12:48 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · GLBT|Latin America · Comments Off
20 Nov 2009There are a number of posts and tweets I have seen today about today being Transgender Day of Remembrance, a day where those whose lives were lost in transphobic hate crimes. Peep the video below and pay special attention to just how violent life is for trans people in Latin America.
Pero before we as Latinos in the U.S. think of this as happening as a problem “over there”, as in Latin America still painted as more transphobic than the good old U.S. of A, all we need to do is look at the life of Esmeralda who came to the U.S. in search of the “American dream”, the life of Angie Zapata, and Jorge Steven Lopez Mercado, porque like it or not Puerto Rico is part of the U.S.
I am sadly surprised that more “Latino” centric sites don’t cover the lives of translatin@s. It’s easy enough to write on immigration cuz that is what is expected to us. Pero to exclude and ignore the reality, the lives of our hermanos y hermanas just perpetuates stereotypes, hate and violence. As I wrote in another post, do Latinos not think that issues of immigration, health care, and marriage equity impact the lives of transgente in our comunidad?
There are events all over today commemorating Transgender Day of Remembrance.
Little Light breaks it down:
The Day of Remembrance is ours, and it is sacred. It is the one day we set aside to honor those in our community, overwhelmingly poor trans women of color, who were killed due to bigotry and hatred. It is a single day in the year where we make certain that the names of the murdered are heard and held up, so we can all remember that these people mattered, were real, were loved, and are missed. It’s a day to gather the community together and call attention to the violence directed against us and the caring we have for each other. It came from us. It was built by us. It was never supposed to be flashy or glitzy. It is a solemn mourning for the dead, a place to hold hands, and a promise to those who violence took away from us that we who are still living will hold together, take care of each other, and push forward together into a world where that violence is only a painful memory…
…My right to stay alive is more of a priority than my right to get legally married. And right now, as this society and its culture and its legal system stand, I’m one of many people who don’t have either right. You want to fight for my right to marry? Wonderful. Thank you. But those hours protesting, those donations, all that outrage and community support and work–I’d prefer they went, for a start, to keeping me alive out here. And I think the “GLBTQ” community in the United States, such as it is, needs to take a long, hard look at why they have money and time to fight Measure 8, but nothing to give but silence, co-opting, and more requests for us to pipe down and lighten up when it comes to the more than monthly murder of trans people. Show us our lives and deaths matter to you. Show us you acknowledge that the violence against us is worth paying attention to, that our dead were real people who deserved far better, and that our living shouldn’t have to live in fear.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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