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People of color initiate Trans Day of Action

Published Jun 22, 2005 10:27 PM

Trans and gender non-conforming (TGNC) people of color and their allies will march here on Friday, June 24, in an historic event to protest the injustices that trans and gender non-conforming people face on a daily basis, and demand social and economic justice for all people.

People of color are pioneering this effort. In the fighting spirit of Stonewall, the first annual Trans Day of Action for Social and Economic Justice has been initiated by TransJustice, the first and only trans and gender non-conforming people of color project in New York City, to call attention to the needs of TGNC and working people.

TransJustice is an outgrowth of the Audre Lorde Project, the lesbian, gay, bisexual, two-spirit, and trans people of color center for community organizing. Coincidentally, its march is being held on the same day as the second annual Trans March in San Francisco. Organizers plan to issue a joint solidarity statement linking both events.

The need for such an action is great. The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force’s Transgender Civil Rights Project reports that only six states have anti-discrimination laws that explicitly include the trans community. And the Trans Day of Remem brance website reports that this year alone, 10 murders of trans people have been reported—more than one a month.(www. gender.org/remember/day/who.html)

Yet the organizers of the march are quick to note that the issues facing all working people are of concern to TGNC communities as well, including poverty, war and racism.

The call for the Trans Day of Action has garnered widespread support, including endorsements from New York City Council person Charles Barron; Al-Fatiha, NYC Chapter; Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center, San Francisco; Brazilian Rainbow Group, Inc.; Center for Consti tutional Rights; FIERCE! Fabulous Inde pendent Educated Radicals for Commu nity Empowerment; Gay & Lesbian Domin ican Empowerment Organization; INCITE! Women of Color Against Vio lence; International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission; Jews for Racial and Economic Justice; San Francisco Pride; San Romero de las Américas Church, NYC; Southerners On New Ground; Florida Gender Equality Project; Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement, Montreal, Quebec; Internation al Action Center; Network/La Red: Ending abuse in lesbian, bisexual women’s and transgender communities, Boston; Troops Out Now! Coalition; Workers’ Rights Law Center of New York; Youth Enrichment Services of the LGBT Community Center; and others.

Reasons for Day of Action

Following are excerpts from the call:

“Communities of color have histories that are rich with multiple gender identities, experiences, and expressions, but today the two-gender system is enforced against us everywhere: in health care, immigration, bathrooms, clothing, shelters, prisons, schools, government forms, job applications, and identity documents.

“Gender policing has always been part of America’s bloody history. State-sanctioned gender policing targets Trans and Gender Non-Conforming (TGNC) people first by dehumanizing our identities. It denies our basic right to gender self-determination, and considers our bodies to be property of the state.

“Gender policing isolates TGNC people from our communities, many of which have been socialized with these oppressive definitions of gender. As a result, we all too often fall victim to verbal and physical violence. This transphobic violence is justified using medical theories and religious beliefs, and is perpetuated in order to preserve America’s heterosexist values. Gender policing and violence denies our existence and is used to maintain control over us and keep our communities divided.

“The specific issues that TGNC people of color face mirror those faced by the broader communities of color in NYC: police brutality and harassment; racist and xenophobic immigration policies; lack of access to living wage employment, adequate affordable housing, quality education, and basic healthcare; and the impacts of U.S. imperialism and the so-called U.S. “war on terrorism” being waged against people at home and abroad.

“These issues are compounded for TGNC people of color by the fact that homophobia and transphobia are so pervasive in society. As a result, our community is disproportionately represented in homeless shelters, in foster care agencies, in jails and prisons.

“On April 2002, the city of New York passed a non-discrimination law that included gender identity as a protected category under the city’s human rights law, yet it took the Bloomberg administration two years to create and release an inadequate set of guidelines to define what this meant. Meanwhile, TGNC people continue to experience high levels of violence and harassment everywhere we go.

“Across the country, people of color communities face high levels of unemployment. For example, it is widely known that in 2005 the unemployment rate for Black men in NYC is now at 50 percent. We can only deduce that the percentage of unemployment for TGNC people of color is likely to be much higher, since there is hardly any New York State employment data for our community. Due to the lack of employment opportunities, many of us are forced to accept work that is criminalized by the government, stigmatized by society and offers very little safety.

“The anti-immigrant REAL ID act not only blatantly violates the rights of immigrants, but also has a direct impact in the lives of all TGNC people. This is especially relevant for people of color, who since 9/11 have experienced rising levels of policing and scrutiny from state agencies such as the Department of Motor Vehicles and Social Security. TGNC people are portrayed as frauds and potential so-called “terrorists,” then targeted or denied rights.

“The police, as agents of the government, have brutalized and murdered multitudes of people in our communities in the past few years. Many of them are people of trans experience, who have had no recourse because the violence perpetrated against them was, and still is, state-sanctioned.

“As Trans and Gender Non-Conforming people of color, we see that our struggle today is directly linked to many struggles here and around the world. We view the June 24 Trans Day of Action for Social and Economic Justice as a day to stand in solidarity with all peoples and movements fighting against oppression and inequality.

“We also view this action as following the legacy of our Trans People of Color warriors, such as Sylvia Rivera and others who with extreme determination fought not only for the rights of all trans and gender-nonconforming people, but also were on the front lines for the liberation of all oppressed peoples.

“In this spirit, we as Trans and Gender Non-Conforming Peoples of Color call on all social justice activists from communities of color, lesbian, gay, bi and trans movements, immigrant rights organizations, youth and student groups, trade unions and workers organizations, religious communities and HIV/AIDS and social service agencies to endorse this call to action and to build contingents to march in solidarity together on June 24. With this march we commemorate the lives of those who came before us, and honor the courage of all communities that continue to struggle and fight for liberation and self-determination every day.”