flinching as neighbourhood dogs barked outside. "We just miss him all the time. Sometimes I think I see him."

But down the hall, Dwayne's room is empty except for pink window curtains decorated with roses, his favourite flower.

http://www.edmontonjournal.com/life/Transgender+teen+killed+Jamaica+country+addresses/8774929/story.html

quinta-feira, 7 de fevereiro de 2013

Transgender woman settles lawsuit with Boston over treatment during 2010 arrest


in: http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/2013/02/05/transgender-woman-settles-lawsuit-with-boston-over-treatment-during-arrest/jldg4ZWAzhEU5srQSiYANI/story.html


Officers’ actions under scrutiny
Brenda Wernikoff was arrested for refusing to leave a woman’s bathroom at a homeless shelter in Boston.
Brenda Wernikoff was arrested for refusing to leave a woman’s bathroom at a homeless shelter in Boston.





The city of Boston has agreed to pay a transgender woman $20,000 in exchange for dropping her suit against the officers who arrested her on disorderly conduct at a homeless shelter, in a case that highlights the department’s absence of written policies for dealing with transgender people.


The officers who arrested Brenda Wernikoff are now being investigated by the department’s internal affairs division.


The department is also continuing to work on training its officers on how to interact with the transgender community.


According to Wernikoff, Boston police did not just book her, they humiliated her.


After she was arrested for refusing to leave a woman’s bathroom at a homeless shelter, she said four to five male officers at the South End police station forced her to remove her shirt and bra and expose her breasts.


According to the federal lawsuit, “The officers then ordered Ms. Wernikoff to jump and down, causing her breasts to jiggle” as the officers laughed. “I mean belly laughs,” Wernikoff said, describing the May 2010 incident.


“The officers contend that was pure fiction. They are well-respected veterans of the department,” said Kenneth Anderson, a lawyer who is representing the officers in the department’s investigation.


Cheryl Fiandaca, spokeswoman for the Boston police, declined to comment on the lawsuit, but she said top commanders have been meeting with leaders in the transgender community about such issues.


“Currently, we are working with the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition to develop new policies to deal with various situations and issues of importance that could arise with the police and the community,” she said.


Last Friday, the Boston Public Health Commission, which runs the Woods Mullen Shelter where Wernikoff was arrested, agreed to pay her an additional $10,000. Staff members at the shelter, who called police that day, were retrained after the incident, said commission spokesman Nick Martin.


“We place an extremely high priority on having policies that promote inclusivity and prohibit discrimination,” he said. “The commission has a clear policy to support transgender individuals — a policy that was in place well before this incident and reinforced in the wake of this unfortunate experience for one of our clients.”


Wernikoff, 60, said she hopes police officers will soon have clear guidelines on how to treat transgender people.


“It shouldn’t happen again to anyone,” she said.


The City of Boston has long had an ordinance that says people have the right to use restrooms, showers, and dressing rooms based on their gender identity, a rule that goes beyond state protections of transgender people.


The problem is that the city has failed to train many officers on its own ordinance, said Wernikoff’s lawyer, Howard Friedman, a well-known civil rights attorney.


He pointed to departments in Washington, D.C., and Los Angeles, which make clear in their rules and regulations that officers are to address a transgender person by their preferred name and use appropriate personal pronouns. They also instruct officers to conduct searches in the same way that they would on a non-transgender person.


Boston police did not follow those guidelines when they arrested Wernikoff, according to the lawsuit filed last November.


Wernikoff, whose birth name is Bruce Wernikoff and who began identifying as a woman when she was in her mid-50s, had been staying at the shelter for about a year. She said she had nowhere else to go after she left her uncle’s home, where she felt unwelcome by relatives uncomfortable with her gender identity.


Wernikoff was in a bathroom stall when a counselor, Margaretta Collins, came into the bathroom and told her she could not be there when other women were present.


Collins said in an interview that her supervisor told her that transgender people at the shelter were supposed to use another bathroom on the floor.


“For whatever reason, she chose to use the female’s bathroom and the females complained,” said Collins, who left her job about a month ago for health reasons.


The Boston Public Health Commission’s policy stipulates that transgender women may use the women’s restroom and showers. Martin said staff members are instructed to follow the commission’s protocol.


“If [Collins] was unfortunately given that advice by her supervisor that would have been a mistake,” he said. Collins said her supervisor called the police officer assigned to the shelter. Officer Loletha Graham-Smith appeared and ordered Collins to get out of the stall.
 
“She was trying to be professional,” Wernikoff recalled. But she never asked for Wernikoff’s identification and refused to acknowledge Wernikoff by her gender, according to the lawsuit.


In her report, Graham-Smith described her encounter with Wernikoff: “ ‘Sir, you have to leave this bathroom now,’ ” Graham-Smith said. “Said male stepped in officers’ face and started pointing his finger in officer’s face. . . . He was persistent in showing harassment and intimidation toward officer.”


At the booking station, the patrol officers repeatedly called her “Bruce,” Wernikoff said, and refused to let her reach for her wallet so she could show them her driver’s license, which showed she had legally changed her name to Brenda.


Officer Edward Fleming booked Wernikoff and Officer Frank Chiola searched her, according to the complaint. The officers did not give her a private space to change and did not ask whether she wanted a woman to search her instead, according to the complaint.


Wernikoff said she tried to show no emotion. “You survive the encounter any way you can,” she said. “That’s what you do.”


Prosecutors later dismissed the disorderly conduct charge against Wernikoff.


Gunner Scott, executive director of the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition, has trained Boston police recruits in dealing with transgender people and said he is confident the department will draft a policy soon. Last spring, he provided the department with a copy of the Washington, D.C., police policy as an example of what it should adopt.


But Scott said his agency still receives complaints from transgender people that police sometimes do not take them seriously and often refer to them as as sir or ma’am, in contrast with their gender identity.


“Whether the person is a victim or assumed to have broken the law, transgender people should be treated with respect and should not be demoralized,” Scott said.


He praised Wernikoff for filing the lawsuit.


Wernikoff, who is now in a committed relationship and taking care of her ailing mother, said she tries to avoid police.


“We’re very, very misunderstood,” Wernikoff said. People “look at us and say ‘what is it?’ . . . We don’t do it to shock. This is who and what we are. We were born this way.”
 



http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/2013/02/05/transgender-woman-settles-lawsuit-with-boston-over-treatment-during-arrest/jldg4ZWAzhEU5srQSiYANI/story.html

segunda-feira, 21 de janeiro de 2013

Portugal passes trans hate crime law


in: http://gaystarnews.com/article/portugal-passes-trans-hate-crime-law210113

Portugal's parliament has voted to include 'gender identity' as a category of hate crime law



The Portuguese parliament approved a revision of the country’s criminal code which will ban discrimination and hate crime against transgender people.

This addition to the criminal code was approved unanimously, following a proposal by the Portuguese Socialist Party.

Hate crimes against trans people in Portugal have been recorded in the recent past, transphobic violence made headlines with the murder of Gisberta Salce Júnior in 2006.

However, gender identity was absent from hate crime legislation.

Portugal’s parliament has now added ‘gender identity’ alongside ‘sexual orientation’ to articles relating to aggravated homicide and assault.

It also stressed the reprehensibility of these acts (and consequently strengthening the penalties) in case their motivation is based on the perceived sexual orientation or gender identity of the victim.

The inclusion of ‘gender identity’ in the Portuguese criminal code was a long-standing demand of ILGA Portugal.

In a statement, ILGA Portugal said: ‘We hope that the recognition of the particular vulnerability of trans people extends to the remaining legal system, also with the broad support of various political forces.

‘We welcome, in any case, this ground-breaking recognition by the Portuguese law, following the gender recognition legislation - and we will continue to work towards the full recognition and protection of trans people’.

Portugal already included ‘gender identity’ in protection against work discrimination, which ensures no discrimination occurs to transgender people in the access to goods and services, education, health and social protection.

On 1 March 2011 the President ratified the Law of Gender Identity, said to be the most advanced in the world, which simplifies the process of sex and name change for transsexual people.

http://gaystarnews.com/article/portugal-passes-trans-hate-crime-law210113

quarta-feira, 9 de janeiro de 2013

Fired trans teacher sues school which said she was 'worse than gay'



in: http://gaystarnews.com/article/fired-trans-teacher-sues-school-which-said-she-was-worse-gay080113


A transgender teacher files a lawsuit against a Catholic school in New York, claiming the head banned her from wearing women's clothing

 

A transgender teacher is suing the New York Catholic school where she worked for 32 years claiming she was fired for dressing as a woman.

Mark Krolikowski, 59, filed a lawsuit against St Francis Preparatory in Queens after the private school sacked her last year following a complaint from a pupil's parents.

The lawsuit revealed that the music and social studies teacher told the principal, Brother Leonard Conway, she was transgender and would start coming to work dressed in women's clothing.

However, Conway reacted by telling Krolikowski that being trans was 'worse than gay' and she would be barred from attending public school events.

Speaking to ABC News, Krolikowski's lawyer Andrew Kimler said: 'He is extremely upset given the dedication and devotion he showed to the school for 30 years.'

Kimler added that his client is protected under state discrimination laws.

However, the school denied they fired Krolikowski because of her gender identity.

http://gaystarnews.com/article/fired-trans-teacher-sues-school-which-said-she-was-worse-gay080113

segunda-feira, 19 de novembro de 2012

Massachusetts transgender inmate fighting for electrolysis


in: http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/11/massachusetts_transgender_inma_1.html

1119transgendxx.jpg  
In this Jan. 15, 1993, file photo, Robert Kosilek, aka Michelle Kosilek, sits in Bristol County Superior Court in New Bedford. Kosilek, a convicted murderer who won a court ruling ordering Massachusetts prison officials to allow her to have a sex-change operation, is now fighting for electrolysis treatments.

 
 
Convicted murderer Michelle Kosilek fought for more than a decade before a federal judge in Massachusetts ordered prison officials to allow her to have a sex-change operation.

Kosilek is still fighting, this time for electrolysis treatments, another step she says she needs to complete her transformation into a woman.

Kosilek's lawyers will be in court Monday to ask U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf to order the state Department of Correction to provide the hair removal treatments. The department is appealing his ruling ordering sex-reassignment surgery.

Kosilek was born male but has received hormone treatments and now lives as a woman in an all-male male prison, where she is serving a life sentence. Kosilek was named Robert when married to Cheryl Kosilek and convicted of murdering her in 1990.

Kosilek, now 63, received seven electrolysis treatments in 2008 to remove facial and chest hair. The DOC discontinued the treatments after finding she had already received significant hair removal and saying her remaining hair could be removed by shaving or using depilatories.

Her lawyers declined to comment on the electrolysis request but argued in court documents filed last month that the DOC provided electrolysis for a limited time "to keep the issue from being fully litigated at trial, showing further indifference to Kosilek's serious medical needs."

The DOC also declined to comment but argued in court documents that Kosilek is attempting to get treatments that have already been denied by the judge.

Wolf has twice rejected requests from Kosilek for additional electrolysis treatments, but ordered prison officials to have Kosilek evaluated by an independent expert on gender-identity disorder. An evaluation was done in 2010, but Kosilek's lawyers objected to the use of a psychiatrist who works for the DOC, saying he could not be considered an independent expert.

In his Sept. 4 ruling ordering the DOC to provide Kosilek with sex-reassignment surgery, Wolf did not rule on the electrolysis request, saying the surgery "will be a material change in circumstances regarding any arguable serious medical need Kosilek may have for electrolysis."

Kosilek's lawyers filed a motion to amend Wolf's ruling in October, asking that the judge require the appointment of an independent expert to evaluate Kosilek's medical need for electrolysis. Wolf later ordered the DOC to provide the name of an independent expert who can give the court an opinion on whether Kosilek needs the electrolysis treatments if he orders an evaluation of Kosilek.

The DOC says Kosilek is not entitled to additional treatments.

Kosilek "is not seeking to correct an error of law or fact, but to relitigate the electrolysis issue raised at trial by obtaining new evidence and a rehearing," the DOC argued in court documents this month.


http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/11/massachusetts_transgender_inma_1.html

Top 10 Myths About Transgender People



in: http://everydayfeminism.com/2012/08/myths-about-transgender-people/


Millions of people in the US identify as transgender.
And yet, most people know almost nothing about them.
Even many feminists have trouble distinguishing identity from identity, term from term, myth from reality.
How many of your friends and family can properly define the term “transgender”?
If you’re like most of us, the answer is, not many.

Why do we know so little about transgender people?

When it comes to gender and sex, transgender people are breaking the rules.  And since patriarchy’s very existence depends on everyone’s compliance, those who break the rules are a threat.
So they must be silenced.

Transgender people are systematically silenced on a daily basis.

They are not adequately represented in politics, government, or media.  They are not encouraged to freely express themselves in a society that fears them.  They are often not even safe on their own streets.
We don’t know them because, frankly, we don’t see them.
When transgender people do live their lives in the open, they are deemed freaks, deviants, and perverts.  They are told that who they are is wrong.  They are even hated, hurt, and killed.
When transgender people are represented in the media, they are often portrayed as over-sexualized, uncontrollable freaks (think “Jerry Springer”).  Or are presented as drugged out prostitutes (think “Cops”).  Or are misidentified as flamboyant drag queens (think “RuPaul”).
We know this is wrong.
But, we may still not know what’s right.
It’s easy to fall into the trap of stereotyping this group that you may find hard to understand.  Maybe you already have.
That’s okay.  Being feminist doesn’t mean being perfect.  But it does mean making an effort to change your ways of thinking and debunk the myths that society tells us about certain groups of people.
So let’s confront some of the most common myths about transgender people, and change our ways of thinking about them.

Myth #1:  Transgender people live crazy lives.

This is probably the most common misconception about trans people.
Many people incorrectly associate being transgender with automatically living an “crazy lifestyle” based on tv and in the movies. This may involve drag performance, hyper-masculine or hyper-feminine behavior, drugs, or prostitution.
Some trans people (and some non-trans people too!) engage in the above behaviors. But all transgender people do the everyday things that are a part of life. They go to work, buy groceries, see movies, kiss their kids good night.
They are people. They do people things like everyone else.

Myth #2: Transgender people are confused.

Just because a person is different, doesn’t mean they don’t know who they are.
Trans people have a sex.  They are females, males, and intersex.
Trans people have a gender.  They are men, women, queer, and other genders.
They know their sex and they know their gender.
This can be confusing to us who inhabit more traditional gender roles, but to the transgender person, it is not confusing.  It is just who they are.
That said, coming to the realization that you are trans, and coming out publically as trans, in a society that doesn’t accept or understand you can be very confusing and hurtful.   Many transgender people have experiences of feeling “defective” or “wrong.”
This is a social problem, not a gender identity problem.

Myth #3: Transgender people are mentally disturbed.

It’s true that many transgender people suffer from mental illness.  But it’s not because of their gender identity alone!
It’s because in a patriarchal society, being gender variant causes a lot of distress.  So much distress, in fact, that it can be described by the diagnosis of a mental disorder.  This diagnosis is helpful because it tells us that this person is hurting and something needs to be done to help.
Transgender people have the same brains we do.  They are just faced with a lot more mental and emotional stress.

Myth #4: Transgender people are gay.

Gender identity and sexual orientation are two completely separate characteristics.   One is what gender we see ourselves as being.  The other is what gender(s) and sex(es) we are physically and romantically attracted to.
Knowing one doesn’t tell you about the other.

Myth #5: Transgender people are radical liberals with crazy ideas.

Transgender people come from all political and religious backgrounds.
Many trans people just want to lead their lives as part of “mainstream” society and be accepted and not condemned by their families, churches, governments and communities.
They should be allowed this.
Other trans people feel very strongly about changing the system that has oppressed them and adapt more radical beliefs about the gender system.  They wish to live outside of traditional social norms and not be deemed “freaks” because of it.
They should be allowed this too.
Transgender people are diverse.  Each will make a unique decision about the life they want to lead.

Myth #6: Transgender people hate their bodies.

This is a very common myth.  It does make sense that a person who identifies as a woman might be uncomfortable in her male body, and vice versa.  And some transgender people are uncomfortable and want to alter their bodies.  Others choose to live with their bodies as they are.
Neither choice means that this person hates themself.  On the contrary, a transgender person can love themselves through the whole process of transitioning.  And we can love them too!
Each person’s relationship with their body is unique and we should support every transgender person in doing what works for them.

Myth #7: Transgender people perform drag shows.

Conservative thinkers would love to point to a singing, shimmying, scantily dressed, heavily made-up drag queen slinking across a stage and say, “THAT is a transgender!”  But, they’re wrong.  In fact, did you know that the majority of gender performance is done by non-trans people?
Because, it’s just a performance.  It’s not about real people.
Drag Queens and Drag Kings “do drag” for theatrical, comedic, and at times, political purposes.  They do it for their art and they do it with you, the viewer, in mind.
When a trans woman wears women’s clothing or a trans man wears men’s clothing, they are not doing drag.  Nor are they cross-dressing.  They are just wearing their clothes.

Myth #8: You can tell someone is transgender just by looking at them.

This is a myth meant to make us believe that transgender people are all crazy freaks.  That you can “spot” one, like a cartoon villain or a sasquatch. “Look, a tranny!”
It is a hurtful and misleading lie.
The truth is, transgender people have bodies just like ours.  And they may display them in very traditional ways.
Some pass very well, others don’t.
As feminists, we don’t judge our bodies or anyone else’s.

Myth #9: Transgender people aren’t “real” men or women.

This is probably the most hurtful myth of all.  It tells us that transgender people are somehow less human because of their gender identification.  It is proof that they do not have a place in proper society.
It is hateful and unacceptable.
Everyone should have the right to be men and women, regardless of sex category or anything else.
There are many ways to be human.

Myth #10: Transgender people are weird.

When someone is unlike anything we have seen or known, we think, that’s weird.
It’s okay to have that thought.  It’s human nature.  But it’s important to understand that your perception of what’s “weird” is based on your experiences and your culture.
Many cultures think that living outside the gender binary (two-gender system) is perfectly normal.  Transgender people are integrated into mainstream society and may even be held in high esteem.
We can do the same!  As feminists, we think difference is good!  (and we embrace weirdness too).

Why do these myths exist?

These myths all have one thing in common: they justify the subjugation of transgender people.
Think about it:  if we all believed that transgender people were confused, crazy, mentally ill, radical freaks that aren’t real people, then why would we want them to have an equal place in our society?  If they’re not normal, and not right, why would we want them to be anything more than invisible?
It’s a calculated collection of stereotypes that serves to maintain patriarchy.
Just by knowing that these 10 myths are false, you know more about transgender people than most people in the country today.
And, because of this knowledge, trans people are one step closer to being understood and accepted in mainstream society.
Now, take a minute to think about how powerful that is.

http://everydayfeminism.com/2012/08/myths-about-transgender-people/

sexta-feira, 16 de novembro de 2012

Americans tell their stories for Transgender Awareness Week



in: http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/trans-americans-tell-their-stories-transgender-awareness-week151112



Video campaign hopes to raise awareness of transgender issues in the US


Actress Laverne Cox tells her story for 'I AM: Trans People Speak' video campaign



A video campaign featuring prominent trans Americans has been launched to mark Transgender Awareness Week.

The 'I AM: Trans People Speak' videos feature New York Times bestseller Professor Jennifer Finney Boylan and actress Laverne Cox telling their own personal stories.

Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (TLDEF) attorney Noah Lewis and performance poet Kit Yan also share their experiences to camera in the campaign which aims to put transgender issues in the spotlight to educate the public and speak to trans youth and adults.

The videos' release by LGBT rights group GLAAD and the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition coincides with Transgender Awareness Week.

The US campaign, which started 12 November and runs until 19 November, hopes to raise visibility and awareness of transgender people and issues.

'The stories of everyday transgender Americans remain relatively unheard in both national and LGBT media,' said GLAAD President Herndon Graddick.

'These stories will not only empower members of the transgender community who rarely see relatable stories, but also educate Americans everywhere about the fact that the community is a valuable part of the fabric of our culture.

'The campaign will also shine a light on the high level of discrimination that our transgender friends, family and neighbors continue to face in schools, the workplace and in their own communities.'

Transgender Awareness Week culminates with the Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR) on 20 November, honoring the memory of those whose lives were lost in acts of anti-transgender violence.

Keep up with Transgender Awareness Week on Twitter by following hashtag #TAW12. Follow the Transgender Day of Remembrance on Twitter with hashtag #TDoR

Watch a selection of the videos below:



















http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/trans-americans-tell-their-stories-transgender-awareness-week151112



segunda-feira, 5 de novembro de 2012

Trans man denied recognition of fatherhood in Japan



in: http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/trans-man-denied-recognition-fatherhood-japan051112

Despite being official recognized as male, judge rules that trans man cannot be named on his child’s birth certificate



A judge in Japan denied a trans man the right to be registered as the father on his son’s birth certificate at Tokyo Family Court last Wednesday (31 October).

The man had his male gender officially recognized before marrying his wife in 2008 and the husband of a woman who has a child is presumed to be the father in Japan.

Judge Yoshiki Matsutani said his ruling against the father’s wishes was not a violation of the constitution which protects against discrimination, including sex, Japan Daily Press reports.

Matsutani said that the man cannot be the father because he is unable to produce sperm (the child was conceived via sperm donation) and that the father’s name on the child’s birth certificate should remain blank.

The father said he will continue to fight for recognition. ‘I feel I am being discriminated against,’ he said. ‘I will continue to fight so that I can live as a husband and father.’

http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/trans-man-denied-recognition-fatherhood-japan051112


sexta-feira, 26 de outubro de 2012

Transgender Woman Stoned to Death in Brazil



in: http://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2012/10/26/transgender-woman-stoned-death-brazil




Madona, a transgender woman recently murdered in Brazil 
 
 


A transgender woman in Brazil has died after being stoned by a group of attackers last week, reports Gay Star News.

The woman, who was born Amos Chagas Lima and went by the name of Madona, was pelted with cobblestones by her assailants October 19 in Aracaju, the capital of the state of the Brazilian state of Sergipe. She was admitted to a hospital and died four days later of severe head injuries. No suspects have been arrested.

Madona, who was a well-known and well-liked figure in Aracaju nightlife, is among many transgender people who have been targets of violence in Brazil, activists say.

“Trans people are the smallest and most vulnerable part of the LGBT Brazilian communities, making up a mere 10th, yet we suffer from the highest incidence of violence and murder,” Keila Simpson, president of the National Council to Combat Discrimination, told Gay Star News. “Since January we have had over 100 transgender people murdered here — that means over 10 people murdered every month. … People here in Brazil think that if they don’t like someone, like a trans person, they have a right to murder. Murders occur because they go often unpunished — simply put: Homophobic and transphobic hate is not a criminal offence.”
 

http://www.advocate.com/politics/transgender/2012/10/26/transgender-woman-stoned-death-brazil

sábado, 20 de outubro de 2012

World Health Organization: Trans people aren't sick!



in: https://www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/world-health-organization-trans-people-aren-t-sick




by Jenna Talackova
Vancouver, Canada
I'm not sick. In fact I’m great! I'm a women that had to undergo transgender medical procedures to become who I really am on in the inside.

But the World Health Organization (WHO) insists that I, and millions of other trans people are sick. The WHO actually considers transsexualism to be a mental disorder.

Since facing and overcoming discrimination for being a transgender woman back in March - when I was kicked out of and then re-admitted to the Miss Universe Pageant - I've been working to fight the stigma and discrimination facing people like me.

Join me in signing this petition and ask the World Health Organization to stop considering transsexual people mentally ill.

This also doesn't mean trans people shouldn't be included in the health system and provided with treatments, however, this has nothing to do with us being classified as mentally ill.

The WHO is definitely willing to reconsider their choices, and they're actually in the process of revising the list right now. If we all speak up I'm sure we can make a difference.


Please sign this petition at:






 https://www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/world-health-organization-trans-people-aren-t-sick

domingo, 14 de outubro de 2012

Transgender community protests Anders’ latest petition


via: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/

Transgender community protests Anders’ latest petition
Members of Calgary's trans community held a protest outside MP Rob Anders constituency office in response to his comments that the goal of Bill C-279 is to "give transgendered men access to women's public washroom facilities" and will expose children to harm.
Photograph by: Lorraine Hjalte , Calgary Herald


More than a dozen members of Calgary’s transgendered community protested Saturday outside the constituency office of Calgary West MP Rob Anders.

The Conservative politician is drawing fire for circulating a petition opposing a bill that would extend legal protections to transgender people.

Anders’ petition calls Bill C-279 the “bathroom bill” and says it endangers children and aims “to give transgendered men access to women’s public washroom facilities.”

Protester Mercedes Allen said the event was organized to clarify the “fear mongering” petition.

“The bill he’s protesting is a human rights bill which is not about washrooms at all but refers to employment, housing, access to services and things like that,” Allen said.

Allen said many Canadians don’t know people who are transgendered and the event served to help people learn about the issues facing a vulnerable population and why human rights protections are needed.

“We just want people to realize that we’re real people. They encounter us everyday, probably don’t even realize it. (We’re) not any kind of scary menace at all,” Allen said.

Anders defended the petition in an e-mail to the Herald Saturday.

“If someone has male plumbing they should use a men’s public washroom,” he wrote.

Females deserve to be protected in public washrooms and change rooms, the email said.

“Women and girls make up over 50 per cent of the population and should not be put at risk for the sake of less than one per cent of the population. What about the rights of the majority of women and girls?”

But Premier Alison Redford characterized Anders’ petition as “ill-informed” and inappropriate.“One of the things that always disappoints me in a dialogue about human rights is when you see people introduce information into the discussion that is incorrect and only designed to get people scared, frightened or to incite emotion,” she said, speaking to reporters after a luncheon Saturday. “It’s unfortunate. It’s a very ill-informed petition.



http://www.edmontonjournal.com/

sexta-feira, 28 de setembro de 2012

LGBT advocate Chaz Bono in Studio Q


in: http://www.cbc.ca/player/Radio/Q/Q+on+CBC-TV/ID/2283804178/


Author and activist, born of Sonny and Cher, Chaz Bono is one of the highest profile transgender individuals in our culture today. He joins Jian in Studio Q to talk about transgender issues and the media, as well as his appearance on Degrassi.



 

sexta-feira, 6 de julho de 2012

Man Cleared Of Rape Because Victim Was Transgender


in: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/

A Swedish judge cleared a man charged with rape because the victim was a transgender woman with male genitalia.


From The Local:

"A man who attempted to rape a woman has been cleared of the charges by a Swedish court after it turned out that the woman he tried to rape was actually a man."


Prosecutors said the defendant was “brutally violent” in the "attempted rape", tearing off the victim's pants and grabbing at the victim's crotch, according to The Local's translation of Sweden's Nerikes Allehanda newspaper.
But because the victim had a penis, "The intended crime never had the possibility of being fulfilled,” Sjöstedt explained.
The unnamed defendant was found guilty of assault.

"More than anything, this case highlights the sheer absurdity of the double standard with which we treat male victims of domestic violence and sexual assault. Changing the verdict solely because of the victim’s genitalia is like switching a grand theft auto charge to petty theft because the car happened to be blue when the thief thought it was green."

Queerty's Benji Douglas added, "In essence, the judge ruled that it’s not possible to rape trans women."




http://www.huffingtonpost.com/

sexta-feira, 15 de junho de 2012

Black Transgender Woman CeCe McDonald to be Housed in Male Prison


in: http://colorlines.com/


CeCe McDonald supportcece.wordpress.com







CeCe McDonald, the young black transgender woman who accepted a plea deal and pled guilty to second-degree manslaughter last month will be incarcerated by the state of Minnesota as a male. McDonald was arrested after she stabbed a white male who was part of a group of that physically and verbally attacked her with transgender and racial slurs.
The plea agreement calls for a sentence of three years and five months in prison, according to the Star Tribune.
Upon sentencing, McDonald, 24, will be taken into custody by the state Department of Corrections and housed as a male “because he is being housed as a male with Hennepin County,” corrections spokeswoman Sarah Russell told the Star Tribune on Monday. “We will intake him as a male at St. Cloud prison.”
Russell went on to add the state will make its own determination of McDonald’s gender.
“We will assess him as any other offender would be assessed,” Russell said. “The assessments include, but are not limited to, screening for potential vulnerability to sexual assaults, tendencies to act out with sexually aggressive behavior and any disabilities” as defined by federal law.
The Transgender Law Center gathered testimonies from former prisoners, sheriffs, and others, about the risks that many prisoners face and found that sexual violence is an “ever present fact of life for far too many transgender prisoners.” [PDF]

It is true that McDonald was not out looking for a fight. On the night of June 5, 2011, McDonald walked past a bar with four other black friends in Minneapolis. She and her friends were attacked by two white women and a white man, first with words, “niggers,” “faggots,” and “chicks with dicks.”
But the words, while enough to incite a response, were not the end of it. McDonald was struck in the face with a cocktail glass by one of the women, slicing all the way through her cheek. A fight ensued as more people joined in to attack the group of black folks, and eventually Dean Schmitz, the white man who was among the first to start harassing them, was stabbed and died later in the hospital.
Even if there is not physical evidence in place to secure the conviction the prosecutor originally sought, it doesn’t really matter. A black person who fights with white people, even when self-defense is clear, is going to likely be arrested. This is often true also in transphobic and homophobic contexts, even when the violence is between people of the same race. The burden to prove one didn’t deserve to die or be brutalized often falls on black, queer and/or trans bodies. In fact, McDonald’s judge ruled that the swastika tattooed on Schmitz’s body was inadmissible by her defense as evidence of his racist assault.

Akiba Solomon will bring you more detailed reporting on McDonald’s story later this week.

http://colorlines.com/


quinta-feira, 14 de junho de 2012

Gay and Transgender Discrimination: Protecting Employee Rights


in: http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/06/lgbt_discrimination.html

Every day far too many gay and transgender Americans are forced out of their jobs and into the ranks of the unemployed at a time when all families are struggling to stay afloat. Until Congress passes the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, or ENDA, it will remain perfectly legal to fire someone based simply on their sexual orientation or gender identity in a majority of states in this country.


                                   







http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/06/lgbt_discrimination.html

sexta-feira, 18 de maio de 2012

Transgender community demands civil, not special, rights

in: http://www.thehindu.com/


“Do we have to live with day-to-day discrimination our whole life?”
“Is it a sin to be born a hijra?” asked Sita, a member of the transgender community, narrating her story of pain and trauma at a public hearing on “Social Inclusion and Access to Justice to Transgender Community” here on Saturday.

“When anti-social elements treat you badly, you approach the police. But whom should you approach when police personnel themselves exploit you sexually,” she asked, highlighting the pattern of institutionalised exploitation of the transgender community.

“The police earlier used to harass us for gay sex, but after the Delhi High Court decriminalised it, they harass the community on the pretext of being prostitutes.”

Another transgender Laksmi poses another query: “If you sit on seats reserved for women in buses, they make you stand. And if you occupy the unreserved ones, then the men harass you. Is this the kind of day-to-day discrimination and social ostracisation we have to live with our whole life?”

Sita and Lakshmi were among the hundred-odd members of the transgender community who had came together to demand civil rights that are granted to every citizens of the country. They demanded that the civil society and the government put an end to their marginalisation and discrimination.

At the end of the public hearing, a jury headed by former Delhi High Court Chief Justice A.P. Shah, recommended the government recognise the transgender community on the basis of their sexual orientation and start welfare schemes for them as a matter of right. He also recommended that every State Government, like Tamil Nadu, form a Transgender Welfare Board and Transgender Commission to protect the human rights of the marginalised community.

While inaugurating the public hearing, Delhi High Court acting Chief Justice A. K. Sikri, said: “It is important for the judiciary to come out with bold pronouncements in support of this community. In the case of the disabled, courts have always taken a firm stand in their favour, which has made a lot of difference to their lives. I hope it is going to be the same for this community in future.”

“We need to understand as to what extent social exclusion, based on identity, is impacting their right to property and inheritance, denial of access to healthcare and social welfare schemes, including identity cards and livelihood options,” said Laya Medhini, director of the Centre for Legal Aid and Rights (CLAR), which co-organised the public hearing with the United Nations Development Programme, India.

Campaigner for rights for transgender community and writer Priya Babu said: “Unless the issue of our legal identity is resolved and we are classified as a gender and on the basis of which the government legislates for reservation for the transgender community at all levels, we are not going to win the battle against marginalisation, stigma and discrimination.”

Ambalika Roy, a lawyer attached with CLAR, said the process of inclusion of transgender community has to start right at the school level so that children with transgender orientation don't have to leave school, as almost all transgender participants at Saturday's hearing had to.

Ambalika said awareness at all levels was resulting in transgender-friendly policy making decisions like the census doing a headcount of the transgender community for the first time in India and the Karnataka High Court appointing a transgender in the High Court to deal with their cases. But she also added that these steps were still very few and the government had a long way to go to ensure a dignified life and human rights to the marginalised community.



quinta-feira, 17 de maio de 2012

Abraço contra a homofobia e transfobia


in: http://www.dn.pt


A rede "ex aequo - associação de jovens lésbicas, gays, bissexuais, transgéneros e simpatizantes" realiza quinta-feira uma ação de sensibilização pública, em que vários voluntários irão distribuir abraços, brindes e panfletos informativos contra a homofobia e transfobia. 


O evento já se realizou em anos anteriores e tem como principal objectivo combater a intolerância contra as diferenças sexuais. A ação decorrerá entre as 17.30 e as 18.30, junto à Estação Multimodal da Gare do Oriente.

A rede ex aequo tem como principal missão trabalhar no apoio à juventude lésbica, gay, bissexual ou transgénera e na informação social relativamente às questões da orientação sexual e identidade de género.

A associação pretende ainda que estejam presentes duas figuras públicas para participar no evento, juntamente com os jovens voluntários da rede ex aequo. Mas, para já, não avança qualquer nome.

http://www.dn.pt

quarta-feira, 16 de maio de 2012

Homophobia: European leaders tell young people It Gets Better


in: http://www.lgbt-ep.eu/press-releases/european-leaders-it-gets-better/


In Europe, growing up lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender can be challenging: difference often leads to bullying, self-harm, and sometimes suicide attempts. Studies consistently point to higher physical and mental health risks for LGBT young people.
For the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia 2012, over 50 European politicians and leaders from all EU institutions  join forces telling LGBT teenagers they are working to make things better, and put an end to homophobia and transphobia.
In this unique video message, Members of the European Parliament tell young people it gets better in 17 different languages, from Italian to Bulgarian and Swedish to Polish.
They are joined in the video by Martin Schulz, President of the European Parliament;Herman van Rompuy, President of the European Council; and Cecilia MalmströmAndris PiebalgsNeelie KroesLászló Andor and Viviane Reding, Members of the European Commission.
This video message is inspired by the American project It Gets Better, which aims to reduce self-harm and suicide attempts among LGBT young people.


http://www.lgbt-ep.eu/press-releases/european-leaders-it-gets-better/

17 de Maio - Marcha de Luta contra a Bifobia, Homofobia, Intersexofobia, Lesbofobia, Polifobia e Transfobia - Coimbra





17 de Maio - Marcha de Luta contra a Bifobia, Homofobia, Intersexofobia, Lesbofobia, Polifobia e Transfobia - Coimbra
www.pathcoimbra.org


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