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Erin Swenson on gender identity |
| On dealing with gender identity, and getting beyond
"male or female" [1-24-03]
The Rev. Erin K. Swenson, the first
transgender ministry in the PC(USA), spoke to the Presbytery of San
Francisco on January 14, 2003
Address to the Presbytery of San
Francisco,
January 14, 2003,
by Erin K. Swenson.
I bring you greetings from the Board of More Light
Presbyterians, and from the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta, a place deep
within the embrace of southern culture, the very place where the first
Presbyterian minister who is transgender had her ordination sustained and
her ministry affirmed. I am that minister, a member in good standing of my
presbytery, parish associate of the Ormewood Park Presbyterian Church, and
founder of the Southern Association for Gender Education, a non-profit
organization devoted exclusively to the task of educating our church and our
community about the reality of gender diversity.
Ministry in our respective communities is a daunting task.
Help me for a moment. How many people here have gender? [pause] If you
didn't just raise your hand I need to speak with you after the meeting. It's
clear that when the topic of gender identity is on the table we all have
something at stake for we all must deal with what it means to be gendered as
male or female. So when I speak of myself as transgender, or Gwen Araujo,
one of Newark's youth recently murdered because she was transgender, I am
talking about a subject that in one way or another effects us all.
Most of us are lucky. In the words of Presbyterian
minister Mister Fred Rogers, we are born male, feel like boys and men, and
are attracted to females. Or, we are born female, feel like girls and women,
and are attracted to boys. For the small, but very real, number of us for
whom this does not happen the world becomes a dangerous place filled with
ridicule, rejection, and violence. Gwen felt that violence a few months ago
at the hands of supposed friends. A violence bred, I believe, in the
determined ignorance of our churches and communities who refuse to face the
reality of gender and its diverse expressions, preferring to enforce
artificial gender expectations on children already overstressed with the
task of growing up. Gwen was an attractive, outgoing, 17-year-old
transgender young woman, excited about life and her future. What a contrast
when I think of myself at that age, a boy painfully shy and withdrawn,
dangerously depressed, and wracked with guilt over my own gender confusion.
I felt violent toward myself; Gwen experienced the violence of others. And
in a way the perpetrators of the Gwen's murder, children all, are as much
victims as Gwen and I, their lives destroyed by the fear and ignorance we
all share.
How does one speak rationally in this world about such a
pervasive and yet little understood topic as gender identity? Embedded deep
within the fabric of our society are assumptions about what it means to be
male or female that lie at the bedrock of our cultural institutions, most
especially the church. The first words we hear in life are a fateful
pronouncement of this reality. "It's a boy!" or "it's a girl!" comes the
blessing. A blessing, that is, if your sense of being a boy or a girl, a man
or a woman, fits the label given. And woe unto you if even this
pronouncement, this first category, cannot be established because some twist
of biology has caused your anatomical sex to be indeterminate. We are only
now beginning to resist our corporate temptation to surgically - violently -
impress an acceptable gender onto the bodies of these intersex infants, a
way of assuaging our anxiety over our compulsive need for them to be clearly
gendered as either male or female.
It's a daunting task as Christians, to change the world's
perception -- "neither male nor female," from God's perspective. Like the
religious people of biblical times, we resist overcoming boundaries: clean
and unclean, welcomed and outcast, male and female. But then that's exactly
what a poor carpenter's son from Nazareth asked of us.
©2003, Erin K. Swenson.
Posted here with permission of the author.
Permission granted to quote with attribution. E-mail -
erin@erinswen.com
Erin Swenson
Atlanta/GA
The Oakland Tribune reported on Erin Swenson's address on
January 21, 2003.
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