Forsaken transgender pioneers recognized
50 years after Stonewall
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[June 12, 2019]
By Daniel Trotta
NEW YORK (Reuters) - According to LGBTQ
legend it was Marsha P. Johnson, a black transgender woman, who threw
the first brick at the Stonewall Inn 50 years ago, sparking the modern
gay liberation movement.
Whether her act of rebellion was truly the first in the rioting is
debatable, although she was "almost indubitably among the first to be
violent," writes David Carter in "Stonewall," his 2004 book about the
police raid on a New York gay bar that became a historic moment.
What is certain about Johnson's role, at least for today's transgender
community, is that the stone she cast packed the most thunder.
Johnson, along with a fellow transgender woman Sylvia Rivera, who was of
Puerto Rican and Venezuelan heritage, became inspirational leaders of
the movement born in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, when
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and other queer people fought back
against harassment.
The months after Stonewall were a time of LGBTQ unity that would not
last long.
Gay men, mostly white, assumed leadership and ostracized trans women
like Johnson and Rivera in the name of respectability, according to
people involved in the movement at the time.
As the 50th anniversary of Stonewall approaches, Johnson and Rivera are
receiving a belated measure of recognition in death that coincides with
a growing awareness of transgender rights.
New York City announced last month it would build a memorial to Johnson
and Rivera near the Stonewall Inn, the Greenwich Village bar whose name
has become synonymous with LGBTQ rights.
"It is certainly sad that their memories were not only forgotten but
desecrated in many instances, and now they are at least back in the
conversation," said Andrea Jenkins, a black transgender woman on the
Minneapolis city council. "I'm still not sure if they are getting the
absolute credit they deserve."
The announcement was made as New York prepares to welcome 4 million
visitors for World Pride 50 years after Stonewall. The annual parade -
the legacy of a march organized by Johnson, Rivera and others on the
uprising's first anniversary - is set for June 30.
Last week, the New York Police Department apologized for the first time
for the raid.
Transgender advocates revere Johnson and Rivera for becoming the public
faces of the most marginalized among LGBTQ people, for standing up to
police harassment, and for insisting on respect.
"They were so remarkably brave and had such an immediate and long-term
impact," said Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center
for Transgender Equality, the largest U.S. trans advocacy group.
The two have been memorialized in a 2017 documentary "The Death and Life
of Marsha P. Johnson." Their names grace the Sylvia Rivera Law Project,
a New York advocacy providing legal services for trans people, and the
Marsha P. Johnson Institute, which promotes transgender human rights.
'MAGICAL YEAR'
In 1969, police raids on gay bars were routine, although Deputy
Inspector Seymour Pine's infamous raid on the Stonewall was mostly aimed
at its Mafia owners, according to Carter's book. It was a time when
LGBTQ people were treated like criminals and generally acquiesced to
harassment.
The scene at the Stonewall Inn was different.
An angry crowd gathered outside and began throwing coins, beer cans and
bricks at the police, who barricaded themselves inside. The weaponry
grew more menacing with the use of fuel-filled bottles and a parking
meter used as a battering ram. It was an act of resistance that still
reverberates.
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LaLa Zannell, a New York-based transgender rights activist, speaks
to schoolchildren outside The Stonewall Inn in New York, U.S., May
30, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Soon after the rioting, Johnson and Rivera became active in the Gay
Liberation Front (GLF) and founded Street Transvestite Action
Revolutionaries (STAR), the first known pro-transgender group in the
United States, providing shelter for the abandoned and homeless.
But before long, the mainstream gay rights leaders dominated by
white men lost patience with the political radicals of GLF, said
Mark Segal, 68, a gay rights leader and GLF veteran who was in the
Stonewall that night. Within a year, the Gay Activists Alliance
formed, insisting on a more respectable image.
"For that first whole, magical year, we were a united community
across the board," Segal said. "And that all went away once the Gay
Activists Alliance was formed."
By the time of the fourth anniversary parade, organizers banned
"drag queens," so Johnson and Rivera marched in front of the parade
banner, outside the official event. Rivera was booed when she took
the stage in the rally at Washington Square Park.
Rivera was known for being combative, according to people who knew
her. She often chastised gay activists as willing to fight for their
own rights but not for trans women who were beaten and raped in
jail.
Johnson was admired for her generosity and compassion. With her
magnetic smile and over-the-top fashion sense, Johnson captured the
eye of artist Andy Warhol, whose 1975 portrait forms part of his
"Ladies and Gentlemen" series.
"Marsha P. Johnson was a living saint," said Randy Wicker, 81, a
longtime gay activist who was roommates with both women at different
times.
Neither referred to herself very often as "transgender," if at all,
as the term was not yet common. Instead, terms such as
"transvestite," "drag queen" and "transsexual" were used
interchangeably. But they lived almost exclusively as women, and
transgender people today consider them two of their own.
Johnson died at age 46 under mysterious circumstances, her body
pulled from the Hudson River in 1992. Rivera, who had been homeless
at times and suffered from addiction, died in 2002 of liver cancer
at age 50.
In the years since their deaths, a new understanding of gender
identity has pushed its way into the mainstream. That has brought
about a measure of reconciliation between transgender women and gay
men, who have become a powerful coalition influencing policy on
LGBTQ rights and fighting discrimination.
Even so, some transgender women of color say they still feel the
sting of those old wounds, making them less inclined to celebrate
the Stonewall anniversary. The work began by Johnson and Rivera is
far from complete, they say.
"There is still a divide," said LaLa Zannell, a New York-based
transgender rights activist. "We moved forward 50 years and where
has the T really evolved? We're still homeless. We still can't get
jobs. We're still marginalized."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta in New York; Editing by Frank McGurty
and Grant McCool)
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