Speeches in the Senate Reading Room |
cross-posted at Walking with Integrity
On this bright January morning, as the hour of 11am neared, I emerged from Boston’s Park Street T stop, turned left and began walking up the hill toward the State House. Today (or rather, at this late hour, yesterday) marked the ceremonial signing of the Transgender Equality bill here in Massachusetts. This legislation, first filed in 2007, passed on November 15th, and officially signed on November 23rd, adds gender identity and expression to the state’s existing hate crimes law and the nondiscrimination statutes in the areas of housing, employment, education and credit. In a fitting twist, the week of its official passage was also Transgender Awareness Week, a time of educational and community events leading up to the eleventh annual observance of Trans Day of Remembrance on November 20th.
The Senate Reading Room, where today’s signing took place,
was packed with observers, a joyful crowd savoring the celebration. Lawmakers were clearly also buoyed, as
their inspiring comments demonstrated.
“You have no idea how beautiful you are as you stand here beaming,” said
state Auditor Suzanne Bump.
“Remember that you are powerful,” offered Senator Brian Downing,
followed by fellow Senator Sonia Chang Diaz: “it's days like this that remind
us why we ran for office... Thank you for reminding us [legislators] of our own
power, in addition to showing us your power.” Representative Byron Rushing, who joined Representative Carl
Sciortino in co-sponsoring the bill from its very first days, declared, “this
hasn't just been a discussion of gender identity but of the identity of
Massachusetts, and hopefully it will become a discussion of our national
identity.”
Representative Rushing, photo from masstpc.org |
In his Episcopal Church context, as a longtime member of the
Diocese of Massachusetts’ deputation to General Convention– Deputy Rushing inspires us to pose that
question of church identity. Faith
communities can ask, and indeed are asking, what do we stand for as people of
our respective traditions? In the
Episcopal Church we might well ask—and have asked at the 2009 General
Convention and various diocesan conventions before it– what does it mean to
declare in our baptismal covenant that we strive for justice and respect the
dignity of every human being? In 2009 the Convention passed resolutions putting
The Episcopal Church on record in support of transgender equality in the civic
sphere (D012 and C048), and pledging within our ecclesial life to make
administrative forms accessible to gender identities beyond male and female and
to protect transgender lay employees from discrimination (D090 and D032,
respectively). As our collective
conversation continues, we might allow the varied lives of transgender as well
as intersex people – communities and individuals whose lives are textured not
simply by complex embodiments of gender but also by race, class, sexuality and
ability-- to deepen our understanding of the human person. How do we interpret and live out the
mystery of being created in the image and likeness of God?
At the signing this morning, I was reminded of a startling
moment in the November 15 debate that I watched on my laptop. Representative
Sciortino was speaking movingly in support of the legislation when he began to
describe the Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR) held at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul the year before. He made a
point of detailing the apology that my bishop, the Right Rev. M.
Thomas Shaw, had offered on behalf of Christians who had condemned trans people
and in the process had “misrepresented God to” us. The apology had been stunning enough in its own right, but to
hear it reported, in some sense repeated, on the floor of the House of
Representatives, was positively astounding. As I sat there dumbfounded—actually, calling out to my
partner to come see this!-- receiving these words afresh in an
unimagined context, I was reminded of a strangely parallel moment at General
Convention three years earlier.
The Convention had managed to pass D012, the Trans Civil Rights
Resolution, on the same day that the Massachusetts Judiciary Committee was
holding a hearing on its own Trans Equality legislation—an earlier version of
what has now finally passed. As a team of trans people and allies worked toward the resolution’s passage in Anaheim, a fellow Episcopalian in Massachusetts
learned about it (on his laptop, while waiting to testify in the stultifying
heat) and shared it in the course of his testimony
three thousand miles away. The
Episcopal Church supports this bill, he was proud to be able to say. It all came full circle.
Also on my mind today were the words (viewable here as blurry video),
offered by Bishop Shaw at this year’s TDOR. Speaking at the
end of the program, he welcomed us to the Cathedral and then offered a word of
gratitude that felt almost like a meditation: “because of your honesty, because
of your integrity, because of the way you so pursue the truth of your identity,
you tell me about the nature of God, because that is how I think God is. And so I thank all of you not only for
the way that you enlighten my understanding of God but how much you preach to
the rest of the world about courage, and about bravery, and about truth and
about perseverance of identity. We
owe all of you a huge debt of gratitude.
Thank you.”
I got the sense people were both honored and stunned by his
words, working to digest and contemplate them— I know I was. His comments about perseverance
in pursuit of the truth of identity—language I had not heard him use before—
reminded me of words from the Gospel of John that I first really took in at a
middle school summer Bible camp: “you shall know the truth and the truth shall
make you free” (Jn 8:32).
From this chair, at the end of this day, looking out at the striking vista of falling snow, it strikes me how the process of knowing the truth and being
freed by it is both lifelong and communal—by turns grueling and wondrous, and
inextricably relational, even as it is distinctive to each person.
Governor Deval Patrick signs the bill, photo from masstpc.org |
An important truth about the MA trans equality law is that
it is far from perfect: it does not include protections in public
accommodations—access to public gender segregated spaces. Everyone was resolved to come back and get
that done. And as I think about
how far we have come, how much more free we are than we were just a few short
months ago, I know that what we need more than anything else is the will, the support, the conviction to keep pursuing the truth.
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