SEXUALITY Transgender people seek openness, acceptance, civil rights
The National
Center for Transgender Equality estimates that between one-quarter of 1
percent and 1 percent of the U.S. population is transgender – their gender identity
or expression differs from the biological features they were born with. That’s
750,000 to 3 million people in the United States.
Lately, though,
more of them are going public about changing gender, or their desire to do so.
And at the same time, they are pushing for greater acceptance and legal rights.
That’s led to controversial legislation, court cases and corporate policies,
as well as parenting dilemmas, which emerge as children question or defy gender
roles at earlier ages.
Transgender issues
have become more prominent in many arenas:
Pop culture:
Movies such as TransAmerica
and the fact-based Boys
Don’t Cry and the introduction of a transgender character on the soap
opera All My Children late last year have increased awareness of transgender
people.
Schools: Transgender
students force schools to confront a range of issues, such as bathrooms, locker
rooms and bullying. One transgender student was named prom queen in Fresno,
Calif., this year.
Parenting:
More parents are allowing their children to choose which gender to identify
with. Doctors used to routinely advise parents to choose the gender of children
whose biological features were not definitive.
Discrimination:
The firing of the longtime city manager of Largo, Fla., in spring 2007 – after
he announced plans to change from a man to a woman – drew attention to questions
about job discrimination. And in May 2007, the U.S. House passed hate crimes
legislation extending coverage to gender and sexual orientation; in the Senate
it’s known as the Matthew Shepard Act. A Gallup
Poll survey found most Americans favor the bill.
Sports:
In 2004, the International Olympic Committee issued rules that allow transgender
athletes to compete in the Olympics.
Why it matters
Attitudes toward
gender roles and sexual orientation are often rooted in religious teachings
and scripture.
OPPONENTS
OF TRANSGENDER RIGHTS
Alan
Sears is president, CEO and general counsel of the Alliance
Defense Fund, a legal alliance based in Scottsdale, Ariz., whose focus is
defending religious liberty. The ADF sponsors the Day
of Truth in schools around the country to “counter the promotion of the
homosexual agenda and express an opposing viewpoint from a Christian perspective.”
Contact Sears through media relations, 480-444-0020. See contacts for the fund’s
five
regional offices.
Regina
Griggs is executive director of Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays and Gays. Some
local
chapters are listed. Contact 703-360-2225, pfox@pfox.org.
Linda
Harvey of Columbus, Ohio, is founder and president of Mission:America, which
opposes homosexuality and “the trans agenda.” Contact 614-442-7998, webmaster@missionamerica.com.
Mathew
D. Staver is founder of Liberty
Counsel, a civil liberties education and legal defense organization specializing
in freedom of speech and religious freedom and based in Orlando, Fla. He is
also dean of Liberty University School of Law. Anita Staver, his wife, is president
of Liberty Counsel. Read news releases about the inclusion
of gender identity in hate crime laws and about a lawsuit
settlement that ended the designation of New York City’s Harvey Milk High
School as being for gay, lesbian, transgender or questioning youth. Contact
800-671-1776, liberty@lc.org.
Rick
Scarborough is founder and head of Vision
America, based in Lufkin, Texas, which encourages clergy and congregations
to promote Judeo-Christian values in local, state and national issues. He favors
overturning tolerance policies in public schools that require acceptance and
protection of gays and lesbians. Contact 866-522-5582, mail@visionamerica.us.
The
Christian Legal Society
contests college anti-discrimination policies in federal court. Contact Greg
Baylor, director of the CLS Center for Law and Religious Freedom in Annandale,
Va., 703-642-1070 ext. 3502, gbaylor@clsnet.org,
or Steve Aden, chief litigation counsel for the center, 703-642-1070 ext. 3504,
saden@clsnet.org.
Randy
Thomasson is founder and president of Campaign
for Children and Families and founder and executive director of Campaign
for California Families. Contact 916-265-5650.
The
Rev. Louis
P. Sheldon is chairman of the Traditional
Values Coalition. The coalition lists resources
for people struggling with their gender identity. Contact 202-547-8570.
Mark
Tooley directs the United
Methodist committee (UMAction) of the Institute
on Religion and Democracy. The committee has asked the church’s General
Conference to establish policies regarding transgender clergy. Contact Loralei
Coyle, 202-682-4131 or 202-905-6852 (cell), lcoyle@ird-renew.org.
CLERGY
Julie
Nemecek, as the Rev. John Nemecek, was a Baptist minister and longtime professor
at Spring Arbor University in Spring Arbor, Mich. The school fired her in December
2006 after she had come out as transgender. She filed a discrimination claim
that was later settled, and is now founder and head of a consulting company
on workplace diversity issues. Read an Associated
Press story published March 13, 2007, by TheBoston Globe.
Contact 517-416-4608, julie.nemecek@comcast.net.
The
Rev. Drew Phoenix, who underwent sex-change surgery and changed his name from
Ann Gordon, is pastor of St.
John’s of Baltimore City United Methodist Church. Read a May
26, 2007, Baltimore Sun story. Contact 410-366-7733, stjohnbmore@earthlink.net.
Erin
Swenson, a who lives in the Atlanta area and was ordained in 1973 as Eric
Karl Swenson by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), in 1996 openly changed gender
while working as a pastor. She is a licensed marriage therapist. Contact erin@erinswen.com.
OTHER
TRANSGENDER SOURCES
Longtime
Los Angeles Times sportswriter Christine Daniels, formerly Mike
Penner, announced her gender change in an April
26, 2007, column. Read her
blog. Contact Christine.daniels@latimes.com.
Lucas
Silveira, formerly Lilia Silveira, is the lead singer of the rock band The
Cliks. He underwent sex-change surgery in 2006. Read an April
20, 2007, Boston Globe story. Contact Alexis Tedford at Shore Fire
Media, 718-522-7171, atedford@shorefire.com.
Michelle
Prevost, who in the late 1990s transitioned from being a man to a woman, directed
the documentary Trained in the Ways of Men, about the murder of 17-year-old
Gwen Araujo. See her Web
site. Read an undated
interview by KQED Public Broadcasting and a Feb.
10, 2005, Rolling Stone story. Contact shelly@nofreetime.org.
Renee
Richards, the physician and tennis player who was born Richard Raskind, wrote
the 2007 book No Way, Renee: The Second Half of My Notorious Life. She
lives in New York state. Contact through Simon & Schuster publicity, 212-698-7541.
Terri
O’Connell was a racing champion as James Terrell Hayes before having sex-change
surgery in 1992. Read a May
13, 2007, Newsweek story. Contact terrio500@hotmail.com.
Margaret
Stumpp, formerly Mark Stumpp, is chief investment officer with Quantitative
Management Associates, an investment subsidiary of Prudential Financial in Newark,
N.J. Read a May
13, 2007, Newsweek story and a 2003
Associated Press story posted by CBS News. Contact margaret.stumpp@prudential.com.
Jennifer
Finney Boylan, formerly James Boylan, is a fiction and nonfiction author
and an English professor at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. She wrote the
best-selling memoir She’s Not There. Contact JennyBoylan@aol.com.
STUDIES
Read the May 2007 study "Gender
Identity and the Military" from the Michael D. Palm Center at the University
of California-Santa Barbara.
See a study on the cost
of transgender health benefits from 2001 to 2006 by Mary Ann Horton of Westerville,
Ohio, a transgender woman who is a consultant on transgender workplace issues.
Contact mah@mhorton.net.