Transgender Day of Remembrance 2021

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Most of the time, my situation as a trans woman isn't on the top of my thoughts. I'm privileged enough in so many ways that being trans isn't a big issue, it's just my life, my version of living as a woman.

But each year, when Transgender Day of Remembrance rolls around, I'm reminded that most of my trans and non-binary siblings don't have my protections. I read the lists of names (375 on one list) and it hits me that each of these names is a human being, much like myself, and each one had their life, their hopes, a future which they were working towards, which was cut down and discarded by a society that sees them as an abomination. Some people, when they are murdered, evoke public mourning and outrage and news articles and maybe even have laws named after them, but these people were mostly ones that their society preferred to pretend didn't even exist. Human beings who were invisible and were mourned by their equally invisible friends, and if the wider society took any note of them at all, it was to misgender and deadname them and maybe imply that their dying was no loss. And some, the ones who appear on the lists as unidentified corpses, probably disappeared without anyone noticing it at all. Yet each of these was a human being much like you or me.

Each of these deaths diminishes all of us, as John Donne pointed out ("Ask not for whom the bell tolls....")

For me, TDoR is about openly respecting and valuing each of these murdered people. It's our way of insisting to the world that each of these, even "the least of these," was deserving of respect and being remembered for who they were. It's an act of resistance against the structural transphobia of the world we live in that would prefer that they had never existed in the first place. Just to say their names and reflect on what we know of them (however little) is an act of defiance.

But what saddens me the most is that with rare exceptions all we know of any of them is their name and when and how they died (and sometimes not even that much.) They deserve more than that. Actually, any human being deserves more than that.

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