Declaration of Gender Liberty
ICTLEP
Dear Friends:
Some time ago I was asked to prepare a Declaration of Gender
Liberty for ICTLEP.
We will be presenting the following document on the evening of
July 4, 1996, at the forthcoming
Transgender Law Conference in Houston.
The Declaration of Gender Liberty is designed to accomplish
several objectives:
1. To articulate basic concepts of the freedom of gender
expression.
2. To link our struggle to the original Declaration of
Independence and the universal struggle for
freedom.
3. To link with the International Bill of Gender Rights and its
major tenets which articulate our
Human and civil rights.
4. To remember and honor those transgendered heroes/ heroines who
have preceeded us in the
struggle by reciting their names.
5. To help draw our diverse peoples together, to lift our
spirits, to enlighten our discourse and to
focus our energies toward the mutual goal of freedom.
As we presently envision the ceremony it will take place outside.
The participants will be formed in a circle. Each participant
will have a candle. The first candle will be lit and used to
light the second and so forth until all of the candles are
burning.
The reading of the Preamble will begin. When it is time to honor
our transgendered predecessors,
the voices of the participants will call out the names assigned
to them beforehand. The narrator will
then continue the reading to the end. Several narrators may be
used.
This ceremony will conclude our schedule on July 4.
We are compiling the list of transgendered heroes and heroines.
Please share with me the names of
any deceased TG martyrs, historical figures, authors, musicians,
artists, pioneers, or other persons
who have contributed to our cause over the centuries, or in more
recent times.
Send those names to StuComOne prior to 5:00 p.m. on July 4.
Comments and suggestions regarding the wording of the Declaration
are also welcome. We are still
in the drafting mode and welcome your thoughts.
Bear in mind that this is being written with a view to reading it
out loud. It is essentially an oratorical
document and is drafted with "performance" in mind.
It is also subject to revision and refinement. Nothing in the
gender world is "cast in stone" as they
say.
This document is an original writing and is not based on a prior
document known as The Declaration of Gender Independence which
was promulgated and circulated circa 1991 by the Gender
Alternatives League (GAL). The latter document is not in my
possession, nor has it been consulted or imitated.
I am very conversant with the original Declaration of
Independence which I have consulted and
referred to in appropriate ways throughout.
In drafting the Declaration I have drawn inspiration from the
ideas and writings of my own heroes
and heroines in our wonderful community. There are so many who
have con- tributed it is impossible to name them. Many minds are
reflected here and if I have done my task well enough all of them
will recognize their contributions.
Sharon Stuart
Declaration of Gender Liberty
Houston, Texas
July 4, 1996
Preamble
Upholding the universal equality of humankind before us in the
sacred fashion of our forebears, we
too recognize self-evident truths and pursue unalienable rights.
Among our endowed rights, we cherish most the freedom to choose
for ourselves our own identities and to put aside the restraints
of ignorant oppressors and indifferent bureaucracies.
United in common purpose and mutual resolve, we gather in this
place to declare liberty from the
prescriptions and constraints of those gender roles constructed
and thrust upon us from birth without our consent.
Affirming that all human beings carry within themselves an
ever-unfolding idea of who they are and
what they are capable of acheiving, we rise as one to proclaim
the fundamental right of all humankind to define and redefine
their own identities.
Representing all races, nationalities, ethnicities, creeds,
classes and sexes, we profess that we are
one and all a people whose diverse gifts and energies find common
ground in the transcension of
conventional gender boundaries.
Recognizing that all are rooted in the human condition, we
nevertheless assert the right to name
ourselves and to choose such language as best characterizes both
our differences and our
commonalities.
Therefore, we throw off the shackles of gender tyranny to uplift
the dignity of those known to
themselves and to all the world as transgendered people.
We are cognizant and proud of the many contributions to the human
journey made by our
transgendered brothers and sisters, which contributions stretch
over the centuries to the very
beginnings of recorded history.
We pause to solemnly honor and to celebrate those who have passed
this way before us.
(Individual voices from the audience call out the names of
transgendered heroes and heroines from a prepared list arranged
chronologically, earliest to latest, e.g. "Jean D'Arc")
We know that our progenitors yearned for the same freedom of
identity that we seek. We know that they struggled and suffered
for the sake of re-imaging themselves.
We know that many died in the pursuit of truth and justice. We
take comfort and courage in the
meaning of their lives. Their examples give us hope and light the
path to freedom.
And so, in the stead of our transgendered ancestors, mindful of
the dangers and pitfalls they faced,
but uniformly resolute in our purpose and confident of the
outcome, we cheerfully take up the cause
of justice and liberty to free ourselves and our posterity from
the tyranny of gender.
The Declaration
By these precepts we propose to transcend the bonds of gender
oppression and prejudice:
We proclaim that our identities are not determined by virtue of
our chromosomal sex, our genitalia,
our assigned sex as males or females, or our initial gender
roles.
We cherish and uplift above all else, the universal right to
define and redefine new identities in accord with our own images
and self-conceptions and without regard for the limitations and
conformations dictated by the tyrant called gender.
We declare our right and duty to express self-defined identities
freely and with due care for the
human rights and sensibilities of all others to whom we are
accountable. And for those who are
accountable to us, we covenant to acknowledge and respect their
identities in accord with their
wishes and in such fashion as we would wish to be acknowledged
and respected.
We will steadfastly resist attempts to subject us, one or all, to
economic deprivation by denying us
opportunities to train for and pursue gainful employment while
manifesting our chosen identities.
We demand equal compensation for our labor. We insist upon
dignity for ourselves and for all other workers. We ask
admittance to all spaces and activities to which we are entitled
by virtue of our self-defined identities.
We proclaim that our bodies belong to us alone. We take
responsibility for the care and nurture of
our bodies and assert our rights to change and alter our bodies
in such ways and by such means as
are pleasing to us, the owners.
We demand competent medical care and expect equal access to the
same professional services
provided to others.
We refuse to permit anyone to characterize us as diseased,
dysphoric or disordered solely by virtue
of our self-defined gender identities.
We affirm our right to the free expression of our sexual natures
in private, adult, consensual
relationships.
We profess the right to form committed, loving relationships with
one another and to enter into
marital contracts by virtue of those relationships without regard
to our own or our partner's
perceived status as male or female.
We assert also our rights to conceive, bear, or adopt children,
to nurture and have custody of
children and to exercise parental capacities.
We deplore the actions of those who seek to stigmatize us and rob
us of our dignity. We vow to
work diligently to banish ignorance with enlightenment and to
strive with equal fervor for the
liberation of our oppressors and detractors.
We abhor violence and come in peace and humility, seeking
dignity, justice and freedom, not only
for ourselves but for all humankind.
We vow upon our sacred honor to break the bonds of fear,
degradation, oppression and bigotry.
We come to build bridges of trust, dignity, compassion and love.
Hand in hand, pursuing life, liberty and happiness, we go out
with love in our hearts, care in our eyes and comfort for one
another on our lips.
Let it be known that we passed through this world for no other
purpose than to share our indivudual gifts for the good of all
humankind.