|
Kimberly
Nixon and Human Rights |
January 20, 2002 |
| Reprinted
with permission from the Women
with Disabilities Electronic Discussion List
-----Original Message----- On January 19, 2002 a Vancouver BC court case granted a $7,500 award for an injury to dignity to Kimberly Nixon. Kimberly Nixon was born male and has been living for almost twenty years as a woman. Kimberly Nixon had sex reassignment surgery in 1990 and was rejected as a volunteer rape counsellor at an organization for victims of physical or sexual assault because of her history. I read elsewhere a lawyer quoted as stating that the ruling establishes that even organizations that help the "disadvantaged" are not immune from human rights complaints. Wondering what members think of the ruling... I, for one, was very pleased! ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~
While I respect Michelle Lansberg's point of view, I take issue with the relevancy of how long Vancouver Rape Relief has been providing services, how hard they work, how challenged they are by limited resources, what an incredible feminist organization they are, how inclusive and sensitive they are, or their terrific history of activism and involvement in issues around custody and access, rape shield laws, and federal anti-violence measures. If anything, in my opinion, it makes this case all the more tragic, because I should have hoped that a progressive organization with the history and quality of work that the Vancouver Rape Relief is so noted for, would NOT have discriminated against Kimberley Nixon based on her past (i.e. that she used to be a male.) Nor do I think it's relevant, to what extent, the Vancouver Rape Relief may suffer as a result of the court ruling and the cost of the litigation. Kimberly Nixon experienced violence from an abusive partner. I've experienced domestic violence, and if I were accessing services at a centre, my concern would be that the person providing counselling to me was informed and knowledgeable, and sensitive to my experience ... the fact that a counsellor USED to be a man would frankly not be any of my business. Kimberly Nixon wasn't given a chance ... I wonder why Vancouver Rape Relief didn't accept Kimberly as a volunteer counsellor and then make a decision to not continue her services if the quality of her services or the response of other women proved problematic. What I find particularly disturbing about Michelle Lansberg's article is this trend of revictimizing and blaming the victim... I quote from Michelle's article: "What a twisted irony it is that the latest and perhaps fatal blow should be inflicted by someone who wants to be a woman -but doesn't hesitate to inflict potential ruin on a women's service that tried to say "no'' to her unwanted advances." So are we to infer from Michelle's statement that Kimberly Nixon was WRONG to exercise her rights because litigation would prove harmful to the defendant, the Vancouver Rape Relief? Michelle's choice of words are hurtful ... she refers to Kimberly Nixon as "someone who wants to be a woman?" News flash: Kimberly Nixon is a woman whether Michelle Lansberg and all the transphobic individuals out there like it or not! And how does Michelle equate Kimberly's desire to volunteer her services, as a woman who had experienced violence from an abusive partner, to that of someone making "unwanted advances"?
Dec.
23, 2000. 01:00 AM Link
to the Landsberg article on the Toronto Star website WHAT MAKES a woman? If a man cuts off his penis, pumps himself full of hormones, gets silicone breasts and electrolysis, and stuffs his feet into high heels, is he/she a woman? To me, that surgically and chemically altered person is a walking testament to the craziness of our cultural rigidity. If all children weren't crammed into pink or blue categories, with prescribed sets of feelings, beliefs and behaviours, maybe the gender-ambiguous wouldn't be driven to such painfully harsh medical extremes. Would that everyone could live freely, in freely chosen sexual modes, without mutilations and lifelong chemicals. Being female is a complicated mixture of physiology, cultural conditioning and lived experience - or even, as one academic thesis would have it, ``a political category created through oppression.'' Out of politeness, I'd be willing to call that surgically altered person a woman and use the feminine pronoun. But a part of me will always feel outraged that ``woman'' could be defined as an outward set of physical characteristics - lack of penis, fake breasts - along with an ultra-sexist ``female impersonator'' style of clothing and gesture. For me (but not for all women), some of the defining moments of femaleness were the restrictions imposed on me as a child; the shame of enduring male molestation; the omnipresent threat of male sexual attack that dogged us from the age of 8 or 9; the happy daydreams of ``what shall I name my children;'' the nervous pleasure of being seen as pretty; the rage that prettiness was all that counted; the sting of injustice and exclusion from endless male entitlements and privileges; the mingled embarrassment and triumph of first menstruation; the thrill of sexual power in adolescence and young womanhood; the struggle to come to terms with sexual assault; and the transformative gifts of pregnancy, childbirth and nurturance. Want to cross-dress and send up our culture's gender strictures by playing the vamp with a feather boa and sequins? Fine. But don't show up at the rape crisis centre and ask to counsel women who have been victimized by male sexual violence. Imagine a raped woman fleeing to the safety of a woman-only centre, only to be confronted by a former man who had never shared any of those formative female experiences. Kimberley Nixon, a former bush pilot, who was a man for his first 30 years and was then surgically changed, says he always wanted to be a woman. In Nixon's discrimination claim against the Vancouver Rape Relief and Women's Shelter, she says she was so hurt when she was turned away from a volunteer training session at VRR that she wandered the streets weeping and thinking of suicide. She refused apologies, $500 compensation for hurt feelings and the chance to work with volunteer fundraisers. On her behalf, the B.C. Human Rights Commission is trying to force Vancouver Rape Relief to fork over $10,000 in damages, compel all staff to take sensitivity training about ``transphobia'' and to advertise its eagerness from now on to hire transgendered staff. Nixon's complaint, in which testimony has been heard at a Human Rights tribunal for the last two weeks, has tied up the VRR in legal wrangling for the past five years and has cost VRR the equivalent of an annual staff salary. Vancouver Rape Relief is 25 years old. It relies on the hard work of a mostly male support team to raise money so it can shelter about 100 assaulted women and their children a year, and respond to 1,200 crisis phone calls. It is also one of the last woman-only protected spaces in B.C. At least one other, the Vancouver Lesbian Connection, fell apart after the B.C. Human Rights Commission ordered it to accept transgendered members. Vancouver Rape Relief is nationally noted as a feminist centre of activism. It has made important contributions to Canada-wide debates about custody and access, rape shield laws and federal anti-violence measures. "`We're known for our inclusiveness and our sensitivity to race and class,'' said Lee Lakeman in an interview. ``This hurts our reputation and could break us financially.'' Lakeman, a member of the VRR collective, says that it responds humanely to transgendered people seeking help. ``But we have to think of the ordinary women at our front door.'' Woman-centred services are beseiged with enemies enough in this backlash era. What a twisted irony it is that the latest and perhaps fatal blow should be inflicted by someone who wants to be a woman - but doesn't hesitate to inflict potential ruin on a women's service that tried to say ``no'' to her unwanted advances. (Michele Landsberg's column appears Saturday in the Life section and Sunday in the A section. Her e-mail address is mlandsb@thestar.ca.) ======== end of paste ============
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