One hundred paper tombstones with the names of lesbian, gay, bi-sexual or transgender (LGBT) people who committed suicide — most at a young age — after experiencing discrimination, bullying or violent attacks were erected in front of the Presidential Office Building yesterday, in a rally to advocate respect for LGBT human rights.
Holding white signs reading: “How many more have to die?” dozens of supporters attended a demonstration rally held by the Lobby Alliance for LGBT Human Rights on International Day against Homophobia and Transphobia, on Ketagalan Boulevard yesterday.
“I only stand here representing the living LGBT people. We are not mourning, but paying a tribute to you [the names on the graves]. Your death reflects the injustice of this world, and your death is a stern protest to the world,” alliance convener Wang An-i (王安頤) said.
Photo: Hsieh Wen-hua, Taipei Times
They spoke as a cellist and a violinist performed the theme song from the film Schindler’s List that portrayed the life of German businessman Oskar Schindler, who saved more than a thousand Polish-Jewish refugees during the Holocaust.
“How many more have to die to shake this cold and indifferent world, how many have to die before another ‘Schindler’ is found in Taiwan, who hears their cries in the corner and give them warmth?” alliance spokesperson Chen Chia-chun (陳嘉君) said.
“The alliance chose to use the graves to help the public understand the reality of how people’s ignorance, bias or misunderstanding [against LGBT people] can deprive people of their lives,” Chen said, adding that there is a QR code on each grave that has a link to the life story of each victim.
Lawyer Wellington Koo (顧立雄) said self-affirmation often comes from recognition from others, but although heterosexuals may not feel doubted by the society, LGBT people often feel insecure as a result of other people’s ridicule or denial.
Alliance secretary-general Zoe Shen (沈盈君) said: “Mom and dad, how much I long for you to look at me again, to hug me, to love me more. I felt love in your arms when you put me to sleep, when you fed me and played with me … but these gradually disappeared. I feel pain and helplessness, I cannot climb out of the abyss or bare all this because we are not suited to live in this world.”
Wu Hsin-en (吳馨恩), a 17-year-old transgender woman holding a sign that read: “We are only different from you,” cried as she listened to Shen read aloud the imaginary confession of the victims.
Wu said that the words invoked her painful memories of being called “perverted,” “disobedient” and being scolded by her grandfather, which caused her to run away from home, after which she became a victim of sexual assault and was not allowed to return home.
“Actually, it’s not that we [transgender people] identify with ‘a different type of gender,’ because the gender we identify with is the same as half the world’s population,” she said, “It’s just that we aren’t accepted for identifying with the gender of people born with the other physical attributes.”
“We will always meet people that we don’t understand, but at least ‘respect’ them before we try to understand them,” she said.
Chen said the alliance has approached the Ministry of Education, hoping to give lectures on human rights to elementary to high school students, because they believe when young people learn to respect other people and basic human rights, they will know not to harm other people, even if they are different.
She added they will also approach lawmakers and encourage them not only to state their attitude towards amending laws to support LGBT rights, but will also monitor their actions.
An increase in Taiwanese boats using China-made automatic identification systems (AIS) could confuse coast guards patrolling waters off Taiwan’s southwest coast and become a loophole in the national security system, sources familiar with the matter said yesterday. Taiwan ADIZ, a Facebook page created by enthusiasts who monitor Chinese military activities in airspace and waters off Taiwan’s southwest coast, on Saturday identified what seemed to be a Chinese cargo container ship near Penghu County. The Coast Guard Administration went to the location after receiving the tip and found that it was a Taiwanese yacht, which had a Chinese AIS installed. Similar instances had also
GOOD DIPLOMACY: The KMT has maintained close contact with representative offices in Taiwan and had extended an invitation to Russia as well, the KMT said The Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) would “appropriately handle” the fallout from an invitation it had extended to Russia’s representative to Taipei to attend its international banquet last month, KMT Chairman Eric Chu (朱立倫) said yesterday. US and EU representatives in Taiwan boycotted the event, and only later agreed to attend after the KMT rescinded its invitation to the Russian representative. The KMT has maintained long-term close contact with all representative offices and embassies in Taiwan, and had extended the invitation as a practice of good diplomacy, Chu said. “Some EU countries have expressed their opinions of Russia, and the KMT respects that,” he
VIGILANCE: The military is paying close attention to actions that might damage peace and stability in the region, the deputy minister of national defense said The People’s Republic of China (PRC) might consider initiating a hack on Taiwanese networks on May 20, the day of the inauguration ceremony of president-elect William Lai (賴清德), sources familiar with cross-strait issues said. While US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken’s statement of the US expectation “that all sides will conduct themselves with restraint and prudence in the period ahead” would prevent military actions by China, Beijing could still try to sabotage Taiwan’s inauguration ceremony, the source said. China might gain access to the video screens outside of the Presidential Office Building and display embarrassing messages from Beijing, such as congratulating Lai
Four China Coast Guard ships briefly sailed through prohibited waters near Kinmen County, Taipei said, urging Beijing to stop actions that endanger navigation safety. The Chinese ships entered waters south of Kinmen, 5km from the Chinese city of Xiamen, at about 3:30pm on Monday, the Coast Guard Administration said in a statement later the same day. The ships “sailed out of our prohibited and restricted waters” about an hour later, the agency said, urging Beijing to immediately stop “behavior that endangers navigation safety.” Ministry of National Defense spokesman Sun Li-fang (孫立方) yesterday told reporters that Taiwan would boost support to the Coast Guard