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How Queer Spaces Can be Transphobic – An Open Letter by a Transman Who Felt Violated At an IDAHOBiT Event

By Jamal Siddiqui

May 20, 2017

International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Bi-Phobia (IDAHOBiT) marks violence against lesbian, bisexual, gay and transgender people. Violence against LGBT people is widespread- physical, mental, social, economical . Sometimes these kinds of violence are overtly manifested but sometimes there are micro aggressions and they are not easily recognisable.

I am a transman and I do not have my legal gender markers. Since gender markers cannot be changed without surgery, I still use my assigned name for legal purposes. In a non-LGBT space, I use this legal gender document. It is difficult, but I use it. But it comes as a shock when I see that an organisation working on LGBTIQ issues in their invite to mark an IDAHOBiT day emphasizes on legal gender document.

To elaborate, American Centre with Humsafar Trust, Harmless Hugs and other groups organised an event to mark IDAHOBiT on 20 of May at American Centre. In their invite, which was sent to everyone, they asked everyone to get their “VALID PHOTO ID”. Someone who works at Humsafar Trust asked me to register for the event using my “Real Name”. I posted it on Facebook about the dysphoria associated with “real names” and some of us do not have legal document of the chosen name. I was upset. I did not want to use my ID for registration or to share it with anyone from Humsafar or American Centre for an event organised for LGBT issue, as it had me registered as a ‘female’ which is very dysphoric for me. We reached out to Humsafar and they said that it’s for security reasons. After that they changed their Facebook invite and said that people who do not have legal gender document, they can come and meet Humsafar representative who will assist them in getting to American Centre. I have issues with this kind of an approach. They are listed below:

  1. Humsafar Trust should have known beforehand that some trans people do not have legal gender markers. In fact, some trans people do not have any ID, mostly transwomen. Why did they not think about this before organising an IDAHOT event at American Centre where IDs are a must?
  2. The level of Dysphoria for trans people are different. For some trans people using the assigned name might not be dysphoric; but for some, it is a huge issue. While we were trying to get in touch with Humsafar staff about the issue, they said that certain trans-woman went to some embassy and did not have an issue (with it). This is not a comparable topic. May be that certain trans-woman did not feel dysphoric about IDs, but I have an issue.
  3. Now, they have said that trans people, who do not have legal IDs, have to meet their representative at American Centre. My point is, why do trans people have to meet those representatives. Cis-gendered people are not going to meet any representative. Why this special arrangements for trans people? Sometimes ‘special’ arrangements are discriminatory. We want equal rights not ‘special’ rights.

On the contrary, they should have had a system where everyone who wants to come to the event could have registered and that registration should have been the ticket to enter American Centre. That could have been equal for everyone and everyone needed to have to show tickets at the registration desk, rather than asking only certain trans-people to have special arrangements. Dysphoria is real and these micro aggressions are violent.