Rutger published: Remembering Trans Lives Worldwide: A Call Beyond Borders and Boundaries
Earlier this year, Spanish activist and legislator Carla Antonelli urged us all not just focus on legal triumphs celebrated in more affluent parts like Europe and North America. She highlighted a harsh truth: while some progress has been made, trans women in Latin America, particularly in Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia, still face extreme violence and even death. Antonelli pointed out that there are systemic attempts aimed at erasing these women's existence and memories.

Honoring trans lives: a global perspective

Every November, Transgender Day Of Remembrance (TDOR) calls on us all overtheworldto honor those lives lost within our community. In America, people come together, holding vigils where each name lostto violence gets called out loud—a commitment never forget them. But how many more names go unspoken due geographical, language barriers? How do countless lives slip through cracks left unremembered?

Violence against trans women in Latin America

In Brazil, reports from ANTRA show hundreds die each year—giving country reputation as deadliest place on earth trans individuals. Most these victims are Black trans women pushed margins as sex workers, denied dignity even in death. Meanwhile, Mexico ranks second highest number murders according local groups like Casa de las Muñecas Tiresias, who keep record since government doesn't seem acknowledge problem sufficiently.

The impact colonialism and religion

The Philippines show another side this issue: colonial Catholic values turned hostile environment trans women reside. Studies indicate religious doctrine works hand-in-hand colonization perpetuating inequalities health and social status among trans Filipinas. Colonizers erased indigenous gender-fluid identities, creating lingering stigma impacting today's lives.

Challenges faced by trans communities in Africa

Across Kenya and sub-Saharan Africa, criminal laws amplify violence experienced by trans individuals. They're often met with exclusion from society, harassment—even abandonment family members, stripped fundamental rights like housing employment. Threats from law enforcement force many hide worsening their plight.

The global reality trans violence

Data Trans Murder Monitoring Project reveals staggering figure: at least 350 trans, gender-diverse people murdered between October 2023 September 2024—highest on record. Predominantly trans women, transfeminine individuals and mostly Black Brown, Latin America stands out having major share killings pointing global disparities rooted colonial history.

From remembrance global solidarity

True remembrance requires us examine how we document report these events. To break cycle invisibility, must tackle language barriers while confronting media biases. Remembering should go beyond empathy becoming act solidarity spanning globally. In São Paulo, ANTRA's yearly reports make sure no one forgotten. In Manila, local organizations blend resilience with native customs honor those passed away. Over in Nairobi, small gatherings defy risk danger, asserting importance remembering these lives.

Beyond mourning: enacting change solidarity

Trans movement Global North needs stretch arms towards organizers whose work powers worldwide struggle rights recognition. TDOR must exceed borders colonial constraints becoming international communion celebrating shared survival. Solidarity means lifting diverse voices, backing grassroots initiatives, contributing funds translation memorial efforts. Recognize that trans liberation intersects with battles against racism, poverty, colonial violence. As Antonelli reminds us, violence gripping Global South intertwined with systems profiting marginalized communities' suffering. To remember fallen without challenging these frameworks reduces mourning mere show.

Lighting candles action change

This November 20th, lighting candles symbolizes both our grief actions take. From Mexico City Manila, trans people actively honor, resist rebuild communities anew. Every name we say aloud challenges indifference; each vigil manifesto demanding fairer future where trans lives flourish—both remembered in life, not just death form global network care surpassing borders, valuing every life equally. TDOR's future lies transforming sorrow solidarity, rejecting colonial confines, envisioning brighter tomorrow honoring trans people fully—not simply marking another loss. True solidarity knows no border limits. As Antonelli's fight goes: “We will not return margins.” Indeed, we won't.

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Rutger

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