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transrevolutionaries · 4 months
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Revisiting this I have absolutely NO idea why i listed this as 2014. It looks earlier in the 2000s, TDOA started in 2005. Its likely from an issue of the workers world which is archived here im not on my computer yet though so i cant look through it properly... heres the coverage on the 2005 march though
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transrevolutionaries · 6 months
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Palestine Masterlist 
Introduction to Palestine: 
Decolonize Palestine:
Palestine 101
Rainbow washing 
Frequently asked questions 
Myths 
IMEU (Institute for Middle East Understanding):
Quick Facts - The Palestinian Nakba 
The Nakba and Palestinian Refugees 
The Gaza Strip
The Palestinian catastrophe (Al-Nakba)
Al-Nakba (documentary)
The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017 (book)
The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (book)
Nakba Day: What happened in Palestine in 1948? (Article)
The Nakba did not start or end in 1948 (Article)
Donations and charities: 
Al-Shabaka
Electronic Intifada 
Adalah Justice Project 
IMEU Fundraiser 
Medical Aid for Palestinians 
Palestine Children’s Relief Fund 
Addameer
Muslim Aid
Palestine Red Crescent
Gaza Mutual Aid Patreon
Books:
A New Critical Approach to the History of Palestine
The Idea of Israel: A History of Power and Knowledge
Hidden Histories: Palestine and the Eastern Mediterranean
The Balfour Declaration: Empire, the Mandate and Resistance in Palestine
Queer Palestine and the Empire of Critique
From Haven to Conquest: Readings in Zionism and the Palestine Problem until 1948
Captive Revolution - Palestinian Women’s Anti-Colonial Struggle within the Israeli Prison System
Palestine: A Four Thousand Year History
Except for Palestine: The Limits of Progressive Politics
Before Their Diaspora: A Photographic History of The Palestinians 1876-1948
The Battle for Justice in Palestine Paperback
Uncivil Rites: Palestine and the Limits of Academic Freedom
Palestine Rising: How I survived the 1948 Deir Yasin Massacre
The Transformation of Palestine: Essays on the Origin and Development of the Arab-Israeli Conflict
A Land Without a People: Israel, Transfer, and the Palestinians 1949-1996
The Iron Cage: The Story of the Palestinian Struggle for Statehood
A History of Modern Palestine: One Land, Two Peoples
Where Now for Palestine?: The Demise of the Two-State Solution
Terrorist Assemblages - Homonationalism in Queer Times
Militarization and Violence against Women in Conflict Zones in the Middle East
The one-state solution: A breakthrough for peace in the Israeli-Palestinian deadlock
The Persistence of the Palestinian Question: Essays on Zionism and the Palestinians
Fateful Triangle: The United States, Israel and the Palestinians
The False Prophets of Peace: Liberal Zionism and the Struggle for Palestine
Ten myths about Israel
Blaming the Victims: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question
Image and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict, New and Revised Edition
Israel and its Palestinian Citizens - Ethnic Privileges in the Jewish State
Palestinians in Israel: Segregation, Discrimination and Democracy
Greater than the Sum of Our Parts: Feminism, Inter/Nationalism, and Palestine
Palestine: A Four Thousand Year History
Palestinian Culture:
Mountain against the Sea: Essays on Palestinian Society and Culture
Palestinian Costume
Traditional Palestinian Costume: Origins and Evolution
Tatreez & Tea: Embroidery and Storytelling in the Palestinian Diaspora
Embroidering Identities: A Century of Palestinian Clothing (Oriental Institute Museum Publications)
The Palestinian Table (Authentic Palestinian Recipes)
Falastin: A Cookbook
Palestine on a Plate: Memories from My Mother’s Kitchen
Palestinian Social Customs and Traditions
Palestinian Culture before the Nakba
Tatreez & Tea (Website)
The Traditional Clothing of Palestine
The Palestinian thobe: A creative expression of national identity
Embroidering Identities:A Century of Palestinian Clothing
Palestine Traditional Costumes
Palestine Family 
Palestinian Costume
Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion, v5: Volume 5: Central and Southwest Asia
Tent Work in Palestine: A Record of Discovery and Adventure
Documentaries, Films, and Video Essays:
Jenin, Jenin
Born in Gaza
GAZA 
Wedding in Galilee 
Omar
5 Broken Cameras
OBAIDA
Indigeneity, Indigenous Liberation, and Settler Colonialism (not entirely about Palestine, but an important watch for indigenous struggles worldwide - including Palestine)
Edward Said - Reflections on Exile and Other Essays
Palestine Remix: 
AL NAKBA
Gaza Lives On
Gaza we are coming
Lost cities of Palestine 
Stories from the Intifada 
Last Shepherds of the Valley
Voices from Gaza
Muhammad Smiry
Najla Shawa
Nour Naim
Wael Al dahdouh
Motaz Azaiza
Ghassan Abu Sitta
Refaat Alareer
Plestia Alaqad
Bisan Owda
Ebrahem Ateef
Mohammed Zaanoun
Doaa Mohammad
Hind Khoudary
Palestinian Voices, Organizations, and News 
Boycott Divest and Sanction (BDS)
Defense for Children in Palestine
Palestine Legal 
Palestine Action
Palestine Action US
United Nations relief and works for Palestinian refugees in the Middle East (UNRWA)
National Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP)
Times of Gaza
Middle East Eye
Middle East Monitor
Mohammed El-Kurd
Muna El-Kurd 
Electronic Intifada 
Dr. Yara Hawari (suspended on X 10/25/2023)
Mariam Barghouti
Omar Ghraieb
Steven Salaita
Noura Erakat
The Palestinian Museum N.G.
Palestine Museum US
Artists for Palestine UK 
Eye on Palestine (suspended on Instagram 10/25/2023)
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transrevolutionaries · 6 months
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Since the trans flag won, here’s my Palestinian trans flag using traditional Tatreez borders along with a design of two roosters from Hebron. This is for Trans Palestinians specifically.
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transrevolutionaries · 6 months
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"Today there are some who will try to separate Aswat [queer feminist Palestinian movement] from the Palestinian struggle and only relate to you on the basis of a universal sexual identity. But those who support your self-determination will not forget that you are linguistically translating your culture, your lives and your self-identities and your struggle to make it easier for those of use who are not fluent in Arabic to understand. But that does not mean that identities like lesbian, gay, bi, transgender, transsexual, intersexual have one universal meaning in all places, for all peoples, for all cultures, or in all historical periods.
Colonialism and imperialism have always tried to foment conflicts in order to divide and conquer. In the case of Palestinians, as Helem [Lebanese LGBT group] concluded, “[T]he rights of gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgenders should not be placed in competition with the long struggle of the Palestinian people, including Palestinian LGBT people, for self-determination, for the right to return to their homes, and the struggle against apartheid and the occupation of their lands.”
Today we see how the imperialists—the U.S. to Israelis—use the experiences of women, of gays, of transgenders as pretexts for imperialist war. The white supremacist ideology replaces the colonial claim of “bringing civilization,” into imperialist claims that they are “bringing democracy.” But Washington and Tel Aviv have brought ruthless reactionary occupations to the Middle East.
Today the U.S. has made anti-gay, anti-trans, anti-woman rape and humiliation part of its science of torture and repression from the U.S. torture camp in imperialist-occupied Guantánamo, Cuba, to Abu Ghraib."
Leslie Feinberg on Pink-washing and rainbow imperialism in hir visit to occupied Palestine through ASWAT's invitation. 2007.
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transrevolutionaries · 7 months
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This is the person credited with coining the modern word transgender Btw.
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transrevolutionaries · 7 months
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This blog has been inactive but Just to let everyone know i support the palestinian resistance unequivocally with my entire heart. may they win whatever it takes!
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transrevolutionaries · 8 months
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Trans pride flag at Free Derry corner to celebrate Foyle pride ❤️
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transrevolutionaries · 8 months
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Marsha P. Johnson was a psychiatric abuse survivor. In Pay it No Mind, friend Bob Kohler says
"She would go down christopher street, and be picked up midway... they would take her away for about two-three months, and they would put an implant in her spine, thorazine i think it was, that would calm her down, and she would come back, and be a zombie for about a month, and then she would go back to being old Marsha"
We must not erase this aspect of her life, and its important to celebrate marsha as a Black Mad Street Transvestite, not whatever sanitized version of her life the mainstream wants to celebrate. The parts of Marsha that made her such a celebrated and mythologized part of NYC gay and trans life is the same thing that got her institutionalized, a victim of state violence. Marsha was the patron saint of Christopher street, and she was also a Mad, Black, Street Transvesite, and many of the people who swear they owe their protection to her did not fight for her, all of her, the way she did for them.
Make sure you do
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transrevolutionaries · 8 months
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY MARSHA P. JOHNSON.
On Aug 24, 1945, Marsha P. Johnson was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, before taking her leadership role the first LGBT pride: a battle against the NYPD's 6th precinct at Stonewall. She frequently returned home to NJ to visit her family in Elizabeth to observe holidays. Generously, she brought trinkets for her nieces and nephews, and flowers for her momma; during her commute, she would even invite wayward people to join her for a hot meal with her family. Elizabeth, NJ, was where Marsha began wearing dresses at age 5, but stopped after homophobic & sexual harassment, and she left her Jersey home at age 17 with $15 in her pocket, to New York's Greenwich Village. There, she became radicalized, stating, "We want to see all gay people have a chance at equal rights as straight people in America. We believe in picking up a gun & starting a revolution if necessary." During the Stonewall Uprising, she famously climbed a lamppost and dropped a heavy object onto a police cruiser window, shattering it. That's not all she shattered. Assigned male at birth, Ms. Johnson made it a point to dress in ways that disrupted the masculine/ feminine binary, by highlighting both simultaneously. Marsha was the product of the Great Migration of the 1920s, with parents coming from S Carolina & VA during a time of crop failure & anti-Black lynching in the South. Father worked on a General Motors assembly line in Linden & was able to support his family. So by fleeing NJ to Greenwich Village, Marsha was following a family tradition of exodus to freedom and opportunity. And like her father, Marsha provided for people. She co-founded STAR. "Their first house was in the back of an abandoned truck in Greenwich Village. Nearly 24 young people called the truck home; Marsha hustled every night to feed them, getting arrested over 100x due to the illegality of drag & sex work".
Retrieved from Peoples History NJ , A fantastic account which you should follow immediately.
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transrevolutionaries · 8 months
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From Leslie Feinberg's FBI file. 1974
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transrevolutionaries · 9 months
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Emi Koyama's "The Transfeminist Manifesto,"
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transrevolutionaries · 9 months
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Transexual Menace Rosa von Praunheim, 1996
Transexual Menace takes its title from the name of "the most exciting political action group in the USA"— transgender people who are defining themselves, demanding their legal rights, and fighting for medical care and against job discrimination. Transexual Menace gives viewers remarkable insight into the home and work lives of transsexuals from many cultures and countries, including FTMs and those with families and children.
you can watch it here for free
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transrevolutionaries · 9 months
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"Adult transsexualism is such a malignant condition (in the sense of irreversibility) that we obviously must apply our beliefs as if they were proven fact. (Stoller, 1970, p. 279) ... Fortunately, [it] may be treatable and reversible in the small child ... treatment must be immediately instituted so that a more normal gender identity can be developed. (Stoller, 1969, p. 140)"
If trans identity could not be cured, clinicians and researchers debated whether it could be prevented by intervening in childhood. The above quotes represent the perspectives of mental health research clinicians who sought to prevent adult trans identification with childhood interventions. These professionals described adult trans identity as a pathological outcome. To this end, interventions such as the Feminine Boy Project sought to prevent gender expressions in children which did not conform to societal norms (R. Green, 1987). This NIMH-funded study lasting over a decade used behavior modification and talk therapy to discourage feminine behaviors in boys, which researchers termed “the Sissy Boy Syndrome” (R. Green, 1987) [...] An endocrinologist at the First International Symposium on Gender Identity told other researchers: “these people are ill, they have a disease, they need to be helped,” but what “we want to do is treat the cause” (EEF, 1969c, pt. 2). He thought transsexualism was likely caused by hormonal exposure in the intrauterine period; once screening of an infant's sex in utero became available, injections of androgens for male fetuses and anti-androgens for female fetuses could be given to “divide our population into real males and real females.” The process, he said, would be the same as giving “a pregnant woman iron or folic acid to prevent her anemia”
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:)
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transrevolutionaries · 9 months
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literally in tears right now
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transrevolutionaries · 9 months
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Alexander John "Bear" Goodrum 1960-2002 Alexander was the creator, founder, and director of TGNet Arizona a grassroots transgender advocacy and resource organization based in Arizona. Goodrum was a bisexual, disabled, African-American, transgender man who worked extensively within those communities.  A native of Chicago, Illinois, Alexander had been involved as an activist in LGBT organizing and social justice issues since the 1980s. In addition to the TGNet Arizona web site, he published numerous articles and papers, and is perhaps best known for his widely published paper, Gender Identity 101: A Transgender Primer. (source)
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transrevolutionaries · 9 months
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here is a pdf of Achim Rohde's paper, 'Gays, Cross-Dressers, and Emos: Nonnormative Maculinities in Militarised Iraq'. LINK
Rohde describes how queer and trans subcultures appeared and even flourished in late Ba'athist Iraq in spite of external pressures, and how the NATO invasion of 2001-2003 wiped away these subcultures and laid the foundations for more organised forms of violent queer-antagonism that have become more visible and socially determinative in the years since the fall of the Ba'ath government.
please read critically - i don't agree with the easy dichotomy between violence against women and anti-queer violence that sometimes seems to appear, or Rohde's classification of 'nonnormative masculinities' (aka, queer AMAB people), but it's nonetheless a very useful resource
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transrevolutionaries · 9 months
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no problem and btw i appreciate ur reblog a lot! sorry if i came off like i didnt, just wanted to clarify some context on the word. i deffo study a lot of trans history but im not Latin American so there will always be a blindspot for me in this regard so i truely appreciate ur perspective/addition a lot
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@staff Yall censoring a word that describes decades of latine trans communities is not lost on me
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