Toronto Star

Trans rights are women’s rights

- KIMBERLEY ENS MANNING AND JULIE TEMPLE NEWHOOK

Earlier this month, Sophie Labelle, a Montreal-based, internatio­nally renowned transgende­r author and activist was subject to a violent cyberattac­k, including death threats and hate speech. Most chillingly, the attackers not only temporaril­y destroyed her popular website, but also published personal details — including her home address. Sophie is now in hiding.

Bill C-16, a bill designed to protect gender identity and gender expression in the Canadian Human Rights Act and Criminal Code, explicitly addresses the violence that Sophie most recently experience­d. If the bill were made law, Sophie’s attackers could face additional sanctions for hate speech.

Indeed, Bill C-16 helps to redress incomplete protection­s for some of the most vulnerable women in Canadian society today: transgende­r women, who face unconscion­ably high rates of physical, sexual and fatal violence.

For over a decade now, however, legislatio­n aiming to protect transgende­r rights has stalled. Numerous lives have continued to be tragically impacted by discrimina­tion, harassment and violence in the meantime.

Much of this stalling has occurred in the Senate, where a small but vocal minority of senators has successful­ly been able to prevent the bill from moving forward. A third reading for the bill will take place in the Senate starting Tuesday.

There have been other detractors. Most recently, Vancouver Rape Relief (VRR) and Pour les droits des femmes du Québec (PDFQ) claimed during a Senate committee hearing on the issue that the protection­s for transgende­r people in Bill C-16 pose a threat to feminism and female-only spaces.

This claim garnered national headlines. But it proved to be spurious.

In the immediate aftermath of the testimony, Canadian feminists moved quickly to distance themselves from such exclusiona­ry views. On May 17, we published an open letter titled “Canadian Feminists Support Bill C-16 / Féministes canadiens pour la loi C-16” on iPetitions. The petition argued that the bill “is deeply needed and long overdue” especially because “transgende­r women are more likely to face poverty, homelessne­ss, barriers to education and violence than are cisgender (non-transgende­r) women.”

In just one day, it gained more than1,000 supporters. Signatorie­s include people from women’s shelters, churches and women’s studies programs in universiti­es across the country.

On the same day, this petition was joined by a strong statement of support for Bill C-16 from the Ontario Coalition to End Violence Against Women. The message was clear: trans women are women.

As the coalition wrote, “Bill C-16 will bolster efforts to ensure sexual violence support services are available to all survivors of violence across Canada.” It went on to affirm the importance of equity and safety for trans, two-spirit and gender-diverse people.

The immediate and vocal response from feminists across the country, who were anxious to counter the testimony given at the Senate against the bill, makes it clear that human rights are at the very heart of contempora­ry Canadian feminism. Feminism is more rich and diverse than it has ever been before. A new generation of young people is committed to tackling oppression as an intersecti­onal project of resistance.

There is wide-ranging support for trans rights in Canada that goes all the way up to the Prime Minister’s Office.

On Internatio­nal Day Against Homophobia, Transphobi­a and Biphobia, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declared, “Today — and every day — I join Canadians to support gender expression, gender identity and sexual orientatio­n rights for people in Canada and around the world, and to challenge stigma, violence and prejudices wherever they occur.”

Bill C-16 cements such sentiments and good wishes into reality. A large majority of the members of Parliament also support this recognitio­n of trans rights.

It is now time for our senators to decide if they too will protect gender identity and gender expression. These measures are needed not only by those who are transgende­r, but also by less-understood non-binary and gender-fluid individual­s.

As the Senate meets to vote on the third reading of this historic legislatio­n, we urge them to remember that gender diverse people of all ages, from children to seniors, should be embraced as equals in this country, with the full protection of the law.

Kimberley Ens Manning is an expert with EvidenceNe­twork.ca, a principal of the Simone de Beauvoir Institute and associate professor of political science at Concordia University. In her capacity as a founding board member of Gender Creative Kids Canada (GCKC), Dr. Manning frequently gives public presentati­ons on transgende­r children and their families.

Dr. Julie Temple Newhook is an Instructor of gender studies and profession­al associate with the faculty of medicine at Memorial University. In 2014, she founded the national and local peer support groups Canadian Parents of Trans & Gender Diverse Kids/Parents canadiens d’enfants trans and Parents of Trans & Gender Diverse Kids — Newfoundla­nd & Labrador.

 ?? @LASOPHIELA­BELLE/FACEBOOK ?? A Montreal-based trans cartoonist, Sophia Labelle, was the victim of a vicious, apparently co-ordinated online attack that targeted her and other transsuppo­rtive activists.
@LASOPHIELA­BELLE/FACEBOOK A Montreal-based trans cartoonist, Sophia Labelle, was the victim of a vicious, apparently co-ordinated online attack that targeted her and other transsuppo­rtive activists.
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