Los Angeles Times

Trans footballer­s team up in Brazil

Playing soccer together helps men find self-acceptance and understand­ing.

- By Jill Langlois

SAO PAULO, Brazil — After warming up with some traditiona­l soccer drills — dribbling, passing — a handful of players on the Meninos Bons de Bola team in Brazil started tossing their shirts aside.

Some had scars across their chests. Others wore binders pulled tightly across their upper bodies. For many players on the amateur Sao Paulo-based team for transgende­r men, the seemingly trivial act of removing workout gear actually represente­d a major step toward self-acceptance.

“I couldn’t look at myself in the mirror before,” Claudio Raphael Galicia Neto, who, at 45, is the oldest player on the team and is affectiona­tely referred to as Grandpa, said recently. “Now I love myself and accept my body.”

Several players said the team provides friendship, understand­ing and recreation for members of a community that frequently faces ridicule, family rejection, discrimina­tion and violence. It was started nearly two years ago by team member Raphael Henrique Martins, better known as Dan, with the help of social media and word of mouth as a casual way to play soccer and talk about issues faced by transgende­r men, they said.

Such outlets are difficult to find in Brazil and worldwide, according to transgende­r people and analysts familiar with LGBTQ matters. Statistics regarding transgende­r people also are not readily available in part because transgende­r people may not be correctly identified in public documents.

Discrimina­tion, whether someone decides to make a physical transition or not, can lead to isolation and a lack of access to healthcare, education and employment, said Jody Herman, a scholar of public policy at UCLA’s Williams Institute specializi­ng in transgende­r issues.

“Community connectedn­ess is one thing that has been shown to be a positive impact on trans people’s lives, both in mental and physical health,” she said.

Brazil holds the largest annual gay pride parade in the world and held a transgende­r pride parade in Sao Paulo this year, but members of the LGBTQ community still face a substantia­l risk of assault, several players and analysts said.

Galicia had been out with a soccer-related injury for about a month, but he went to practice on this day because he missed seeing the other players. His family has come to accept his transition from being identified as female at birth, but it was difficult at first.

His mom laughed it off when Galicia asked, at 5 years old, when his penis would grow. She ignored him when, at 12, he said he liked women and wanted to be a man.

“It was hard for my mom,” he said. “She’s from another generation where this type of thing wasn’t talked about.”

One day after his 18th birthday, Galicia decided to leave home. He ended up homeless and addicted to drugs. He didn’t speak to his mom again until he was 25, when his uncle begged him to let her know he was alive. That’s when Galicia went back home and turned his life around.

Before joining the team, he didn’t know any other transgende­r men.

“My other friends just didn’t understand a lot of what I was going through,” he says. “These guys are my family. We laugh, we fight, we make up. I didn’t have that before.”

Most of the other 24 men on the team didn’t have that either.

Martins, 30, said that when he realized he was transgende­r at 18, “I felt like I was an alien, like it must all be in my head.” He said he started taking a testostero­ne-based steroid that a friend told him would help with his physical transition by giving him facial hair and a deeper voice.

Side effects like dizziness and vomiting led him to look for help online. That’s when he discovered Sao Paulo’s Center for Diversity, a program run by the municipal government for the last nine years that gives psychologi­cal and social support to members of the LGBTQ community.

“It was there that I found out people could be the way they wanted to be,” Martins said.

Several years after coming out as transgende­r, Martins said he escaped a sexual assault in a taxi. After sitting in the front passenger seat, the driver threatened Martins, saying he would “show him how to be a lady.” Martins was able to elbow the driver and fight his way out of the car when it stopped at a traffic light.

After attempting suicide following the assault, he realized he needed to use what happened to him to help other transgende­r men in Sao Paulo and to move forward with his own physical transition. Now a social worker with the center for four years, Martins says that, even there, finding other transgende­r men who would understand his struggles was difficult.

“There were no trans men [at the center],” he says. “There were plenty of gay men, transvesti­tes and trans women, but not one trans man. So I had to figure out what would bring trans boys and men to the center. That’s when I realized that what they wanted was to play sports.”

Martins soon realized the men on the team wanted to do more than just practice. He started searching for other transgende­r teams or competitio­ns they could play, but found none. There’s a team made up mostly of transgende­r men in Porto Alegre, in the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, but Meninos Bons de Bola has yet to meet the group.

Meninos Bons de Bola will play any team or tournament that will have them. They dream of going to Paris in August for the 10th edition of the Gay Games. A sporting and cultural event meant to celebrate all types of diversity, the Gay Games have been held every four years for the last 36 years and allow participan­ts to register in their chosen sport based on their gender identity and not what they were assigned at birth.

This year’s Gay Games are expected to host 10,000 participan­ts from more than 80 countries, but the possibilit­y of Meninos Bons de Bola making it to the tournament is slowly fading. Without a sponsor, the $20,000 they need to get 10 players there is too far out of reach.

At least for now, they’ll continue to play closer to home.

Last year they came in third place at the Diversity Championsh­ip, an LGBTQ soccer tournament held in Sao Paulo. But their win didn’t come without the name-calling they know is often part of the game.

“We were called little girls and ladies,” Martins said. “But we can’t bow our heads, because that’s when we lose. That’s what makes me so proud of our medal. We overcame all of that. It was our first fight against transphobi­a and we won.”

Langlois is a special correspond­ent.

‘I had to figure out what would bring trans boys and men to the Center [for Diversity]. That’s when I realized that what they wanted was to play sports.’

— Raphael Henrique Martins

 ?? Photograph­s by Gui Christ For The Times ?? PLAYERS practice in Sao Paulo, Brazil. “These guys are my family,” says one. “We laugh, we fight, we make up. I didn’t have that before.”
Photograph­s by Gui Christ For The Times PLAYERS practice in Sao Paulo, Brazil. “These guys are my family,” says one. “We laugh, we fight, we make up. I didn’t have that before.”
 ??  ?? RAPHAEL HENRIQUE MARTINS started the team nearly two years ago as a casual way to play soccer and talk about issues faced by transgende­r men.
RAPHAEL HENRIQUE MARTINS started the team nearly two years ago as a casual way to play soccer and talk about issues faced by transgende­r men.

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