4th Annual Transgender Day of Remembrance
Vigil Held in Downtown Indianapolis
Released: November 25, 2002
They
came from Lafayette and Bloomington, from Greencastle and
Plainfield, from Carmel and Indianapolis to remember the dead,
to mourn over two dozen lives cut short in the past year by
gender-related violence. In all, more than forty people gathered
in downtown Indianapolis on a clear but bitterly cold Saturday
evening, November 23, 2002 to commemorate the 4th Annual Transgender
Day of Remembrance.
This year marked the first time Indianapolis residents participated
in Day of Remembrance activities. Event co-sponsors, the Community
Activist Network Developed by Youth (CANDY) and the Indiana
Transgender Rights Advocacy Alliance (INTRAA), served hot
cocoa and cider, courtesy of Vic's. Participants bearing photographs
of the dead held candles for those who could no longer hold
a light of their own. Members of INTRAA and CANDY then read
names from a list of more than 250 individuals that have reportedly
been murdered for their gender expression since statistics
have been collected. "It was cold, but worth it!"
exclaimed one vigil participant, who wished to remain anonymous.
"It is a really sobering experience to hear all those
names."
Lorrainne
Sade Baskerville, Executive Director of transGenesis,
a social service agency in Chicago, was a guest speaker at
the vigil. Baskerville made an emotional plea to participants
to come together collectively to fight this form of hate that
destroys so many lives. "We must not forget our fallen
trans brothers and sisters," she urged while holding
a picture of Christian Paige, a slain transgender woman from
Baskerville's home town.
"Particularly striking is the number of young people
on the list," added Bryan Sirtosky, a vigil organizer
and President of INTRAA. "Since August of this year,
there have been three children under the age of 18 brutally
murdered here in the United States for the 'crime' of being
themselves."
Sirtosky also noted the disproportionate number of people
of color on the list. "It is time we all acknowledge
how multiple forms of oppression can have a devastating and
compounding effect on the most vulnerable individuals in our
community. Now is the time not only to remember our dead,
but to garner our strength as a community, to empower one
another as we work to create a world free from the threat
of gender-related violence for ALL people."
Additional Photos
From the Vigil are Available
For more information on Day of Remembrance,
visit:
http://www.rememberingourdead.org/
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