Los Angeles Times

Lives honored, with firm resolve

Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e salutes victims of violence, saying: not one more.

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

In January, Yasmin Vash Payne, a transgende­r woman, was found dead with multiple stab wounds on the kitchen floor of a burning Van Nuys apartment. She was 33.

Last month, Zella Ziona, another transgende­r woman, was lured into a Maryland alleyway where she was shot in the head and groin by

a man who, authoritie­s said, was embarrasse­d by her approachin­g him in front of his friends. She was 21.

Ashton O’Hara, described by friends as “gender fluid,” was stabbed to death and found in a Detroit field in July. O’Hara was 25.

Theirs were among the transgende­r lives honored by hundreds of people Friday night in West Hollywood for the annual Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e. Volunteers clutching flowers read the names — and the graphic details of their deaths — of dozens of transgende­r people killed around the world this year. In life, many faced brutality. In death, some would have their self-identity mischaract­erized by family, police and the media.

The theme of this year’s event: Not One More.

“Every year, it doesn’t get any easier, because we’re recognizin­g too many people lost to hate and violence,” said Coco LaChine, a member of the West Hollywood Transgende­r Advisory Board.

The Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e, now a worldwide observance, began as a vigil recognizin­g people killed in violent acts after the still-unsolved 1998 slaying of transgende­r activist Rita Hester in her native Boston. Hester was stabbed 20 times in her apartment, according to GLAAD.

At least 22 transgende­r and gender-nonconform­ing people have been killed in the U.S. so far this year, including 19 Latina or black transgende­r women, according to the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs.

It is the highest toll since advocacy groups began tracking killings more than a decade ago. Many more are believed to be unreported, advocates said.

At least three transgende­r women, including Payne, have been killed in California this year, according to Equality California.

This year “has been a year of impressive accomplish­ments for LGBT people, but an underlying tragedy should mute any celebratio­n: the transgende­r members of our community, especially transgende­r women, continue to suffer from staggering levels of violence,” said Rick Zbur, Equality California’s executive director.

In West Hollywood, the blue, pink and white transgende­r flag flew over City Hall.

At the ceremony at the city library, the mood was nuanced: Attendees were familiar with the pain of violence and death and yet cheered by the sight of so many transgende­r people in one place.

“We get to hug, we get to see each other. That’s how you heal and know that you’re not alone,” said Drian Juarez, a member of the city’s Transgende­r Advisory Board.

As some in the audience wept, members of the newly formed Trans Chorus of Los Angeles sang the Goo Goo Dolls’ “Iris”: “When everything’s made to be broken, I just want you to know who I am.”

James Wen, chair of the Transgende­r Advisory Board, told the crowd that he, too, has faced violence — pushed against the wall, with someone’s forearm pressed against his voice box.

“By grace we are living,” he said. “We must not allow ourselves to be snuffed out.”

Vicky Mitchell, a transgende­r woman from Arcadia, read a story of a trans woman beaten to death in Brazil.

Mitchell, 67, has been to many days of remembranc­e, read many names.

“I know these people suffer,” she said with a sigh. “But mostly, they simply want to be accepted, to have someone put an arm around them, to hug them, to give them a job so they don’t have to struggle.”

After the ceremony, attendees took to the street, marching down Santa Monica Boulevard, chanting, “Not one more!” Some hoisted signs that read, “Stop killing us!”

Xzanakya Savvoto, a 21year-old transgende­r woman, held a blue candle as she walked. She, too, had read the name of a victim. She planned to keep the printout of the woman’s story and to post it on a board where she keeps favorite quotes so she doesn’t forget. She, too, has experience­d harassment and said she knows she could have easily been one of the names read.

As the group marched, Transgende­r Advisory Board member Mariana Marroquin handed a small transgende­r flag to a man observing from the sidewalk.

As she moved on, he stayed, waving the f lag at the crowd, cheering.

‘We get to hug, we get to see each other. That’s how you heal and know that you’re not alone.’ — Drian Juarez, a member of West Hollywood’s Transgende­r Advisory Board

 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez
Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE GATHER outside the West Hollywood Public Library on Friday for the annual Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e. It is now a worldwide observance.
Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times PEOPLE GATHER outside the West Hollywood Public Library on Friday for the annual Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e. It is now a worldwide observance.
 ?? Photograph­s by Michael Robinson Chavez
Los Angeles Times ?? PARTICIPAN­TS in the Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e march up San Vicente Boulevard. At least three transgende­r women have been killed in the state this year, according to Equality California.
Photograph­s by Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times PARTICIPAN­TS in the Transgende­r Day of Remembranc­e march up San Vicente Boulevard. At least three transgende­r women have been killed in the state this year, according to Equality California.
 ??  ?? AGAINST A BACKDROP of faces, volunteers read the names — and the details of their deaths — of dozens of transgende­r people killed around the world.
AGAINST A BACKDROP of faces, volunteers read the names — and the details of their deaths — of dozens of transgende­r people killed around the world.
 ??  ?? IN LIFE, many transgende­r people faced brutality. In death, some would have their self-identity mischaract­erized by family members, police and the media.
IN LIFE, many transgende­r people faced brutality. In death, some would have their self-identity mischaract­erized by family members, police and the media.

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