This
weekend is the 12th Annual Transgender Day of Remembrance
(TDOR,) and many of us across the nation will be memorializing
transgender Americans murdered because of their gender identities
or gender expressions.
The
purpose of TDOR is to raise public awareness of hate crimes against transgendered
people and to honor their lives that might otherwise be
forgotten.
This
event is held every November honoring Rita Hester, a
34 year old African American transsexual, who was mysteriously
found murdered inside her first floor apartment outside
of Boston on
November 28th, 1998, because it kicked off the “Remembering Our
Dead” web project.
Rita
is another one of our black civil rights martyrs, but sadly,
too, few African Americans know of her or even care how
Rita was murdered. But if Rita were heterosexual and the
news was that her alleged killer is a white male, my community
would still be on the hunt for him.
Many transgenders, because
of transphobia and anti-trans violence in this society,
feel most comfortable moving about their lives in the night
and out of the view of the general public. In urban enclaves
known for their gang violence, crimes against transgender
people often go unnoticed or are seen as lesser crimes.
It’s not easy for any
person of African decent to be LGBTQ in our black communities,
but our trans brother and sisters, are the most discriminated
against among us. With misinformation about transgender
people in our country still rampant and egregiously offensive,
its impact is deleterious. And because of how transphobia,
in this present-day, has taken shaped in black communities,
most of our trans populations not only have much higher
rates of suicide, truancy, HIV/AIDS, drugs and alcohol abuse,
and murder, than we already have among our queer populations
in black communities, they also have much higher rates of
homelessness.
For
example, today forty-two percent of the country’s homeless
youth identifies as LGBTQ, and, tragically, approximately
ninety percent within this group comprise of African American
and Latino trans youth from urban enclaves like New
York City, Boston and Los
Angeles.
But homelessness and
residing outside of their communities have not always been
the case with our African-American transgender communities.
Black drag balls and then “drag houses” or “drag families,”
as seen in Jennie Livingston’s 1990 documentary film
Paris
Is Burning, comprised of primarily African American
and Latino transgenders who lived in their communities.
Their performance at drag balls illustrate how race, class,
and varying ranges of gender identities and expressions,
deconstructs notions of masculinity, and redefines what
it is means to be a diva.
During the 1920’s in
Harlem, the renowned Savoy Ballroom and the Rockland Palace hosted drag ball extravaganzas
with prizes awarded for the best costumes. Harlem Renaissance
writer, Langston Hughes, depicted the balls as “spectacles
of color.” George Chauncey,
author of Gay
New York, wrote that during this period “perhaps
nowhere were more men willing to venture out in public in
drag than in Harlem.”
And
with constant harassment by white policemen patrolling the
neighborhood, making the trans community their conspicuous
target along with public denouncements of them by black
ministers, like the famous Adam Clayton Powell Sr. of Abyssinian
Baptist Church, Harlem’s trans community was, nonetheless,
unrelenting with their drag balls, because they were wildly
popular and growing among its working class. And these
drag balls were reported in the black press:
“Of course, a costume
ball can be a very tame thing, but when all the exquisitely
gowned women on the floor are men and a number of the smartest
men are women, ah then, we have something over which to
thrill and grow round-eyed,” reported the gossipy black
weekly tabloid The Inter-State Tattler.
Although,
today, African American and Latino trans are relegated to
the margins of our communities, if not expulsed from them,
they, nonetheless, force their way into being a visible
and powerful presence in our lives, leaving indelible imprints
while confronted with not only transphobia but also “trans-amnesia.”
For
example, the inspiration and source of LGBTQ movement post-Stonewall
is an appropriation of a black, brown, trans and queer liberation
narrative and struggle. The Stonewall Riot of June 27-29,
1969, in Greenwich Village started on the backs of working-class African-American
and Latino queers who patronized that bar. Those brown and
black LGBTQ people are not only absent from the photos of
that night, but are also bleached from its written history.
Many Black and Latino LGBTQs argue that one of the reasons
for the gulf between whites and themselves is about how
the dominant queer community rewrote and continues to control
the history of Stonewall.
I
won’t forget Rita Hester. It’s why we have TDOR.
And
I won’t forget the vigil we held for her in 1998 because
I am still haunted by the words of Hester’s mother.
When
she came up to the microphone during the Speak Out portion
of the vigil at the Model Cafe where Rita was known, Hester’s
mother repeatedly said in a heartbroken voice that brought
most of us to tears, including myself “ I would have gladly
died for you Rita. I would have taken the stabs and told
you to run. I
loved you.” As the vigil processed from the Model Cafe to
21 Park Vale Avenue where Rita lived and died, Hester’s
mother again brought me to tears as she and her surviving
children kneeled in front of the doorway of Rita’s apartment
building and recited, and many of us joined in unison with
them “The Lord’s Prayer.”
In
remembering Rita, let us keep vigil - its Latin root “vigilia”
means “night spent watching” - against hatred and violence.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion
columnist, theologian, and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of theAfrican-American
Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific
School of Religion. A native of Brooklyn, Rev. Monroe is a
graduate from Wellesley College and Union Theological Seminary
at Columbia University, and served as a pastor at an African-American
church before coming to Harvard Divinity School for her
doctorate as a Ford Fellow. She was recently named to MSNBC’s
list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author
of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible
Prayers for Not’So’Everyday Moments. As an African-American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society
that is frequently invisible. Her website
is
irenemonroe.com.
Click here
to contact the Rev. Monroe.
|