Upon hearing of the Human Rights Campaign’s (HRC) “Transgender Day of Remembrance”, I had to wonder, is anything sacred to HRC?

The Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR) was started by Gwen Smith. She explains the origins of TDOR on the Remembering Our Dead website:

The Transgender Day of Remembrance was set aside to memorialize those who were killed due to anti-transgender hatred or prejudice. The event is held in November to honor Rita Hester, whose murder on November 28th, 1998 kicked off the “Remembering Our Dead” web project and a San Francisco candlelight vigil in 1999. Rita Hester’s murder — like most anti-transgender murder cases — has yet to be solved.

She explains the mission of the TDOR this way:

The Transgender Day of Remembrance serves several purposes. It raises public awareness of hate crimes against transgendered people, an action that current media doesn’t perform. Day of Remembrance publicly mourns and honors the lives of our brothers and sisters who might otherwise be forgotten. Through the vigil, we express love and respect for our people in the face of national indifference and hatred. Day of Remembrance reminds non-transgendered people that we are their sons, daughters, parents, friends and lovers. Day of Remembrance gives our allies a chance to step forward with us and stand in vigil, memorializing those of us who’ve died by anti-transgender violence.

If one needs proof of the showboating, one need only look at the details of the event. To address those gathered they chose Rev. Drew Phoenix, a white transgender pastor from Baltimore, rather than someone of color from Washington D.C.. They chose the comfort of the HRC corporate headquarters, instead of a location closer to where the following deaths have occurred.

(WOC= woman of color)

Tyra Hunter – WOC- Washington D.C. 8/8/1995
Tyra Henderson – WOC - Washington, D.C. 4/23/2000
Jamie (James) Jackson - WOC - Washington, D.C. 11/21/2001
Stephanie Thomas – WOC- Washington, D.C. 8/12/2002
Ukea Davis – WOC- Washington, D.C. 8/12/2002
Kim Mimi Young – WOC- Washington, D.C. 4/9/2003
Bella Evangelista - WOC - Washington, D.C. 8/16/2003
Emonie Kiera Spaulding - WOC- Washington, D.C. 8/20/2003

Why not have a ceremony with locals that knew those murdered and experienced the loss personally? They haven’t been in the national media the way Drew Phoenix has, but this isn’t supposed to be about a photo op. Last year, Ethan St. Pierre eloquently explained how offensive this is. Ethan is the maintainer of the list of the dead for the project. Ethan’s aunt, Debra Forte, is one of the dead on the list.

He writes:

An Open Letter to the Transgender Community

“There are only thirteen people on the list this year?”

That was the first sentence in an email that smacked me in the face just days before The Transgender Day of Remembrance event. That was the email that smacked me in the face just after I’d spent hours updating the statistics and going over the entire list of transgender people we have lost to the unspeakable violence faced by our Community.

Hours later I received a phone call from a leader in our community who was complaining about how the Transgender Day of Remembrance was such a downer and that she wanted to have more of a celebration and to perhaps incorporate the day of remembrance into such an event and yes, even move the event to the springtime so that Colleges and High Schools could still be involved. After all, the more the money-er.

The attempted manipulations and attempts to capitalize on the Transgender Day of Remembrance by some of our national organizations and so called leaders is nothing less than appalling and downright sickening.

The Transgender Day of Remembrance is not a place to put on your party hat, it is not a celebration of life, nor is it an opportunity for your organization to fund-raise, it should not be an event where the keynote speaker gets paid a lot of money to come and sell the latest autobiography and should not be a political event where people schmooze with their donors from a past political campaign and it most certainly should not be sponsored nor cosponsored by The Human Right’s Campaign, an organization who can’t even support us in a Federal Hate crimes bill!

Not in my wildest dreams did I ever imagine that I’d have to write about such an issue and believe me when I tell you that there have been few things in my life that have been this painful and hurtful.

The Transgender Day of Remembrance still remains the one event where our community has come together as one to express our outrage, our fears and our sorrow for the losses we have endured, to honor and memorialize those who we have lost. It is a day to educate, not just society at large but the people in our own community who just don’t understand the risks. It is a day of solidarity and I for one will not let that be lost and turned into something cheap.

I want to thank all the people around the world who have continued to coordinate events and who work tirelessly. Your commitment to the event and respect for its meaning is most certainly appreciated. For that, I’d like to say THANK YOU.

I just added another name to that list of people we have lost to anti-transgender violence and prejudice bringing the total up to 19. Is that enough?

Sincerely,
Ethan St.Pierre
Remembering Our Dead Project
http://www.rememberingourdead.org

In the memory of those who have died, I urge everyone in the Metro D.C. area to avoid this TDOR. Please do not take part in this abuse of our dead.

This entry was posted on Thursday, November 1st, 2007 at 1:05 pm.
Categories: HRC, trans murders.

12 Comments, Comment or Ping

  1. Kathy

    I was just about to send out this email.
    —————————————

    These people have no right to appropriate this specifically transgender event. To wrap themselves in our dead as a publicity stunt is in appallingly bad taste. Especially from an organization that has no transgender employees, no transgender board members and has NEVER hired a single transgender woman.

    The huge majority of those murdered are transgender women of color. Many of who’s lack of economic opportunity placed them in dangerous situations. HRC’s history of actions oppossing or not supporting inclusion of transgender people in ENDA did nothing to lessen the risk we face.

    This is our ceremony - they have no business desecrating it. If they want to come as individuals to one of the events we’re putting on - they’re welcome. But don’t try to paste your corporate logo on our tombstones.
    =========================

    You might consider replacing your graphic with an HRC logo on a tombstone.

  2. Polar Bear

    The continuing and ongoing crassness and idiocy of
    the fools at HRC never ceases to confound and amaze me. But what causes my coolant to boil over the worst is this little tidbit from Ethan:

    DOR is SUPPOSED to be a downer. I can’t speak for how it’s done anywhere else. I know that, in my home town, it’s a solemn CHURCH MEMORIAL SERVICE. It’s not a party. We don’t go out to party afterwards. It’s held in the campus chapel of a seminary. A transperson speaks annually, along with clergy, seminary students, supportive members of the community, and even press and public officials. The event has significance and gravitas - great significance, as we mourn those who have passed, and solemnly pray and hope, together with our friends, family, and supporters, that no others must die because of gender-based prejudice. We speak quietly to each other afterwards, shed some tears, share a hug or two. It’s not a party. We will never allow it to become one.

    The date has significance - no changing the date. We don’t have any problem attracting young people of all gender presentations and sexual orientations to the event. They make it their business to be there.

    Whatever HRC touches, normally turns into a fund-raising opportunity and a gala dinner. If HRC members want to attend, they may do so. But
    no fund raising, no corporate takeover, no corporate sponsorship, no gala dinner, no banners, no advertising, no brochures……..

    HRC’ll never get it, will they?

  3. Polar Bear

    Sorry, I screwed up my HTML coding on my last comment. Ethan’s quote is embedded, but my comments follow them. Hope nobody was confused, and I was not trying to attribute my words to him or vice versa.

  4. nicely said by Ethan. I love that guy.

  5. The latest news:

    A WOC is organizing a competing Remembering our Dead in DC. It will be held at the local glbt/hiv clinic … a place that is *very* trans friendly.

    Hopefully most of the trans people here who have a political pulse will be at her’s rather than HRC’s.

  6. Marti Abernathey

    Kara, can you get me the info? I’d like to promote the hell out of it.

  7. Kathy

    I’m beginning to wonder if we shouldn’t have many, many transgender people from accross the country attend this and turn it into a photo op to remember.

    Bring the cameras folks - I can think of some ways this could get very interesting.

  8. I just called her … she will call me back and hopefully there will be something concrete to pass on to Ethan.

  9. As soon as I get clearance from her about publicizing it. Right now everyone is scrambling to get this put together.

    She was in a meeting when I just called, but will be calling me back. I have volunteered to help her, so we at least need to coordinate things.

  10. T. Trist

    In addition to memorializing the people lost to senseless hate and violence, I would like to honor the women and men who courageously live their lives in truth everyday.

    It makes me so angry that much of the hate and degredation against the GLBT community is embraced by religion!

    Everyone in our community should know that there’s a documentary film soon to be released about two lesbian women who set out to fight against religious bigotry by posing as a straight couple in an evangelical church… and they have proof.

    You can see Faith of the Abomination movie trailer on YouTube, or go directly to FaithoftheAbomination.com