Antelope Valley Press

Puerto Rico LGBTQ icon, dead at 73

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Soraya Santiago, the first person from Puerto Rico to undergo gender reassignme­nt surgery and a longtime icon for the US territory’s LGBTQ community, has died. She was 73.

Santiago died of cancer early Tuesday at her home in the north coastal city of Carolina, activist Pedro Julio Serrano told The Associated Press.

Many mourned the news, including the mayor of Puerto Rico’s capital and activists on the US mainland.

“Soraya was a pioneer, our teacher, our beacon of light,” trans activist Ivana Fred said in a statement. “She opened the door for all us trans people and left us a legacy of unwavering spirit that is unmatched.”

Santiago had often hung out at New York’s Stonewall Inn and was in the city — though not the bar — when police raided it in 1969, unleashing a rebellion that led to the LGBTQ rights movement. She credited that with helping turn her into an activist.

She traveled again to New York in the 1970s for gender reassignme­nt surgery and upon returning to Puerto Rico, became the island’s first trans person to successful­ly change their name and sex on their birth certificat­e.

Santiago, a hair stylist who owned a beauty shop, was the first openly trans person to run for office in Puerto Rico, according to the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College in New York, trying unsuccessf­ully for a city council seat in 2008. She was also the first LGBTQ candidate to do so as a member of the pro-statehood New Progressiv­e Party, the center said.

Santiago studied political science at Puerto Rico’s largest public university and was featured in several documentar­ies, including the 2014 Puerto Rican film “Mala, Mala,” which follows nine transgende­r people. Santiago also published a book, “Made by Hand: Gender Dysmorphia.”

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