This Saturday 12th July, the Trans & Intersex Pride March will take place.
Pride events are a great opportunity to show our commitment to trans and intersex members of our communities and to create inclusive youth work environments for all young people. We can celebrate Pride events by walking in marches with our trans, non-binary and intersex young people and young people may want to organise an event in the youth service or in the community. We can throw parties, or we can run quizzes, big or small.
Our interventions and recognition of trans, non-binary, and intersex identities are important for young people. Particularly in this moment where young people find themselves the subject of the online narratives about who does and doesn’t belong.
There have been many gains for the rights of LGBTQI+ young people but there are still significant barriers that trans and intersex people face in Ireland, including major deficits in trans health care.
As our young trans, non-binary, and intersex young people navigate their lives they will face adversity, hostility and a lack of understanding. They may be called on to justify their existence, made to feel less than, or be the subject of more serious targeting. It is in the context of these challenges that the positive support of youth workers can make the biggest difference. Being inclusive, giving opportunities to young people to be fully themselves, listening, and staying alongside on the journey is the truly powerful role that youth workers play.
If hate and hostility creep into youth services, or you suspect that transphobia is lurking in the shadows do turn to our resources:
- Transforming Hate in Youth Settings, and Beyond Hate its partner resource
- e-Learning on Understanding Social Justice and Introduction to Transformative Practice.