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Dancehall impacts the rise of transgender community
BARBIE… first made headlines in late October when ‘she’ was held and subsequently released by the police
Entertainment
Steven Jackson  
December 5, 2009

Dancehall impacts the rise of transgender community

270,000 gay, bisexual, and transgendered people live in Jamaica

The homophobic dancehall culture can stop the rise of local transgendered community, argued the Jamaica Forum for Lesbians All-Sexuals and Gays (JFlag) following the recent party photos of cross-dressers.

JFlag said that the dancehall culture castigates such individuals but fails to crush them.

“The genre of music called dancehall … has certainly played its part in preventing the kind of dialogue that would allow for a greater understanding of this particular minority grouping,” asserted Jason McFarlane, programmes manager at JFlag in response to Observer queries. “(But) homophobia does not prevent the emergence of transgendered persons it only prevents dialogue around transgender issues as many have not yet dealt with the reality of homosexuality.”

JFlag added that transgendered persons are stepping out, but fear prevents them from fully expressing their gender identity.

The gay lobby estimates that up to 270,000 lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered people live in Jamaica. That represents “between three to 10 per cent of the population”. Of that figure a “smaller percentage” are transgendered persons which includes transvestites (cross-dressers) and transsexuals (surgical augmentation).

“The reality is that this already exists but many don’t have the space or the vocabulary with which to express and articulate this,” he said.

Not all transgendered persons are private, as the nation’s latest celebrity, Barbie (crossdresser) posed in a series of party pictorials published this week. The fashionable Barbie however was not alone and posed with two crossdressing friends. All three were dressed for the spotlight with big hair and tiny skirts and tops. The photos made headlines because Jamaica is arguably the most homophobic country in the western hemisphere. Proponents of this view cite gay murders and attacks but opponents counter stating that most of these murders are committed by gays in crimes of passion.

JFlag added that transgendered persons have the right to freely exist in Jamaican society.

“What would be beneficial is the acceptance of diversity of whatever prevents itself in a way that as a society we can have a rationale discussion and come to some understanding of its place in a Jamaican society,” he said. “It would in turn be beneficial to those who express as this third gender as there is whole sector of people who never get to understand and experience who they are because of social constraints.”

JFlag added that transgenderism is to gender what homosexuality is to sexuality. In other words a transgendered person does not have to be gay. “Sexuality and gender are separate markers and the distinction needs to be made because people continue to believe that someone who is transgendered is gay and this is not true. The concern of the transgender community is one of a disconnect between how they feel and how they see their body expressing how they feel. Simply put, what is between the ears doesn’t match what is between the legs, so someone feels that they are female but carries male genitalia and vice versa.”

Barbie first made headlines in late October when ‘she’ was held and subsequently released by the police. The police say they noticed a man and a ‘woman’ arguing in a Toyota Mark II motorcar parked at a lonely spot along Manchester Avenue in May Pen. The police took both persons to the May Pen Police Station where it was discovered that the ‘woman’ was a man. Police suspected that the cross-dresser propositioned the male for sex. Barbie had subsequently refuted the claim of prostitution. The man reportedly fumed when he discovered that he was intimate with a man. The police inspected the crossdresser’s driver’s licence and voter’s ID which showed a Gregory Park, St Catherine address. As news spread, a crowd converged on the police station to see Barbie who was clad in a tight-fitting blouse, jeans shorts, high heeled shoes, loop earrings and a wig. The cross-dresser sported false eyelashes and neatly shaven eyebrows. The police say they admonished and discharged both men. Barbie subsequently has claimed that policemen with romantic interests have been calling ‘her’ phone.

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