San Francisco Chronicle

Trans March seeks recognitio­n, justice

Crowd rallies on Market Street for community often ignored

- By Lauren Hernández

More than 1,000 people, some draped in rainbow LGBT flags and others in pale blue and pink transgende­r pride flags, crowded near Dolores Park on Friday evening for the annual Trans March, kicking off the weekend events for San Francisco Pride.

Members of El/ La Para TransLatin­as, a nonprofit organizati­on in the Mission that provides services and shelter to transgende­r Latinas, carried a black fake coffin with photos of trans women affixed on its sides.

Essie Garcia, 25, cradled a burning copal, an aromatic resin used in some ceremonies, just steps behind the coffin.

Garcia and a group of more than a dozen women dressed in black and clutching white roses surrounded the coffin, with some shrouding their faces with black veils.

“The coffin represents all the trans women that are unjustly deceased because they have some of the highest rate of murder and oppression, especially trans women of

color,” Garcia said. “We are in mourning for all the folks who can’t be here today, including the people who are detained at the border who can’t show their pride today.”

Participan­ts chanted demands for justice and protection of transgende­r people, who are disproport­ionately victims of violence and discrimina­tion, as they marched down Dolores Street toward Market Street.

Women at the head of the march called out, “Ni una mas” — not one more.

“Trans folks can’t just support each other all the time. We need allies out here supporting them, too,” Garcia said.

Friends and partners held hands, their fingers interlacin­g while walking down Market Street. Members of the San Francisco Lesbian/ Gay Freedom Band played music for marchers when they rounded Market Street at Elgin Park.

The staccato drumming sound bounced off the brick street corner, inviting hundreds of marchers to stop walking and instead start dancing, demanding

“otra” — another song. A passenger riding a streetcar traveling in front of the marchers blew bubbles, showering down on marchers and police following on patrol motorcycle­s.

Hundreds of signs bobbed above the heads of participan­ts, some calling for support of trans children and others stating, “Black Trans Lives Matter.”

Some participan­ts held signs calling for police to stay away from Pride celebratio­ns. Still, dozens of San Francisco police officers walked alongside marchers and lined the median on Dolores Street.

Jessica Mayorgia, 30, said the march holds a deeper meaning for transgende­r individual­s living in the city, saying that transgende­r people are often in the shadow of what San Francisco Pride has evolved into in recent years.

“We don’t get a lot of days that are just for ‘ T,’ you know?” Mayorgia said. “It’s rare that you can get enough trans people in one place because we’re all scared and anxious, and some of us don’t leave our houses a lot.”

Mayorgia gestured to her wife and other women marching alongside her down Market Street.

“This is important for us because this is closer to the roots and history of Pride,” Mayorgia said.

“We’re here to yell, ‘ We’re trans, here we are.’ Because there are a lot of us, and you have to value what we have to say.”

 ?? Photos by Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Trans March participan­ts walk along Dolores Street during the kickoff to a weekend of San Francisco Pride. The transgende­r celebratio­n, which drew more than 1,000 people, began in Dolores Park.
Photos by Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Trans March participan­ts walk along Dolores Street during the kickoff to a weekend of San Francisco Pride. The transgende­r celebratio­n, which drew more than 1,000 people, began in Dolores Park.
 ??  ?? Trans activist and drag performer Rexy Amaral emcees the Trans March, which mixes the personal with the political.
Trans activist and drag performer Rexy Amaral emcees the Trans March, which mixes the personal with the political.
 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Members of El/ La Para TransLatin­as, a Mission District nonprofit, carry a replica black coffin affixed with photos of transgende­r women who have died.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Members of El/ La Para TransLatin­as, a Mission District nonprofit, carry a replica black coffin affixed with photos of transgende­r women who have died.

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