The Denver Post

Sampaio is magazine’s first transgende­r model

- By Derrick Bryson Taylor

Valentina Sampaio made history Friday, becoming the first transgende­r woman to be featured in the Sports Illustrate­d swimsuit issue, the magazine said.

In a personal essay on the magazine’s website, Sampaio, a 23-year-old Brazilian model, said she was honored to be in the publicatio­n.

“The team at SI has created yet another groundbrea­king issue by bringing together a diverse set of multitalen­ted, beautiful women in a creative and dignified way,” she wrote.

While Sampaio’s inclusion in this year’s swimsuit edition has earned headlines, it’s hardly a first for her: Last year, she became Victoria Secret’s first openly transgende­r model and was hired for catalog work for VS Pink, the company’s athletic line. In

2017, Sampaio was also the first transgende­r model to grace the cover of a Vogue edition.

In recent years, the Sports Illustrate­d swimsuit issue has had a number of breakthrou­gh moments.

The magazine, which debuted in 1964, put Ashley Graham, its first size 16 model, on the cover in

2016. Last year, it featured the Somali-American model Halima Aden, who was the first woman to wear a hijab and burkini in the magazine.

MJ Day, the editor of Sports Illustrate­d Swimsuit, said in a statement that Sampaio had been on her radar for some time and that she had noticed her passion for activism, calling the Sports Illustrate­d rookie a “true pioneer for the LGBT+ community.”

Sampaio said that she was born in a fishing village in northern Brazil, and that being a transgende­r woman meant facing doors closed to “hearts and minds” as well as encounteri­ng insults and violence “just for existing.”

In 2019, Brazil had 130 killings of transgende­r people, the most of any country, according to the Trans Murder Monitoring program, a database and analysis of reported killings of gender-diverse and transgende­r people.

“Our options for growing up in a loving and accepting family, having a fruitful experience at school or finding dignified work,” Sampaio said, “are unimaginab­ly limited and challengin­g.”

Her inclusion in this year’s swimsuit issue comes amid a wide push for transgende­r visibility, acceptance and rights. In the United States, lawmakers in more than two dozen states have introduced measures that would take away transgende­r rights, including criminaliz­ing medical profession­als who prescribe hormone treatments to minors.

Transgende­r women have long been a target of violence, and Black transgende­r women, in particular, are killed so often, the American Medical Associatio­n has declared it an epidemic.

In 2019, 91% of the transgende­r or gender-nonconform­ing people who were fatally shot were Black women, according to the Human Rights Campaign. So far this year, there have been at least 16 murders of transgende­r people.

“I recognize that I am one of the fortunate ones, and my intention is to honor that as best I can,” Sampaio said. “What unites us as humans is that we all share the common desire to be accepted and loved for who we are.”

 ?? Gabriel Bouys, AFP via Getty Images ?? Brazilian model Valentina Sampaio presents a creation from Spanish designer Miguel Marinero’s Spring/ Summer 2020 collection during the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week in Madrid in 2019. She will be the first transgende­r model in Sports Illustrate­d’s swimsuit issue.
Gabriel Bouys, AFP via Getty Images Brazilian model Valentina Sampaio presents a creation from Spanish designer Miguel Marinero’s Spring/ Summer 2020 collection during the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week in Madrid in 2019. She will be the first transgende­r model in Sports Illustrate­d’s swimsuit issue.

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