August 19 2016 5:01 AM EDT
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LGBTQ communities in Texas are as big and diverse as the state
itself. Small towns and big cities alike are engaged in their struggles
to maintain the efforts, district by district and city by city, to
explicitly protect people from discrimination based on gender identity
and sexual orientation in this border state. Their struggles have
national implications and yet are often not highlighted in national
conversations. GLAAD and our state partners like Equality Texas seek to
bring the work of local advocates to national attention in order to
inform national efforts to achieve equality. The work is informed by
GLAAD's Accelerating Acceptance
study, which found high levels of discomfort, particularly in the
Southern United States, toward LGBTQ family, friends, and neighbors. In
order to dismantle the discomfort, GLAAD and our partners seek to
collect and amplify the stories of LGBTQ Texans and the work they are
doing to achieve full acceptance.
Texas has sued to block the expansion of immigration relief (Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) and to keep school districts from following the guidance
to allow transgender students the ability to use facilities that match
their gender identity. These lawsuits lead the way for other states'
antijustice efforts.
But as one of the panelists at the sneak preview of GLAAD’s State of Change: Texas documentary said at the Montrose Center in Houston, "It's home. And no one should have to leave their home in order to be who they are."
As part of GLAAD’s Southern Stories program, GLAAD and our partners at Equality Texas, Aquí Estamos, Organizacíon Latina de Trans en Texas, Pride Home, LULAC Council 4871, HoustonLGBTHistory.org,
and others are working not only to accelerate acceptance of Texas’s
LGBTQ community but also to confront racism, sexism, anti-immigrant
discrimination, and xenophobia in the state.
Last week GLAAD released a bilingual guidebook for reporters covering LGBTQ stories in Texas;
met with Texas media outlets to talk about best practices for reporting
on LGBTQ people and issues; shared our work on air with one of the
largest Spanish-language media outlets in the region, Televisa; and
provided sneak previews of GLAAD’s State of Change: Texas
mini-documentary to spark conversations across the state about what
needs to be done to further affect change for LGBTQ Texans. This
mini-documentary is part of a six-state series that highlights diverse
LGBTQ and allied voices in Southern states.
The interviewees made it clear that such work requires pro-immigrant,
antiracist, antisexist, faith-inclusive strategies that are intentional
and intersectional.
One of the interviewees, Ana Andrea Molina, founder of the Organizacion Latina de Trans en Texas, clarified
the pro-immigrant lens. She is engaged against 287g, an act that
fosters cooperation between police and Immigration Control and
Enforcement — meaning that a traffic stop could lead to detention and/or
deportation for an LGBTQ undocumented immigrant, especially transgender
women, who came to the United States fleeing persecution back home.
This forces undocumented communities further into the shadows and Molina
pointed out that when transgender women are deported they lose contact
with their communities and in some cases are murdered. Although the Center for American Progress and the Transgender Law Center
have outlined the ways that detention centers fail to keep immigrants
safe, especially transgender immigrants who flee abuses when they
emigrate only to be detained in unsafe conditions in the United States,
these struggles are not always part of the national narrative for
equality.
Molina also informed the audience that there are plans to open a detention center for transgender women near Dallas, which her group, though new and underresourced, is working to stop.
Texas is a border state particularly hostile toward immigrants, which
adds to the stigma and discrimination that the women already face for
being transgender. But Molina said, "We cannot live in fear. The people
who discriminate against us should be afraid because of the way they are
treating us — we are in the right, we are just trying to live and
survive."
Until explicit protections are in place that ensure that lesbian,
gay, bisexual and/or transgender, intersex and gender-nonconforming
people who are black, Latinx, indigenous, Asian, Muslim, poor,
undocumented, or in any other way share an identity, history, or
experience that is marginalized in the United States, no one will be
safe being who they are or loving who they love.
These are the stories and struggles that are still not heard. GLAAD
recognizes the breadth of the community and wants others to recognize it
as well. By sharing the stories of LGBTQ people in Texas, GLAAD is
raising awareness, fostering understanding, and advancing acceptance for
the LGBTQ community.
JANET QUEZADA is the senior strategist for Spanish-language media at GLAAD. |
Read more articles from the Advocate, here.
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