From Ivy Hill, Campaign for Southern Equality <[email protected]>
Subject Remembrance and Resilience for Trans Southerners
Date November 20, 2019 2:17 PM
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Today we mourn, we honor, and we envision.

Friend:

Over the past year in the United States, at least 22 transgender and gender non-conforming people have been killed. Ninety-one percent of these people were black transgender women, and sixty-eight percent lived in Southern states. Globally, the number of trans folks killed this year is close to 300. Please read their names here. ([link removed])

Today is Transgender Day of Remembrance, the most solemn day of the year for LGBTQ people and our many allies who mourn the lives lost to anti-transgender violence and hate. Far too many of our trans siblings have been killed simply because they had the courage and bravery to be who they are. Our team at the Campaign for Southern Equality sends our love, peace, and solidarity to all people who are hurting today.

Violence against transgender people, particularly trans women of color and especially in the South, is an epidemic.

Every year on November 20, we come together to mourn the losses that our community endures – and that is critically important. But even as we center lives lost to violence and push toward an end to this epidemic, we also must be sure to not allow the trans community to be exclusively defined by tragedy and despair. That’s why we join so many worldwide in additionally lifting up November 20 as Transgender Day of Resilience ([link removed]) , which the Movement Building & Cultural Strategy Team at Forward Together calls “an extension and re-imaging of Transgender Day of Remembrance.” The organization writes, “It is critical that we honor and support trans people of color while they are alive, and not only in memoriam.”
[link removed]
Art by Shea Coco for the Trans Day of Resilience Art Project, led by Forward Together. Click here to learn more and see lots of powerful art. ([link removed])

Several trans and non-binary artists and poets of color have published new work with the Forward Together team, and I hope you’ll take a moment to take a look. This work challenges all of us to imagine and build toward a world of trans liberation. “We all need this world,” Forward Together writes. “Because when trans people of color get free, we all get free.”

Click here to see the Trans Day of Resilience website and art, and spread the word on social media. ([link removed])

Today, we mourn, we honor, and we envision. Together, we can and must build a better world.

Thank you,
Ivy Hill
Campaign for Southern Equality
Donate to the Campaign for Southern Equality ([link removed])

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