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

Thursday, November 03, 2011

Black America, Give Black Transwomen The Same Unconditional Love Y'all Give Madea

"Blacks have no problem with cross dressing and transgenderism as a form of entertainment.  It’s only after the lights go off and the camera stops rolling that it becomes an issue if the dress and heels are still on." Jasmyne Cannick, February 24, 2006   Black America's Infatuation With Butch Men Up In Heels

One of the things that has irritated me and other African descended transwomen is the glaring disconnect that we observe between the community showing much love and respect for Tyler Perry's Mabel 'Madea' Simmons movie character.  We are your children, daughters, parents, sisters, aunts, cousins, co workers, fellow churchgoers, classmates and friends while Madea is a movie character played by a man wearing a dress. 

But Black transwomen who live their lives 24/7/365 (366 in a leap year) as themselves get dissed and are sometimes subjected to violent transphobic negativity.

I've talked about that disconnect in numerous posts here.  Jasmyne Cannick mentioned it a February 24, 2006 blogpost, and it inspired a poem that I wrote and posted on TransGriot a few months later that I entitled 'Y'all Love Madea But You Hate On Me'.

I left this February 26 comment on that JasmyneCannick.com post :
Amen Jasmyne!
As an African-American transwoman I get irritated with the Jurassic attitudes that our people have concerning gender and sexuality.

Those attitudes are not just the exclusive province of straight peeps. They are also prevalent among the gays and lesbians who are SUPPOSED to be our allies.

Black America needs to wake up and smell the coffee. Transgender peeps are 3% of the population and we have much to offer our people. They have to open their minds and hearts and realize that we are also African-Americans who are ready to do our part to uplift the race.
What I, Jasmyne Cannick and others observed back in 2006 is unfortunately still prevalent in elements of the African-American community today.  We have Black people who give far more unconditional love, respect and authenticity to a fictional character than they do the transwomen in their midst.  Those people unfortunately are also eager to express that hate and fear of transwomen in ways deleterious to us.

Bottom line, we are women in heart, mind and soul whose bodies caught up later to the reality of our lives.  Increasing medical evidence and ongoing research on gender identity is backing up what we transpeople already knew and dispelling the lies told about us by the Forces of Intolerance.

I'm also noting more African Americans who are willing to step up, educate themselves beyond a Trans 101 level about our lives and gender identity issues and be stand up allies and supporters of chocolate transpeople.

I'm especially heartened to see increased support in Black academic circles, amongst HBCU students and our legacy organizations begin to tackle those internal community conversations we need and must have to continue to educate our community about trans African-Americans. 


Those same conversations are happening inside the SGL community as well.  While the National Black Justice Coalition is role modeling that new paradigm when it comes to inclusion of Black transpeople in their activism, others like the NAACP and our HBCU's still have a long way yet to travel, but have taken their first tentative steps forward in doing so.

Any progress in terms of African Americans becoming aware of the issues we face is welcomed as long as it results in community comprehension that we trans African-Americans deserve more unconditional love as flesh and blood human beings than a movie character. 
  .

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Upcoming Washington DC Panel Discussion On LGBTQ Youth Of Color

On October 24 there will be a town hall meeting in Washington DC presented by Beautiful U -Yes U Institute, The One Mic Stand with Simply Nay and Damien Ministries entitled 'Young Black and LGBTQ- Who Is Protecting Me?' 

The town hall meeting will take place at the MCCDC Church located at 474 Ridge St NW Washington, DC 20011 and will run from 6-8:00 PM EDT.  

The town hall will explore experiences, services available and the lack of them that have contributed to the emergence of self-identified gay gangs and the surge of attacks on the transgender population of Washington DC..  

A town hall panel comprised of youth, youth services providers, community leaders and elected officials will examine these contributors and the offered resources thought to remedy these harsh realities.
“Over half of homeless youth identify as LGBTQ and less than half of LGBTQ nonprofit initiatives are helping them, that is one of the problems,” says Aiyi’nah "SimplyNay" Ford,  host of The One Mic Stand with SimplyNay and panel participant.

Other participants in this Monday night town hall event and invited speakers include:

Jeffrey Richardson, The Mayor's Office of LGBT Affairs
Sharon Lettman-Hicks, The National Black Justice Coalition
Amena Johnson, Sexual Minority Youth Assistance League
Samantha Masters, RainbowSoul {Morgan University's Gay Straight Alliance}
Brian Watson, Transgender Health Empowerment

This event is the first of Beautiful "U" Yes U's "Justice for All" Town Hall Series.

For further information please contact beautifuluyesu@gmail.com or tune in to The One Mic Stand with SimplyNay at www.blogtalkradio.com/onemicstand  You c
an also contact Tre'ona Kelty at 202-352-2679
My name is Tre’ona Kelty and I am a black lesbian female. After reading the article, {insert article name and date published} I was disheartened to learn that “The Check Its” exists.  I understand where these youth are coming from as being Black and LGBTQ {lesbian} is one of the hardest situations to deal with in life.
The article made reference to youth frequenting the streets of Chinatown. Quite rankly, there are no safe places for the LGBTQ community of Color. We are not welcome within the traditional church. Our families ostracize and disown us.  Too often, we must change our identity in order to function in “Corporate America”. Our police ignore our complaints and allow our Transgender family to be shot in the streets. In synopsis, we live in communities who believe we should be damned.
 Subsequently, this gang provides a psuedo “safe place” for these youth. They feel that there is no where else to turn and no one who cares enough to reach back to help and support them. So many times we as African Americans-especially LGBTQ indentified- forget how hard it was to grow up different. We forget about the abuse and the bullying. We get our “good government jobs” and leave our youth to fend for themselves! What do we expect them to do as opposed to forming their own familial structure? Refer to Bennett’s quote for the real problem, “I want to go back to school to get my GED, but I do not know where to begin.” These kids yearn for assistance, but have no where to turn. They are fighting for their lives, literally. How dare we judge if, we as a community have not tried to rally and reach back to help them and others like them.
I could not read this article and not feel compelled to move and give back. My organization “Beautiful U Yes U” in collaboration with “The One Show with Simply Nay” will host a town hall meeting entitled, “Young, Gay and Black: Who Is Protecting Us?” This townhall meeting intends to question experiences, services and lack thereof that have contributed to the emergence of self-identified gay gangs and surge of attacks on the transgender population within this marginalized community.   A panel of youth, youth services provider, community leaders and elected officials will examine these contributors and the offered resources thought to remedy these harsh realities. We can no longer sit back and do nothing, waiting for someone else to take care of the problem. It is our duty and obligation to reach back and help. Will you join us?
For more information contact:
Tre’ona ( Ms. Tree) Kelty
Founder, Executive Director
Beautiful U Yes U
- Show quoted text -
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:22 PM, Treona kelty <treona.kelty@gmail.com> wrote:
Take a look and give your thoughts/suggestion before I send to Courtland.
thanks!


-- Gay Black youths for from attacked to attackers.
Op-ed
My name is Tre’ona Kelty and I am a black lesbian female. After reading the article, {insert article name and date published} I was disheartened to learn that “The Check Its” exists.  I understand where these youth are coming from as being Black and LGBTQ {lesbian} is one of the hardest situations to deal with in life.
The article made reference to youth frequenting the streets of Chinatown. Quite rankly, there are no safe places for the LGBTQ community of Color. We are not welcome within the traditional church. Our families ostracize and disown us.  Too often, we must change our identity in order to function in “Corporate America”. Our police ignore our complaints and allow our Transgender family to be shot in the streets. In synopsis, we live in communities who believe we should be damned.
 Subsequently, this gang provides a psuedo “safe place” for these youth. They feel that there is no where else to turn and no one who cares enough to reach back to help and support them. So many times we as African Americans-especially LGBTQ indentified- forget how hard it was to grow up different. We forget about the abuse and the bullying. We get our “good government jobs” and leave our youth to fend for themselves! What do we expect them to do as opposed to forming their own familial structure? Refer to Bennett’s quote for the real problem, “I want to go back to school to get my GED, but I do not know where to begin.” These kids yearn for assistance, but have no where to turn. They are fighting for their lives, literally. How dare we judge if, we as a community have not tried to rally and reach back to help them and others like them.
I could not read this article and not feel compelled to move and give back. My organization “Beautiful U Yes U” in collaboration with “The One Show with Simply Nay” will host a town hall meeting entitled, “Young, Gay and Black: Who Is Protecting Us?” This townhall meeting intends to question experiences, services and lack thereof that have contributed to the emergence of self-identified gay gangs and surge of attacks on the transgender population within this marginalized community.   A panel of youth, youth services provider, community leaders and elected officials will examine these contributors and the offered resources thought to remedy these harsh realities. We can no longer sit back and do nothing, waiting for someone else to take care of the problem. It is our duty and obligation to reach back and help. Will you join us?
For more information contact:
Tre’ona ( Ms. Tree) Kelty
Founder, Executive Director
Beautiful U Yes U
- Show quoted text -
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:22 PM, Treona kelty <treona.kelty@gmail.com> wrote:
Take a look and give your thoughts/suggestion before I send to Courtland.
thanks!


--

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Houston And Texas POC TBLG Peeps, Time To Stand And Deliver

You may have read the long post I wrote venting about the lack of diversity in Houston and Texas TBLG orgs that purport to represent us but look like Republican Party convention rooms.

That's not the first time I've talked about that subject and probably won't be the last.  The valid criticisms I leveled in that post aimed at the white TBLG  organizations in Houston and Texas are stuff that is fixable with modest efforts from them.

But this one is dedicated to what you TBLG people of color in Houston and Texas need to do as well.


Okay, I sent the message that TBLG people of color in Houston and Texas aren't happy about being erased from TBLG orgs, BTLG events and are upset about the policy directions these white dominated TBLG orgs continue to make and are taking in our names.  I got that and heard you at last year's Houston TDOR.   I'm still hearing you express your frustrations about this situation and agree something needs to be done about it.

But here's the $64,000 question.   How can we affect the policy or ensure our community interests are ensconced in these policies if we aren't sitting on the boards to articulate our community's views in the first place? 

Yeah yeah, I know.  I'm quite aware of and have talked about the race and class issues that have caused LGBT boards in this diverse city and state to be melanin free and gone off about it.

But if we're criticizing the white dominated LGBT orgs about their failings, in fairness we need to acknowledge ours as well.   We need to give them one final chance to make good to fix the issues that we've identified at problematic and deleterious to our community before we start executing the "Texas trans revolution will not be televised" options.  

Now as much as I am honored by the chatter in Lone Star person of color trans world that y'all think IFGE Trinity Award winning me is all that and four bags of mesquite flavored BBQ chips when it comes to handling our Houston and Lone Star trans business, I can't be the only voice speaking for the POC trans community.   

'Let Monica do it' while some of y'all sit on your ample asses, party, do pageants, sit behind your computers, hide out at your jobs or in your apartments or homes 'scurred' of being trans and proud while y'all snap at me and others for not doing enough to expeditiously bring about your trans liberation is not going to be the tired modus operandi of the 2K10's Lone Star POC TBLG program. 

I've been there and done that.  From this day forward shared sacrifice is the name of the game.    

If I'm willing to give up some of my valuable time to represent your interests in Houston, Austin, nationally and the rest of the state, some of y'all here in Houston and the rest of the Lone Star State are going to have to stand and deliver too.  

Some of you are going to have to get off your behinds, come out of the shadows, own your power and step up to the leadership plate as well. 


I'm not saying you have to put your pretty faces on camera, talk to politicians (although there will come odd numbered years I ask y'all to do that), speak before you're mentally ready to do so or do interviews on 'Queer Voices'.  I'm willing to be your front person for that, but you can and are going to have to do so in other ways. 

You can serve on the boards of TBLG organizations without disclosing it to your coworkers.  You can volunteer.  You can join the NAACP Houston or Dallas chapters or your local one.  You can mentor other trans people.  You can make more of an effort to support Vanity Wilde when she has her community parties and her business (hint hint) along with other trans entrepreneurs.  You can show up at the TTNS, local events at colleges to make your presence known, town hall meetings, or at a local TDOR or a memorial service for a fallen transperson.

Just do something positive that helps build visibility and goodwill for the POC trans communities of Houston and Texas. For those of you in the Houston area, every now and then show up at the first of the month TG socials like I do to meet other Houston transpeople.  Hello?  Sometimes other transpeople of color show up at this event and it's a way to meet people in this spread out city of ours

Rafael O'Donnell and the gang would probably love to see some of y'all in the Dallas-Ft Worth area volunteering at Resource Center Dallas or other orgs in the area.   Same is true for the rest of y'all in Austin, San Antonio, El Paso, the Golden Triangle and on your various college campuses. 

And there's always my FB page and the TransGriot blog.   

You've asked me to step up to a leadership role and I'm ready, willing and in a place now where I can do that.

But I need people to stand behind and beside me.   I need loyal people watching my back so I don't get stabbed in it by lukewarm wishy-washy folks, sellouts or agent provocateurs.

We have allies in Houston and the state TBLG community who have heard what I had to say on your behalf about our POC trans community frustrations about the erasure.  They believe the best way to fight for our Texas rainbow community's human rights issues is moving forward together with a diverse coalition of people.  They are willing to extend invitations to us to sit on boards, fight for our inclusion in their orgs and do what it takes to make that inclusion happen.  But there is only one Moni, and human cloning hasn't been perfected yet.  I can't be everywhere and part of every organization.  Some of y'all are going to have to say yes when those invites are extended to you. 

Yes, there is a need for POC transpeople to close ranks and build community as we simultaneously seek to be part of the local and state ones as well.  We have the ability and the will to accomplish both tasks and need to get busy doing it, but in order to do so some of you are going to have to step up your leadership game. 

And for those of you who don't wish to lead but do wish to engage in shady behavior, stirring up mess and confusion or jealous name calling denigrating the people who do step up to lead, don't let me find out you are engaging in instigating that behavior because I will call your azzes out and embarrass you.
 
But the bottom line is that in a city of 2.1 million residents and a state with over 25 million people,  I shouldn't be the lone transperson of color willing to be out and proud and take a leadership role in this community and this state   I'd like and I'm humbly asking for some help in accomplishing this task that needs to happen.    

So what are we going to do about it?   Griping about it isn't going to change the status quo situation, only concerted action is.  We've identified the problem.  What are you going to do to become part of the solution to fixing that problem and not an impediment to doing so?

The Houston and Texas TBLG communities and I await the answer to those questions from you POC transpeople.

It's time to not only own our power, but stand and deliver on it.