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Showing posts with label transgender POC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transgender POC. Show all posts

Time To Get Busy In 2012, Chocolate Trans Community

The Waterford Crystal ball has been dropped in Times Square to welcome in 2012.  Many of you may have greeted it during a New Year's Eve watch service, in a club with other revelers or you had a quiet evening at home engaged in some hard solid thinking about your life.

I've done that part already.   Now it's time to engage in some hard solid thinking about what needs to happen in 2012 for my chocolate trans people

We've already seen the stats from the NTDS survey and the confirmation about the deleterious effect that anti-trans discrimination has on us..  We've gotten pissed off about being excluded from last year's NAACP GL(bt) town hall meeting.  We've discussed being angry about being erased in the trans community senior leadership ranks that resemble a Republican party convention and being marginalized in the overall trans community. 

We're tired of having our young transsisters names being added to the Remembering Our Dead name lists we read at every TDOR.  The 2012 list unfortunately has already gotten started with Dee Dee Pearson's Christmas Eve death.   We've had discussions about the shame and guilt issues that plague us, the faith-based ignorant transphobia in our midst and our pressing need to define ourselves and build community.

So the question I put to you Black trans community on the first day of 2012 is what the hell are we gonna do about it?   While you're pondering that question, have a few more I'm going to ask as well to get your hard solid thinking for 2012 off to a good start. 

What are you going to personally do to advance the human rights of our chocolate trans community?.  What will you do to help build community?   Are you willing to lead in the effort or sit on your ample behinds and bitch about the lack of progress?   What will you do to help educate and enlighten our fellow cis African American people as to who we transpeople are and why supporting trans human rights secures their own?

Since this is a leap year, I have an extra day on the calendar to offier my thoughts on these electronic pages as to what I believe we need to do.  But I'm painfully aware of the fact that we have a lot of work to do in tackling the problems that ail our community and we can't do it alone. 

We'll need allies.   While it's wonderful that the national Black Justice Coalition is on our side, we will need to get our legacy organization like the Urban League, the NAACP and our legislators cognizant of the fact that Black transpeople exist.  

We need to support TPOCC as it builds strength and capacity to take on the task of representing our interests.

We need to relentlessly drive home the point with them and politicians that Black trans community problems are Black community problems, and remind them we vote.

As Black people we are tied to the cis African descended community by history and blood and our African descended brothers and sisters across the African Diaspora.  What affects them affects us as well.

While some of what ail us can and must be dealt with internally, other problems will require government intervention to fix such as enacting strong anti-trans discrimination laws so we can tackle the unemployment issues.. 

So that our transkids can get educations free from harassment we need anti-discrimination policies and anti-bullying ones that have gender identity and expression language at the school district, community college and collegiate level.   That means HBCU's need to step up and make the same kinds of policy changes on their campuses as their white collegiate counterparts have been engaged in for at least a decade.

And finally, the faith-based haters need to buy a vowel and get a clue that they are being played by white fundamentalists with this anti-trans bigotry.   We are part of the diverse mosaic of human life, we are God's children, and we are part of the African descended family.  Hating us fuels the anti-trans violence that leads to our deaths, and that needs to cease and desist.   

We're not going anywhere.  The sooner you deal with that reality, the sooner we transpeople can uplift ourselves and do our fair share to help uplift the Black community.


The challenges we face as Black transpeople can seem daunting at times but compared to where our people have come from and the challenges our ancestors faced, this is a minor speed bump.   

I have the faith grounded in my people's history to believe my Black trans family will rise to the occasion and do what is necessary to solve the problems that ail our community.  

It's just time to get busy doing so.



Happy Kwanzaa Black Trans Style-The 2011 Remix: Umoja

TransGriot Note:  On each night of the 2011 Kwanzaa celebration, just as I did last year, I'm going to write about each one of those principles and explain how it applies to the chocolate trans community and our cis African descended brothers and sisters. 
***
Umoja
(Unity): To strive for and to maintain unity in the family, community, nation, and race.


Haban gari    What's The News?   

It's time to light the first candle on the Kinara and ponder the first principle of the seven celebrated during Kwanzaa.

Umoja.  Unity.  As I stated in last year's post, It's a concept we've been striving to achieve in our community over the time we have been Africans living in the Western Hemisphere.  That is no different for those of us who are African descended trans people. 

And yes, it has been at times an elusive and frustrating as hell concept for us in the African descended trans community to grasp and achieve.  But in order for us to become a part of the greater society as Kwame Ture said, in order for us to own our power it is imperative that we close ranks, work it out amongst ourselves in family conversations and hopefully emerge a more powerful and stronger community on the other side of what will be an ongoing process.


One of the things I was most happy to see in the 2k11 is various elements in chocolate transworld coming to an epiphany that this needs to happen and soon.   TPOCC's emergence, the upcoming Black Transmen's Empowerment Conference event in Dallas, the Transfaith in Color Conference and the Philly Trans Health one are just some examples of the yearning for Black transpeople to own their power as Sharon Lettman-Hicks of NBJC would say. 

Our haters don't want to see that happen, and will do whatever it takes to frustrate, delay and impede our progress toward making umoja a reality in the chocolate trans community

There were also steps taken by our cis African descended brothers and sisters in light of the horrific stats that came out during the summer pointing out how hard we have it .  Our cis brothers and sisters could no longer ignore the reality that they must do a better job on their end in including the chocolate trans community in its policy stances and organizations. 

The NAACP made a highly publicized attempt to do so in a town hall meeting during it's 2011 convention that failed to include the bi and trans sectors of the community.  The NAACP and the chocolate trans world knows how much this needs to happen and no matter how frustrated we get with their missteps in the process, we must keep on pushing for that unity and inclusion to happen.

I've also been heartened to observe the greater desire amongst African descended trans people to organize, unite and build community on a local, state and regional level as well and get better connected with the communities we intersect with as well. . 

Despite the odds and obstacles being put in our way, umoja will happen and it will pay great dividends for us once we achieve it and consistently strive to maintain it..