Maybe because their
names and faces get lost in the grim glut of crime reporting. Maybe because no one knew their story—or their
secret. Maybe it’s because the Guardians
at the gate want to protect our tender sensibilities. Maybe it’s because outside of “those people”
no one cares. Or maybe it’s because some
see a kind of rough justice acted out on the streets and prefer to let it go on
as they used whistle in the dark at lynchings
that kept Black folk in their place.
But someone must
remember these transgender people
murdered every year simply because of who they are. According to Transgender.org
more than 50 victims have been identified worldwide just so far in 2012 and
are remembered in its pages.
Like so many memorial
days do, the International Transgender
Day of Remembrance had its origin in grief.
Rita Hester was a transgender African American woman murdered in Allston, Massachusetts on
November 28, 1998. An outpouring of community grief and anger led to a
candlelight vigil held the following Friday, December 4 with 250 people in attendence.
This vigil inspired the
Remembering Our Dead web project and
the International Transgender Day of Remembrance. Gwendolyn
Ann Smith, a transgender graphic designer, columnist, and activist helped
organize the first public vigil in honor of all victims the next year in
San Francisco in November of 1999.
Since then, the
observation has spread across the world. In 2010, the occasion, now held
annually on November 20, was observed in over 185 cities in more than 20
countries.
Many local, national,
and international organizations now participate in and promote the Day of Remembrance. I am proud to say that the Unitarian Universalist Association and
the Standing on the Side of Love campaign
have played a leading role. Both provide
resources and materials that can be used in organizing local observances or
worship services. Many UUA congregations
include some part of their services this time of the year to the memorial.
Materials for services
can be found on the Standing
on the Side of Love web site.
They are instructive and moving to read even if there is no local vigil
or service to attend.
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