Transgender Day of Remembrance 2020

Transgender Day of Remembrance 2020

Transgender Day of Remembrance

Transgender Day of Remembrance occurs annually on November 20th. It is a day to memorialize those who have been killed or murdered as the result of transphobia, (hatred or fear of transgender and gender non-conforming/non-binary people). We also remember those who died as a result of suicide. This day serves to bring attention to the continued violence and non-acceptance endured by the transgender community which we see at an alarming new rate emanating from federal government against its own people.

No alt text provided for this image

Currently, Transgender Day of Remembrance is observed in cities across the U.S. and in more than 20 countries globally. In the preceding 12-month period (Dec.1, 2019 – Nov. 2020) in the United States alone, 37+ people have been brutally murdered with an additional 6 people in Puerto Rico for a total of 43. Globally this number is over 300 people with Brazil leading with the greatest death count. These people were violently killed just for living their authentic lives as Transgender or Gender Non-Conforming/Non-Binary. A disproportionate majority are Transgender Women of Color. It is time to stop this violence, hate and senseless death! It is time to celebrate the wide range of gender diversity many Americans and especially many New Yorkers share.

We often confuse a person's sex with their gender. A person's sex is determined by their physical anatomy at birth. Gender is how we see and think of ourselves, our internal sense of self, how we express who we are to other people around us.

In our culture, we quantify sex and gender as a binary of possibilities – male/masculine or female/feminine, with little room for variation in between. Transgender and Gender Non-Conforming/Non-Binary, Intersex individuals transcend or cross over these traditional sex and gender boundaries. We view life not in a strict male/masculine or female/feminine binary concept but rather a much fuller, richer continuum of possibilities across a variety of sex and gender-related spectrums.

In recent years, the current Federal administration continues their onslaught against our community. At most federal agencies (Department of Education, Department of Housing & Urban Development, Department of Labor and many others), hard fought rights and protections were either rolled back,  rescinded or not enforced for members of our community leaving our already marginalized community with a greater sense of disparity, inequity and hardship in accessing needed medical/behavioral health care, employment, education and other vital services we need to survive on a daily basis.

No alt text provided for this image

Suicide continues to be a constant concern in the Transgender community. For those who completed, attempted or considered suicide account for approximately 41% of our members. Over 50% of Transgender youth under the age of 20 have considered or attempted suicide. The suicide rate amongst the general population currently resides at less than 5%! The reasons for these deaths vary with each individual person. Major contributing factors include non-acceptance by parents, spouses and family members, bullying and harassment in schools, places of employment, places of religious worship and non-acceptance by society in general. Clearly the numbers referenced above are unacceptable to a society that is supposed to welcome and support diversity amongst all people. 

The transgender community is continuing to make ourselves known and visible in modern society and in daily life. We are demanding our place in society in terms of health/mental health care, employment, education in schools for our K-12 children, teens and college age youth and every other aspect of daily life.

If we are to live in a modern, progressive society, should we not welcome and accept all people regardless of sex, race, ethnicity, ability or disability status, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression along with all the other protected groups of people who reside in this state?

Kelly Metzgar, Executive Director, Adirondack North Country Gender Alliance 

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Kelly Metzgar - pronouns (she/her/hers) ??的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了