Saturday, June 16, 2012

Trans* and Transportation

Yesterday, I met with a woman named Rayza who is MTF and currently fighting for her legal name change in Cochabamba (it's not legal anywhere in Bolivia). I met with her to discuss the documentary I am creating about the Trans community. I want her to be my main story line because she is the biggest activist here in Cochabamba and is really well known in the community. She reviewed my proposal and was very interested and willing to help. Some of the things she talked about as far as the Trans community goes:

  • It is much safer in Cochabamba to be FTM than MTF because of the machismo attitudes of most men. There is much more likely to be violence against a person intentionally not displaying their masculinity.
  • Her biggest goal for the documentary was to expose the difference between what I think is essentially "drag" culture (or what she called "transformativos") and people who identify as transsexual or transgender. She explained that the general population of Bolivia tends to think that people who are Trans are people who decide to "cross-dress," but that they population doesn't have any understanding of actual trans identities-- i.e. People who were born into bodies that do not fit their emotional or mental identity. 
  • The biggest legal fight right now for the Trans community is to legalize name changes for Trans people. This is even more difficult in Bolivia, however, because of the issue of lack of documentation for much of the population. A lot of people don't have identity cards/birth certificates/etc. to begin with. The second fight is to promote inclusive policies in the work place to ensure that no one is fired from their job based on gender identity.
On a different note, I took some (not that good) pictures of the various kinds of transportation I take yesterday. 
A "Micro" bus w/ a set route around the city. You hail the bus from the side of the street and hopes it stops for you! 1.70bs/ride

The white car is a "Taxi," but a sketch one. A lot of cars but a sticker that says Taxi on their windshield, but they are not actually part of a company or anything.

The front end of a Truffi bus. A VW-esque van with extra seats. It drives a set route and you also hail it from the sidewalk. Normally they are PACKED.

1 comment:

  1. Hey,
    my name is Andrew and I live in the states but originally I am from Bolivia. I was born there. I am an FTM and I am currently fighting to change my name and gender but cannot go back to Bolivia because of Legal issues. I am trying to find a lawyer to help me do all of this and I was wondering if you knew what lawyer(s) were working with Rayza? Or if you know anyone who would know? Please let me know, I'm in desperate need!

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