Protesters packed the courtyard of the Brooklyn Museum and surrounding parkway in New York City borough on Sunday in support of Black trans lives, merging the fight to protect two deeply marginalized groups.
The rally began about 1 p.m. local time in front of the museum, just a short walk East of Brooklyn’s Grand Army Plaza as activists made speeches emphasizing the importance of human rights for Black trans Lives. About two hours later, attendees began to march north, led by event organizers and Black transgender women in front.
A number of groups, including the Marsha P. Johnson Institute, The Okra Project, and Black Trans Femmes in the Arts, co-organized Sunday's rally and march.
A spokesperson for the organizers did not have an official estimate for the crowd, but a swarm of attendees covered the plaza in front of the Museum and took over the road on Eastern Parkway, likely in the thousands.
Some of the speakers included transgender activist Raquel Willis, author Ceyenne Doroshow, and the family of Layleen Polanco, according to the event’s homepage.
Polanco was a transgender woman who died last June after an epileptic seizure while in solitary confinement at Rikers Island jail. Video obtained by NBC Out Saturday revealed that guards tried to wake her for approximately an hour and a half before calling for help.
“The video is the last piece of the puzzle,” David Shanies, an attorney for Polanco’s family in a wrongful death lawsuit against the City of New York and several Rikers staffers, told NBC News. “It's the last bit of indifference to her life that we saw and recklessness to a person who obviously needed help.”
The rally also comes just days after two Black transgender women were killed in Ohio and Pennsylvania, each of which are being investigated as homicides.
The body of Dominique “Rem’mie” Fells was found Monday floating in the Schuylkill River in Southwest Philadelphia, according to NBC Philadelphia. She was bruised and both of her legs were severed, police said.
Fells’ death is a reminder that as the nation discusses Black Lives Matter, that transgender lives are included, Philadelphia’s Office of LGBT Affairs said in a statement Thursday.
“We are reminded with this, and countless other painful losses—especially within our transgender communities—that there is much left to do until we achieve full equality, respect, and support for us all,” the office said. “The murder of transgender people—especially those of color—is truly an epidemic, and a crisis that we cannot afford to allow to persist any further.”
The day after Fells’ body was found in Philadelphia, Riah Milton, 25, was shot to death in Liberty Township, Ohio. Suspects allegedly lured the Black transgender woman from Cincinnati to the township in an attempted to rob her, according to a statement Tuesday from the Butler County Sheriff’s Office.
Two suspects, an 18-year-old man and 14-year-old girl, were arrested and charged in Milton’s death.
Tori Cooper, with the Human Rights Campaign’s Transgender Justice Initiative, in a statement urged people to remember that they can speak up before any transgender individual dies.
“In the same week countless people across the globe stand up for racial injustice, in the same week we honor the 49 victims of the Pulse massacre in Orlando, in the same week a billionaire author spouts transphobic rhetoric to millions -- in this same week, we have lost two more Black transgender women to the same fate most of us worry about every day,” Cooper said.
As the country rallies behind dismantling racist systems that put Black lives at risk in the wake of George Floyd’s death, activists have also put a lens on Black trans people who are at the intersection of two dangerously marginalized groups. June is also Pride Month, a celebration of the 1969 Stonewall Uprising which is often credited for being a turning point in the liberation movement of the LGBTQ community.
On Friday, President Donald Trump’s administration finalized its rollback of protections against gender identity discrimination in health care regulated by the Affordable Care Act.
The administration would recognize "sex discrimination according to the plain meaning of the word 'sex' as male or female and as determined by biology,” according to a statement from the Department of Health and Human Services.
The move means insurance policies and healthcare regulated under the Obama-era Affordable Care Act can deny services to transgender people.
There can be no hierarchy created to determine which Black lives are more valuable than others, Tiq Milan, an LGBTQ advocate, wrote in an essay for NBC Think Tuesday.
“Race and gender equality go hand in hand for Black LGBTQ people. We can’t pick only one kind of justice because to examine them both is too complicated or makes some us look at our own complacency.”
"crowd" - Google News
June 15, 2020 at 03:42AM
https://ift.tt/2N3sJml
Rally for Black trans lives draws enormous crowd in Brooklyn - NBC News
"crowd" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2YpUyMI
https://ift.tt/2KQD83I
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Rally for Black trans lives draws enormous crowd in Brooklyn - NBC News"
Post a Comment