Tag Archives: ohio

Trans Film Series Hosted by TransOhio & Gateway Film Center: She’s A Boy I Knew

Monday, February 21 · 8:00pm – 10:00pm

Gateway Film Center
1550 North High Street
Columbus, Ohio
$6—Benefits TransOhio

They say that when someone comes out of the closet, they can’t stop talking about it. Vancouver filmmaker Gwen Haworth not only talked she made a movie. Using archival family footage, interviews, phone messages, and hand-drawn animation, Haworth’s documentary SHE’S A BOY I KNEW begins in 2000 with Steven Haworth’s decision to come out to his family about his life-long female gender identity. The resulting auto-ethnography is not only an exploration into the filmmaker’s process of transition from biological male to female, from Steven to Gwen, but also an emotionally charged account of the individual experiences, struggles, and stakes that her two sisters, mother, father, best friend and wife brought to Gwen’s transition.

Under Haworth’s sensitive eye, each stepping stone in the process of transitioning becomes an opportunity to explore her community’s and our own underlying assumptions about gender and sexuality. When Steven starts to wear his wife Malgosia’s clothing, she struggles with whether Steve “wants to be with me or to be me;” when Steven changes her name to Gwen, her father comments, that’s “when I realized I lost my son;” Haworth’s gender reassignment surgery, or vaginoplasty, forces her sister Kim to grapple with her own experiences in the medical establishment and raises questions about the implications of the medicalization of gender.

In these tender and difficult moments, SHE’S A BOY I KNEW forces us to question our own assumptions about the role that names, clothing, and anatomy play in our constructions of gender identity. As her transition progresses, Gwen is forced to reckon with the end of her marriage and the loss of her status as son and brother. But in doing so, she also discovers that while the nature of personal relationships may change, the love and support present within those relationships can remain just as powerful and sometimes even more so.

At turns painful, funny, and awkward, SHE’S A BOY I KNEW explores the frustrations, fears, questions, and hopes experienced by Gwen and her family as they struggle to understand and embrace her newly revealed identity.

You’re Invited: Final Full-Dress Rehearsal of I AM MY OWN WIFE Presented by CATCO & TransOhio

You’re Invited…

Join TransOhio & CATCO for the final full dress rehearsal of the Tony Award winning play:

I Am My Own Wife

Charlotte von Mahlsdorf was a transgender person, who lived through the horrors of pre- and post-World War II Germany. How did she survive the harsh regimes of both Nazi Germany and the post-war East German Communists? How did she create a respected museum that also served as a safe haven for Berlin’s homosexual community? This Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winning play illuminates the sacrifices and betrayals of Charlotte von Mahlsdorf through the artistry of a single actor playing more than 30 characters.

Date: Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Time: 7:00pm
Doors open at 6:30pm
RSVP’S Required!

Riffe Center Studio Two Theatre
77 S High Street
Columbus, Ohio

RSVP’s ARE REQUIRED and suggested donation of $10 at the door.
(All Donations go DIRECTLY back to TransOhio).

For more information about CATCO and I Am My Own Wife, visit
http://www.catco.org/seasons/2010-2011-season/i-am-my-own-wife

AIDS Clinical Trials Research Site at Case Western Reserve/University Hospitals in Cleveland

Recently, an HIV vaccine trial in Cleveland has opened enrolling gay men and transgender women who have sex with men.  The AIDS Clinical Trials Research Site is located at Case Western Reserve/University Hospitals in Cleveland.

They are particularly interested in reaching out to the transgender community, both for the community’s understanding of the HIV vaccine trial, as well as for recruitment purposes.

Preliminary information on the trial is available at www.hopetakesaction.org.  Please feel free to contact Outreach Coordinator, Bob Bucklew, with any questions or comments you may have.

Bob Bucklew, Outreach Coordinator
CWRU/UH AIDS Clinical Trials Unit
office: 216-844-2247
fax: 216-844-3926

The Man Behind the Legalize Trans* Campaign

Asher Kolieboi

Asher Kolieboi

Asher Kolieboi is currently the LGBTQIA Community Coordinator at Oberlin College and the founder of the Legalize Trans* campaign.  The Legalize Trans* campaign is an artistic and educational campaign intended to create dialogue and draw attention to the lack of inclusivity within the popular American Apparel “Legalize Gay” campaign. Legalize Trans* serves to emphasize the need for Transgender inclusivity within the dominant national Lesbian and Gay rights movement, and provide public education and resources that focus on navigating legal resources for Trans/gender non-conforming people.

Hailing from Saint Louis by way of Monrovia, Liberia, Asher graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia with a dual BA in Sociology and Women and Gender Studies in 2009.

Throughout college, he worked with multiple student and community groups to stimulate conversation about intersecting oppressions and during his last year, he organized the IncludeME campaign, an ongoing effort aimed to amend the university’s constitution to ensure gender equality for all students, faculty, and staff. After graduation, Asher served as the Co-Director of Young Adult Activism for Soulforce, a national interfaith organization working to end the religious and political oppression of LGBTQIAP people and co-directed the 2010 Equality Ride, a traveling forum of young adults which seeks dialogue about the intersections wherein faith meets gender, race, and sexuality. He also co-founded Queer Sol, a queer people of color arts and activism collective in Austin, TX.

The Legalize Trans* campaign is an artistic and educational campaign intended to create dialogue and draw attention to the lack of inclusivity within the popular American Apparel “Legalize Gay” campaign. Legalize Trans* serves to emphasize the need for Transgender inclusivity within the dominant national Lesbian and Gay rights movement, and provide public education and resources that focus on navigating legal resources for Trans/gender non-conforming people.

For information about the Legalize Trans* campaign, and to get your Legalize Trans* wear and buttons, visit www.legalizetrans.com.

Lakewood to add gender identity to equality laws

Gay People’s Chronicle, OH, USA

December 17, 2010

Lakewood to add gender identity to equality laws

by Anthony Glassman

Lakewood–City council stands poised to expand protections for transgender residents with the passage of three new ordinances.

The final votes are expected on December 20, according to councilor Nickie Antonio and council president Kevin Butler.

The move comes just months after Antonio, who leaves for the Ohio House of Representatives next month, worked with the human resources director of Lakewood to add sexual orientation and gender identity to personnel policies across the board, protecting city employees from anti-gay and anti-trans discrimination.

“Further, the language that was incorporated into the updated policies and procedures has also been expanded and incorporated into some of the union contracts that have been negotiated this year, so those protections will now be in those contracts going forward,” Antonio said, “which I really believe speaks to the city of Lakewood’s commitment to respecting diversity in hiring and employment.”

The three proposed ordinances, which were introduced by Butler when Antonio was at a new-legislator orientation in Columbus last month, would amend section 501.01 of the city code, which provides definitions, to add ones for sexual orientation and gender identity; section 537.18, to add gender identity or expression to the ethnic intimidation ordinance which already contains sexual orientation, and section 516, the fair housing ordinance, to bar discrimination in housing and  financing on the basis of gender identity and expression.

The fair housing code also currently includes sexual orientation.

Antonio was elected to the 13th District Ohio House seat that State Rep. Mike Skindell is vacating due to term limits. Skindell was also a Lakewood City Council member, and has won election to the Ohio Senate for the 23rd district. Skindell is a staunch supporter of LGBT rights,  and was one of the main proponents of the addition of sexual orientation to the Lakewood city codes.

With the measures’ passage, Lakewood would become Ohio’s eleventh city to include transgender people in its equal rights ordinances. The others are Columbus, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Toledo, Dayton, Akron, Cleveland Heights, Shaker Heights, Bowling Green and Oxford. Six more cities have sexual orientation equality measures: Canton, Oberlin, Yellow Springs, Athens, North Olmsted and East Cleveland.

No federal or Ohio law protects either group, unlike in 21 other states and the District of Columbia. A measure to do so passed the
Ohio House last year but never saw a Senate vote; a similar federal bill has met a similar fate.

© 2008 KWIR Publications

http://www.gaypeopleschronicle.com/stories10/december/1217101.htm