Transgender Day of Remembrance

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This coming Monday (Nov. 20) is Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDoR) Some places in my area are doing some sort of activity/ceremony for it, including some I wouldn't have expected it of and not including some I would have. (I'll probably go to the activity at "The [Gay] Center" in NYC.)

So:

What sort of TDoR activities are in your area, folks? And what do you all plan to do to commemorate it?

Comments

I don't like showy things

Angharad's picture

So I will just remember those women I trans or otherwise who I've lost, because as long as I remember them, they are not forgotten and they remain in my heart.

Angharad

Remembering those who society would prefer were forgotten.

TDoR was established because trans people who are murdered are often deadnamed, or not named at all, disowned and denied by family, treated as refuse by police and other officials, and quickly entirely forgotten. (The lists usually include a lot of "name unknown"s.) If they're lucky and were part of a trans community (always pretty small and usually outcast), their friends might remember them for a while, or even light candles near where they died. Society at large tries to forget they ever existed. This is still a problem even now, over 20 years since TDoR was established. TDoR is a way of making sure that they (well, the ones that we know about) aren't forgotten.

We do TDoR ceremonies for the same reason cis people do funerals and memorial services. As for "showy," most funerals are more showy than any of the TDoR ceremonies I've seen. In my experience, TDoR ceremonies usually consist of a few people speaking (I read the "no man is an island" passage), maybe a few people playing music, and a reading of the names. Often, only the USA names are read, because there are so many international ones. They don't seem to have a high profile; I never hear about them in the news, except maybe the LGBT news sites, and I usually have to ask around and do a bunch of web searches to even find a local ceremony.

I also see it as a form of resistance: we're saying, "we're still here, we won't be eradicated," even if we're the only ones who hear it. If you and your friends don't have to worry about being murdered or hounded to death, nor that you or your friends will be quickly forgotten by all when you die, you are fortunate. (Well, I guess I am, too.)

I may try

gillian1968's picture

To get a few friends together to do something.

The latest name on this list was right here in Albuquerque. I guess it says something about how isolated and siloed we can be, even as we reach to our own communities, that I missed the news.

I may have heard some mention, but didn’t pick up on it.

https://www.pghlesbian.com/2023/10/35-year-old-trans-latina-...

Gillian Cairns

Here's a thought?

Andrea Lena's picture

Many if not most of the folks depicted in the site In Memoriam section lived in the shadows. Unknown as their true selves but for a precious few. Some had families who knew them as who we knew them to be, But I imagine some never had anyone other than folks here to talk with and share themselves.

Perhaps as an honor to their memory. we all might endeavor to read some of their works. There are more than a few whom I knew more than just in passing; counting them as real friends. I'm sure many of you can say the same. Please join me in celebrating OUR dearly departed?

Thanks, Asche, for the reminder.

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Too painful

Andrea Lena's picture

but nevertheless necessary to read. Thank you!

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena