Giving Compass' Take:
- Orion Rummler honors Trans Day of Remembrance by highlighting queer-led advocacy to support trans communities amidst attacks on their rights.
- What are the root causes of the erasure of out trans people from public life? How can you support trans communities not only on Trans Day of Remembrance but year-round?
- Learn more about key issues facing the LGBTQIA+ community and how you can help.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits focused on LGBTQIA+ rights in your area.
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Transgender Day of Remembrance honors trans people lost to homicide and violence at memorials around the world. This year, LGBTQ+ advocates are using the somber day to call on politicians to stop demonizing trans and gender non-conforming people — and to take responsibility for their anti-trans rhetoric.
In the past year, Advocates for Trans Equality counted 27 violent deaths of trans people in the United States, as well as 21 suicides. Those deaths include the kidnapping, torture and killing of Sam Nordquist, a 24-year-old Black trans man who endured horrific conditions before his death in upstate New York.
That killing shook the community. Gwendolyn Ann Smith, whose work chronicling anti-trans murders led to the creation of Transgender Day of Remembrance in 1999, said that Nordquist’s fate is one of the worst stories of violent trans deaths that she has ever encountered. She started the Remembering Our Dead project in 1998 after the murder of Rita Hester, a Black trans woman.
“Every story of an anti-transgender murder is horrific, but there are some that are just that much more notorious,” Smith said. “For example, an intersexed infant that was killed by their parents in 1999, or the lengthy torturous death of Gwen Araujo in 2002. Sam Nordquist’s murder is clearly among these.”
Underneath the violence is a layer of increasingly threatening language and rules that push for the erasure of out transgender people from public life.
This year, the Trump administration launched a blitz of executive orders, federal policies, and inflammatory rhetoric that portrayed trans adults and children as dishonest, mutilated, and part of an extremist ideology. In response, many trans Americans felt personally singled out and discriminated against. Transphobia has always been part of life for gender non-conforming people, but now, the federal government is steering it in unprecedented ways.
“This year, these deaths are punctuated by a political movement and powerful politicians who have fanned the flames of hate and are driving our trans siblings even further to the margins of society,” said Kelley Robinson, president of the Human Rights Campaign. “Every anti-equality politician, from Donald Trump and his cabinet, to those in Congress and state legislatures, needs to see these numbers, see these names and faces, and see the cost of the cruelty they have greenlit.”
Read the full article about Trans Day of Remembrance by Orion Rummler at The 19th.