aotearoa - New Zealand Council of Trade Unions
Transcription
aotearoa - New Zealand Council of Trade Unions
- TAT OU www.tapatoru.org.nz whanganui-a-tara aOTEAROA WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND OCTOBER 2011 Chief Human Rights Commissioner Rosslyn Noonan Outgames crew are supreme winners Rainbow Wellington’s questionnaire Enjoying the body you’ve got Adoption: The next step Featuring Wellington raised Sara Chez and her incredible journey proudly brought to you by - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz Me Karakia Tatou Whiti ora ki te whai ao ki te ao marama. Whiti ki runga, whiti ki raro. E ngungu ki te pohatu e ngungu ki te rakau - taha titaha ki tenei - - taha. titaha ki tera Tihei mauriora. What’s it all about: TAPATORU? Focus on the present: Tapatoru would like to share with its Maori trans and wider trans whanau the importance of making the most of the present! This is the time when people are too focussed on other aspects of their lives and that we forget about enjoying ‘today’: • we believe we are a whanau/ family and we look after each other and get on; • our uniqueness is what contributes to our vibrant and colourful community; • keeping things simple is what is more effective than complex and full of jargon; • we show our support in numbers and a unifed voice with good intention toward our people; • always it is about uplifting our wairua/spirit, and leading proudly by example; • We have no boundaries to our successes! • savvy in today’s world means living in both worlds confidently Our history: Our Maori trans whanau are a part of our Maori trans history also and it is important that we remember those who have passed on and that we keep their memory alive. Tapatoru invites contributions from whanau, friends, and companions, to share their story with us. We welcome any material on our brothers and sisters. Our email is: [email protected] What the future holds: To have a place for our aging indigenous trans whanau in Wellington. To encourage a lifestyle that respects our trans people as they age and either require support to live comfortably or want to live in a facility that is supportive. OCTOBER 2011 From the editors Kia ora Whanau. Nau mai haere mai (welcome) to the October issue of Tatou where I acknowledge our dear whanau (family) and friend Dana de Milo who celebrated her 65th birthday on 27 August (her actual birthday was 29 August). It was a lovely gathering of many of Dana’s nearest and dearest turning up at the Green Parrot Cafe here in Wellington. THE EDITORS Page 2 until seeing it on the big screen. It was hilarious, the fundraiser’s mascot ‘Hospi’ (characterised as a lion), was doing his thing in entertaining the crowds. Oh how comical he was on the night, and everyone melted when these toddlers arrived, (and they must’ve met Hospi while in hospital), and the shrills of delight from them on seeing Hospi - they absolutely ‘adored’ him and all his antics. Keep up the good work Hospi! We (as in Tapatoru) were delighted to be advised that our application to the Outgames legacy fund was successful (see page 16). As we had received so much positive feedback regarding the calendar we produced in time for the Asia Pacific Outgames in March this year; we have decided to do another one. We applied to the legacy fund for $2000 which will cover the cost of production. All costs for the first calendar were paid by us. However, as we are now on one salary, we are unable to continue without some support and the grant from the legacy fund was a key factor in producing another calendar (see Page 29). The people of Aotearoa (New Zealand) commiserate the passing of Sir Paul Reeves on 14 August 2011. He was 78 years and among many titles he was Archbishop of Aotearoa in the early to mid 80’s; and became the first Maori Governor General of Aotearoa 1985-1990. His televised state funeral was acknowledgement of his commitment, and an article (see Page 5) acknowledges his humanity and support for all people and especially his role of patron with Last week (27 September 2011), we attended the NZAF. farewell of Chief Human Rights Commissioner Just over a week after Sir Paul Reeves, we were Rosslyn Noonan held in Wellington, at Parliament shocked to hear news of a friend (Charles Jones), in the Banquet Hall. Her farewell drew a large who was taken tragically while in Thailand on crowd which gave us an indication of the breadth 22 August 2011. He was president of the World that Rosslyn works and it was an impressive Croquet Federation and was on his way home gathering, for an impressive and highly respected from a tournament in the UK. We got to know person. Her message was clear in that while alot Charles through volunteer work at the soup has been achieved - there is still much more to kitchen, and when Peri joined the local Wellington do. The reward for us is the opportunity for croquet club back in 2007 (where Charles played Rosslyn to say farewell to you - in her article on and was on the executive). When he was brought Pages 10-11. back to Aotearoa, two funeral services were held The cover picture (photographer Adrian Malloch) simultaneously; in his home town (Westport), plus the picture on Page 11 were taken at and here in Wellington, which gave me the Rosslyn’s Auckland farewell (held in August), on opportunity to pay our respects. Orakei Marae. The korowai (cloak) she is wearing On an uplifting note, I had a great time with new is called Te Kahui Tika Tangata (the cloak of the friends Amie and Kim as we celebrated Amie’s 40th Human Rights Commission), and was presented birthday on 20 August 2011. They contributed to to her at this event. the Queer Avengers article that was in our July We would like to convey our congratulations issue of Tatou. It is great fun meeting new people, to young Cherise Witehira in her appointment and also meeting ‘their’ friends too (who are just as President of Agender NZ. We are always as lovely). As soon as our work and study load very proud to hear of our young Maori people, eases, we are looking forward to organising some stepping up and taking on key roles like this and family gatherings as the summer heads our way. we send our support. We have kept abreast The world rugby competition has certainly been via online communication with Cherise in an enjoyable time for Peri! Not me, I don’t know the incredible work she has done in keeping much about rugby. I admire his ‘double standards’ Agender Christchurch striving; especially the new in that when he has assignments or an exam, he premises called Te Whare Puakitanga, Transition needs his quiet and focus. But oh! That’s all out House; amidst the earthquake disaster and falling the door if there is a rugby game on TV. One night economy. Aside from winning the presidential I caught him watching a game on TV with the seat, she certainly deserves accolades for her sound on mute instead of studying - (you had to achievements to date. be there to see it - very cute). Best thing though The NZ Police Diversity Liaison Officers will - he was given a ticket to see the Wales vs South be recruiting at Police College on 26 October Africa ‘plus’ 2x tickets to see Tonga vs France. 2011. For me, it is an opportunity to network, Lucky boy is all I can say.....and he still did okay educate, learn, listen and build relationships with with his exams and assignments. these awesome people. Some stories I’ve heard Just recently we went along to a fundraiser charity involving DLO’s have been hugely rewarding and screening at the Embassy theatre. The event it is always a pleasure to be called up and asked was put on by Wellington Hospitals and Health to attend these. Foundation and the movie was Footrot Flats. Arohanui (much love), Gee! I never knew how violent that movie was Karen & Peri - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 FEATURE Page 3 Necessity is the mother of invention introducing Sara Chez Ever had to do something a different way because there is no other way to do it? That is what my whole life has been like. Surprisingly trying to turn a negative situation into a positive can sometimes be extremely hard, but this is how it is for us now and will be for a long time to come. The ability to reinvent ourselves is one of our many facets. We are chameleons who are forever changing and trying to improve ourselves to make us feel complete. I arrived in Wellington in the early 80’s after running away from home and finding sanctuary in my aunt’s home in Island Bay. My aunty was extremely kind and always knew I was different from the others. She gave me enormous support and understanding. She was my foundation to create the new persona I desperately needed to become. Acceptance is so important for us and to have that is indeed a gift. We need to be accepted, we want to be accepted and we tend to search for this our whole lives. Wellington was so enormous to me. My aunt worked in The Harry Squires Memorial Hostel for the Elderly (on the corner of Vivian and Taranaki streets. My uncle Ben would take us in the car at 10.30pm to go and collect aunty from her afternoon shift at 11pm. While we patiently waited in the car outside the hostel, I notice a lot of women dressed very glamorously walking across the pedestrian crossing, tossing their hair and twirling their beautiful dresses. I was instantly mesmerised by these people who I would later find out were exactly what I was going to become. I enquired to my uncle as we waited as to who they were, and he told me that they all had come from aunty Carmen’s Coffee Shop and were on their way to the Purple Onion (a strip club). He finally divulged to me their secret and then I wanted to meet them. of my head from my aunt (preventing me from seeing what was happening under that table). A small argument ensued, and one of them flicked her hand in the air and knocked something out of the fish net they had in the roof and headed out the door. We spent a few hours there at that Coffee Shop and this was the start of my new life. I annoyed my aunt for ages until one I eventually moved out of my aunts, night she took me to The Balcony Club and secured my own place (a small when I was 14 where we met another unit on Russell Terrace), near the aunty called Gypsy. My aunt and Gypsy zoo. I was now in control of my own talked for a while and we were told that Carmen was I was enrolled at the Gloucestershire at the Coffee Shop so we College of Arts and Technology where I headed down there; utterly amazed as we walked into passed a Business Diploma in Secretarial the Coffee Shop. I could Studies for the next two years passing see them everywhere. with honours. There was an argument going on in the corner, another was life. I looked for work and became a under a table, and when I went to look Chef’s apprentice at the Grain of Salt underneath our table to see what was on Oriental Parade, where I began my going on, I received a clip to the back love affair with food. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 intriguing as I did him. I was totally spoilt with dinner at restaurants, gifts and jewellery and we became lovers and best friends. His name was Jim. Jim’s mother passed away so he left to return home to the UK; and upon his return he asked me to move there with him, as he inherited their family home in Gloucestershire. I immediately said yes. My curiosity now was getting the better of me, and I wandered down to the Harry Squires Hostel one night and then saw the ‘ladies of the night’, as uncle Ben would call them. They headed into the local pub where they all met up and were having a great time. So now was the time for ‘me’ to have a go. I went to my aunts the following weekend and borrowed a ladies suit and a pair of high heels (two sizes too small for my feet), and some makeup. I was now ready to hit the streets of Wellington and learn more about these ‘ladies of the night’. Of course I needed a name. Being a great fan of the Sara Moon pictures, I thought Sara sounded nice and hence I was reborn. The first person I met that night was Colleen White, who would later become a dear friend and we would live together for a time. She taught me how to apply makeup, hair styles, clothing ideas (she was very fashionable) and eventually Colleen and I would go out (most nights) working. She was like my drag mother. She introduced me to the scene and before long I had met everyone. I began to crack it with Colleen and one night met a wealthy Englishman who would eventually fall in love with me, as I did him, and still do to this day. He found me I nearly drew blood out of his hand (I was holding) as the plane took off and we left Wellington for Heathrow. Jim had organised a Rolls Royce for us and we headed to our new home. The home was a beautiful two story English home with stain glass windows, complete with a glass house, two car garaging and a summer house at the rear of the property. I thought I would be happy here. Jim had to work in London so I was left in Gloucestershire to my own devices. Eventually after exploring most of the town and shopping every day, I grew bored and mentioned this to Jim and he suggested I undertake tertiary studies. After thinking long and hard, I decided that an executive assistant/secretary would be what I wanted to do. I enrolled at the Gloucestershire College of Arts and Technology where I passed a Business Diploma in Secretarial Studies for the next two years passing with honours. My life was nearly complete. And now FEATURE Page 4 it was time to make the final changes to my new existence, surgery! I was given a referral by a GP to go to have psychological counselling for two years before surgery could be considered. I arrived and saw some girls from all over the world waiting for their ticket to freedom/surgery! Having seen the psychologist, he put me straight through as I had already lived as a woman for more than two years. I was 19 at the time and was sent to the Gender Reassignment Doctor, Mr Phillip, (who had performed this operation for the past 30 years and was performing four surgeries a month). He was about to retire and he told me I would be one of the last he would do and I would benefit from all his years of knowledge. He also did the famous Tula (Caroline Cossey). So through the private health system, I chose the date of the operation and went to Charing Cross Hospital for 10 days to become the woman I am today. I was not nervous or anxious as this would make me complete and I never looked back. I had the breast augmentation done a year later on my hormone breasts, completing my change. Over the next few years Jim and I travelled throughout Europe, Asia and the Middle East. We wined and dined at such fabulous places as Maxims in Paris. I used my Diploma and started to work as both a fashion model in London and also did some secretarial work in between. I was now ready to go out into the world myself and prove that I could do it on my own. I spoke to Jim and then I headed back to New Zealand to show the girls what I had done. Since this time, I was married to Jeffrey in Australia in 1999 and we bought the Les Girls Show and we toured Australia for the next five years with a lovely group of queens. Jeffrey passed away in 2008. I currently work for one of the big banks in Australia (head office) as an Executive Assistant and look forward to my 50th birthday in 3 years. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OBITUARY OCTOBER 2011 Page 5 Sir Paul Reeves remembered as a community friend GayNZ.com 14th August 2011 The gay and HIV communities are acknowledging the close support they received from ex-Governor General Sir Paul Reeves who died this morning (Sunday August 14) due to cancer. join the Board. And everyone was devastated. And I said: ‘Look, he’s about to become Governor-General’. And so it was sort of automatic that he became patron.” A senior and moderate figure in the Anglican Church at the time of the mid1980s final push for decriminalisation of homosexuality, Reeves helped counter anti-gay elements in that church and other conservative denominations. Soon after he became Governor General he signed into law the groundbreaking legislation decriminalising homosexuality. “But he wasn’t just a passive patron,” says Logan. “There were points at which there were conflicts within the Foundation, the kind of conflicts that happen in every organisation in New Zealand between Auckland and Wellington - you know, Queen St is full of people walking up and down the streets kicking the parking meters swearing about their Wellington branch, and Lambton Quay is full of people walking up and down swearing about their Auckland branch. There was one of those kinds of conflicts and it was quite unable to be resolved. I was in the Wellington branch and not on the Board at this later stage and we had these disagreements and the Board just wasn’t being at all helpful. It would never meet or talk or anything. And eventually I suggested we go to the Patron. We bowled up at Government House and he said ‘Yes’, he’d intervene. He wrote a letter essentially saying: ‘Be sensible, talk to these guys’, and it sorted things out completely.” Reeves also became the first patron of the NZ AIDS Foundation, bestowing much mana on that organisation at the height of the terrifying first appearance of the thendeadly virus which was decimating the gay community. By becoming the organisation’s patron Reeves drew attention to the fact that, although HIV/AIDS was overwhelmingly affecting gay men, it was an issue which the whole population needed to be concerned about, says the NZAF’s Executive Director at the time, Warren Lindberg. “We needed to organise as a gay community to fight HIV and we couldn’t have done it without the support of the wider society,” remembers Lindberg. He says Reeves was not content to just lend his name to the cause, he was prepared to be actively involved. “He was always available when we wanted his advice and was generous with his time.” HIV activist and early NZAF Board member Bruce Kilmister says Reeves was “out there” in his support for initiative supporting people with HIV. “He was right there at the beginning of World AIDS Day and the decision to use it as a fundraiser for the Wellness Fund supporting financially stressed people struggling with the virus.” And in embracing positive people and the NZAF’s fight to stop the epidemic “Sir Paul helped enormously with the destigmatisation of the virus and of the people with it or at risk of contracting it, nearly all of whom were gay men.” Kilmister says Reeves also helped provide political and bureaucratic stability to underpin governmental backing of the battle against HIV and its effects. “There were people within the corridors of political power lobbying strongly against the use of public money to counter HIV,” says Kilmister. “But once Sir Paul as Governor General lent his name and the prestige of his office to the cause, that particular part of the fight was effectively over.” However, Reeves was supportive of the gay community’s fight against HIV even before becoming Governor General says a noted gay rights activist and early NZAF trust board member. Bill Logan says the NZAF was set up just as Reeves was coming into office as Governor-General. “We had sorted him out, Bruce Burnett and I, as a potential trustee of the AIDS Foundation, and he accepted. And I heard from contacts in the Government that this was an outstandingly sensible and fortuitous choice for us to have made,” Logan recalls. “Then I heard that he was to become Governor-General and the Board got this message that unfortunately he couldn’t now Logan says that was a very unusual thing for a Patron to do, pointing out that Reeves did not take sides but was active in a way that you wouldn’t expect a Patron who was the Governor-General to be active in sorting out disputes. Of Reeve’s important part in our history when he signed the Homosexual Law Reform Bill into law “I don’t think he had any difficulty doing that at all,” Logan says. “He was on our side.” Logan says Reeves was very down to earth, as is his wife Beverley, Lady Reeves. “I think he was more human than most people that get to that position. And he kept that humanity in a way which is admirable.” Wellington Rainbow Bowling Bowling every Sunday at 5pm Strike Entertainment Centre, 399 Hutt Road, Lower Hutt, Wellington We welcome you to come and join us Phone: 04 568 3168 Email: Rainbow Bowling Website: www.strikenz.co.nz - TATOU Ch c i t iroprac www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 Total Health chiropractic Spicing Up Your Life You already know that spices can add some incredible taste sensations to your food – but did you also know that many spices have significant health benefits? In fact, many herbs and spices have been used for natural healing for thousands of years, and are still used today in place of medications that may cause unwanted or adverse side effects. And… they are fat-free and extremely low in calories! Some herbs and spices that are better known for their healthy properties include: • Cinnamon – Helps stop the growth of bacteria and fungi in the body and may help to increase brain function. It is also reduces blood sugar levels in diabetics and helps to lower cholesterol. As for antioxidants that help fight disease, cinnamon ranks at the top as an antioxidant source. • Parsley – Known for its cancer-fighting properties, parsley is also rich in antioxidants and heart healthy vitamin C and beta-carotene. • Ginger – Great for digestive health, ginger is used to calm motion sickness and stomach upsets associated with pregnancy. Ginger is another spice with antioxidant properties. • Turmeric – The spice that gives the yellow colour to mustard, turmeric is also loaded with antioxidants and it may help to guard against cancer and the inflammation that contributes to joint problems and Alzheimer’s. • Oregano – Armed with powerful antibacterial compounds, oregano helps fight infection and, when eaten fresh, has more antioxidant properties, per gram, than apples, blueberries, oranges and potatoes! Many spices have been around for centuries, and were used for all types of medicinal purposes long before the first pharmacy ever appeared on the scene. Maybe our ancient ancestors were wiser than we give them credit for! As you know, we chiropractors seek to help your body heal itself without drugs or surgery. Herbs and spices, mixed in with chiropractic care, proper diet, sleep, and a lot of laughter – these are the ingredients of a great meal and healthy lifestyle! This article has been retrieved with the permission of Dr David Comely via his monthly e-newsletter and link: http:// www.wellingtonchiropractor.co.nz/doctor.asp?chiropractor=10639S. For more interesting topics, please feel free to visit Dr Comely’s website on www.totalhealthchiro.co.nz. Dr David Comely BSc.(Chiro), Cert. AK 74 Park Road, Miramar, Wellington Phone: 04 891 0911 Fax: 04 891 0912 email: [email protected] www.totalhealthchiro.co.nz - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz LOCAL OCTOBER 2011 Page 7 Labour releases rainbow policy www.gayexpress.co.nz 22 September 2011 but it’s consistent with our commitment to equality.” Promoting safety and dignity for all New Zealanders The New Zealand Labour Party has released its rainbow policy platform for the 2011 election, which includes gay marriage and GLBT youth safety among the party’s primary concerns. MPs Charles Chauvel and Jacinda Ardern (pictured above) visited the express offices this week to deliver the policy, which has three basic tenets – bringing about formal equality before the law, promoting safety and dignity for all New Zealanders, and promoting safety and dignity internationally. Bringing about formal equality before the law Labour’s policy states, “New Zealanders in a same-sex relationship may enter into civil unions, which are not fully equivalent in a legal sense to marriage, and they may not enter into marriage. They may not offer themselves as the adoptive carers for children. Transsexual and intersex new Zealanders face numerous barriers to full participation in society.” To bring about formal equality before the law, Labour pledges to review laws and practices that offend section 19 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights. Specifically, the party will: • modernise the law relating to the care of children, to ensure that the widest pool of suitable adults is lawfully available to provide care to children in need; • review and update relationship and relationship property law; and • implement the 2007 Human Rights Commission report To Be Who I Am, which focused on improving the lives of trans and intersex New Zealanders. “It’s our policy to open up the right to marriage so that people can make the choice,” says Charles. “I imagine there will be some who have some difficulty with that, Labour’s policy platform states, “Every New Zealander should be able to live a life of safety and dignity. Many GLBT New Zealanders continue to be subject to insult, verbal and physical abuse, and to be made to feel inferior, most damagingly in schools. Too often, this results in high rates of selfharm and suicide amongst young GLBT New Zealanders.” Labour’s policy is to support safety and dignity for all, including in school. In order to support safety in schools, Labour will encourage the establishment of queer / straight alliances, as well as other diversity groups. Charles says Labour will also require schools to operate policies that prevent bullying of GLBT students. “All our young people have to pass through schools and we all know how unsafe we can feel through bullying, negative comments or not being made to feel the same as your straight friends. It’s going to be a requirement of every school to have an antibullying policy that specifically mentions GLBT youth and is reported on regularly through the ERO mechanism. Parents will be able to know if their kids are going to a safe school.” To those schools that have refused queer/ straight alliances in the past, particularly on the grounds of religion, Charles says, “Just as we wouldn’t find it acceptable for any school that receives state funding to discriminate on any other ground, they can’t discriminate against our queer youth either.” Labour’s policy platform also affirms the place of the last Labour-led government’s rainbow desk within the ministry of social development, which facilitated the planning and delivery of public services to the GLBT community. The policy states, “Labour will ensure that the planning and delivery of public services continue to take the needs of GLBT New Zealanders into account. This includes the needs of an aging population.” Charles says, “There’s no agency in central government that’s tasked with looking forward and finding out the needs of our queer populations going forward; there’s no one ensuring that existing public services are delivered safely. Nobody’s looking at the fact that we figure higher in suicide and self-harm statistics. Our policy puts a mechanism to deal with this right in the heart of central government in place.” Promoting safety and dignity internationally Labour’s pledge is to maintain and grow New Zealand’s participation in international bodies dealing with human rights, especially at UN level. The policy platform states a belief that New Zealand should raise its voice on these issues, including as an advocate on individual cases. Charles says, “New Zealand should be saying – at a minimum – that it’s not acceptable to criminalise adult consensual same-sex behaviour and wherever we encounter this in the international community we will speak out against it.” After the election Both Charles and Jacinda assure us that regardless of the election’s result, Labour are committed to implementing laws outlined in the party’s rainbow issues policy. Charles says, “If we are not successful in November, our policies become the agenda we’ll be advancing through private members’ bills and the like.” Jacinda says, “If we become government, we do the work ourselves and it gets sped up significantly. “If we’re not, my care of children bill will be kept in the ballot and I’ll keep progressing it, along with these other policies.” CROSSWORD ANSWERS The answers to the August 2011 issue. If there are two or more words, there will be no spaces or symbols in between, they will be written as one word. ACROSS 4. Purefunk, 6. Gloriousmiracles 12. Porirua, 15. OkarekaDanceCompany 17. QueerAvengers, 20. BelindaLeeBorlase 21. Lolabar, 22. Dargaville, 23. Annie 24. RandyCrawford, 25. Gayparenting DOWN 1. WhetuTirikateneSullivan 2. Chocolateandpearpudding, 3. SheliaMcCoy 5. TrueBlood, 7. BalianBuschbaum 8. ArtFacts, 9. TheRedEarSlider 10. DrDavidComely, 11. IknowaShelialikethat 13. Poi, 14. Waiheke, 16. Cherie 18. MoiIhakara, 19. LiliElbe - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz LOCAL OCTOBER 2011 Page 8 Making a safer environment for Queer Youth www.greens.org.nz 16 September 2011 for civil unions which had immeasurably improved the social environment for adults, most queer and transgendered young people still had to navigate a very hostile world. On Saturday 17 September, Green Party spokesperson on Rainbow issues Kevin Hague (pictured right) will launch a new report: How do we make it better? Mapping The Steps Towards A More Supportive Coming Out Environment For Queer Youth In Aotearoa New Zealand. The report has been researched and written by Murray Riches, an undergraduate student at the University of Waikato majoring in social policy and public relations. Mr Riches is passionate about social justice and environmental issues, and is involved with multiple activist groups, including local queer youth groups, Hamilton Pride, and the Campus Greens. Mr Riches completed this project as part of an undergraduate directed study under the supervision of Associate Professor Shiv Ganesh in the Department of Management Communication. “Murray took the initiative on this from the start. He looked for funding for this project, got support from Trust Waikato, traipsed up and down the country to talk with people, and worked on the report design and recommendations entirely by himself. He has really delivered, and it is completely fitting that a report on queer youth issues in Aotearoa should be written and led by “As adults we have a responsibility to make things better for our young people. “Murray’s report provides an excellent summary of the issues and a really practical programme for improving things, which I hope our whole community — regardless Despite legislative changes like of sexual orientation or gender identity — Homosexual Law Reform, anti- will be able to unite behind and commit to discrimination legislation, and the implementing,” said Mr Hague. provision for civil unions which had immeasurably improved the social environment for adults, most queer and transgendered young people still had to navigate a very hostile world. a queer youth. Murray’s report spotlights some major changes in policy and practice that are required to make coming out safer for queer youth, and I hope that as many people as possible will read it,” said Associate Professor Ganesh. Kevin Hague said that despite legislative changes like Homosexual Law Reform, antidiscrimination legislation, and the provision Mr Riches said that he had really enjoyed working on the project. “For me, the real highlight has been the opportunity to spend time talking with queer youth leaders from all over the country. “Having the chance to meet with so many people dedicated to empowering the queer youth of Aotearoa has really opened my eyes to the wonderful work already going on, as well as the dire need for immediate concerted action. Their insight and passion for the work they do is truly inspirational,” said Mr Riche Opening day in Kilbirnie at Wellington’s new ASB Sports Centre Source: http://futsal4all.com/2011/08/ futsal-on-show-as-wellington%E2%80% 99s-indoor-stadium-opens-nz/ 26 August 2011 Futsal will be one of the sports helping to christen Wellington’s new ASB Sports Centre in Saturday’s (27 August) grand opening. The 12 court, $47.5 million venue opened in Kilbirnie and around 10,000 were expected through the doors during the open day from 10am to 3pm. Futsal activities will be held throughout the day at the 2500 seat venue with the Futsal Whites, New Zealand’s national futsal team, kicking off festivities at 9.30am with a match against a St Pat’s representative team before competing against ethnic-based local teams in a futsal Cup of Nations. One court will also be set aside for people to try futsal in half hour blocks created for different gender and age-groups. Futsal wasn’t originally considered in the planning for the centre but was included by the Wellington City Council following rapid growth in recent years and will now base its Capital Football Futsal office at the stadium. “Futsal is one of the fastest growing sports in the country and with the growth of the sport in Wellington and combined with the huge popularity of football in the region generally, a venue like the ASB Sports Centre will allow the sport of futsal to really kick on,” said New Zealand Football’s Futsal Development Manager Dave Payne. “It has top of the line facilities right down to the details of the sprung floor and The Editors (Karen is pictured) enjoyed opening day at ASB Sports Centre. imported goals and it will be a great venue for local and hopefully international futsal competitions.” Up to six futsal courts will be in action every Monday, Tuesday and Friday night beginning in October, and a range of tournaments run during the October school holidays. Close to 300 futsal teams will play in leagues and tournament s at the ASB Sports Centre between October and December. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz TRIBUTES OCTOBER 2011 Toni Taylor and Marsha Hunt Kia ora Whanau, Page 8 TRIBUTES Connecting and acknowledging our people You may recall in the last issue of Tatou that I was heading off on holiday to some beautiful places in Aoteaora (New Zealand), called Ahuriri and Heretaunga. While I was there I managed to catch up with some whanau of the two girls I am going to talk about (which was one of the reasons apart from attending a hui (meeting) that I was in that region. The reason for visiting the home towns of the two girls and asking whanau about them is because I didn’t know them well enough to know share as I have done with previous sisters. I always say that if you have more information on these beautiful girls, please do contact me. If you want to stay anonymous, that certainly is respected; or if you have pictures too, I would love to hear from you. So, aroha mai (I’m sorry) whanau, that this story doesn’t have any pictures to accompany my talk (korero). Toni Taylor aka Mutz She hailed from Tangoio, Ahuriri. I met her in Melbourne in the late 70’s to early 80’s. She seemed really easy going and was a very likable person. And did I say attractive....she was a ‘very’ attractive girl with golden skin. From my asking around in her home town (Kahungungu), it seemed she was very ‘out there’ and very ‘hypo’, (as likened by one person) described as a ‘butterfly flitting around from place to place, room to room’. They said that she always seemed happy. One other thing that I was told was that she was much loved and cherished by her mother. Unfortunately, I can’t even recall what year she was born, or died. All I know is that she died in the early 80’s. Marsha Hunt Our next sister is Marsha Hunt (don’t know if that’s her real surname). I know Marsha a wee bit more than Toni, but not any of her (family history) whakapapa, except that she came from Gisborne. She had a very upfront personality (or on the face of it), she seemed fearless. Actually, she was very vulnerable (as most of the girls were back then, as are we all). She always entered the room tossing her hair, (which was thick and lustrous) and made a statement. She had dimples which makes me think she may have been a born under the zodiac sign of Leo, (as in very attractive and voluptuous). Being a fashion-conscious lot, we girls often used drugs to keep thin, especially if on hormones, as it puts fat on you, (some more than others though). But to me, they looked stunning, although at the time - thin was ‘in’ plus its a woman’s prerogative to always want the ‘opposite’. Marsha was also a very welcoming, loving person, and yet I found that she was sometimes very sad. I would catch sight of this when visiting her at the different flats that she lived in when she was living Melbourne. I didn’t know where she came from here in Aotearoa (New Zealand), as I only met her in Melbourne back in 1977. Like Toni, I can’t tell you when she died but I think it was between 1978 and 1981 at the latest, (unless she came home and passed. I was in Adelaide from 1978 to end 1980 and I don’t think she was around when I got back. When I think about it - those years between 1976 to early 1980’s was quite a challenging time for the girls especially in Australia with access to copious amounts of pills from all over. Not to mention street drugs mixed with little or no knowledge of what drugs not to mix. The contributing factor was their feeling as though they were ‘bullet proof’ as we all did in our younger years. So whanau, as I said, aroha mai (sorry) for a smallish article on these two lovely ladies. Until next time. Ka kite ano whanau (See you later family) Arohanui Dana de Milo Email: [email protected] Hunt underway for Wellington’s next queen By GayNZ.com 21 September 2011 Wellington’s Next Top Drag Queen will be crowned in what’s probably the campest event on the capital’s calendar, at Garden Club on Sunday 23 October. With the theme “camp as a pair of tits,” organisers are confident the pageant will deliver a truly stunning array of Wellington drag talent. Nikita van der Kamp currently holds the title, which was formerly won by Rhubarb Rouge in 2009. “This pageant has been hugely anticipated and we are delighted to be producing the show for 2011,” says promoter and club owner Greig Wilson. “Interest has been pouring in from queens all over Wellington and further-afield. “This time around we are adding a slight twist to the show; we invite the audience to get involved this year. Put on a frock or a suit, slap on your fake titties or a moustache and dress up. It’s going to be a fun night!” Hosted by Steve Gray, Wellington’s Next Top Drag Queen will also include a special performance by drag kings. The panel of judges includes Scotty and Mal of S&M’s and diva Amanduh La Whore. “We’re rolling out the red carpet, stocking up on glitter and getting our glam on. We invite you to do the same,” Wilson says. Straight after the pageant the chairs are all cleared and Garden Club turns into a dance party with DJ Wixmix. Tickets are available from Cosmic Corner stores and online at dashtickets.co.nz Early birds - $15; General admission - $20; Door - $30 (if any available). - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz AOTEAROA OCTOBER 2011 Page 10 Rosslyn Noonan immediate-past Chief Human Rights Commissioner Ngā mihi mahana ki a koutou As I complete my time as Te Amokapua, Chief Commissioner at the Human Rights Commission, I want to record my immense respect for the many whakawāhine, Queens, tangata ira tane, and members of the wider ‘trans’ whānau who have supported the Human Rights Commission’s work upholding the dignity, mana and human rights of your communities. I have learnt so much from you. Thank you to all those who gave submissions to the Transgender Inquiry, took us on to Ngā Whare Waatea marae, hosted us at NZPC, came to our two national human rights training hui at Tapu te Ranga marae, or have spoken on panels in Wellington, Auckland, Palmerston North, Whanganui, Christchurch and Hamilton. Thank you too for taking the Inquiry report back into your communities and for staying involved in ongoing projects such as the recent resource for health professionals created by Counties Manukau DHB. One of Tapatoru’s many strengths, particularly in the newsletter Tātou, is how you celebrate those who make this all possible by just being themselves and standing up for their rights. I know that you also remember those who have passed away. I would like to take this opportunity to remember Serena Barrett who came with others from NZPC to one of the meetings at our old Wellington office in Aitken St. She was very ill at the time but came all that way across town because she wanted to be part of the Transgender Inquiry. It was privilege for me to work with Commissioner Joy Liddicoat, Jack PHOTO by Jane Ussher Byrne, Julie Watson and other staff on the Transgender Inquiry. The Inquiry was powerful because it heard from so many of you about what it is like for trans people in Aotearoa / New Zealand. The report documented for the first time the obstacles trans people face just trying to get on with your lives. It also captured the dignity and mana of your communities and what steps were needed to make changes that were long overdue. The Commission was very grateful to those people, including Peri Te Wao, Gemmah Huriwai and Dana de Milo who shared their stories and images in the Inquiry’s final report. That report (and the Assume Nothing exhibition) took your stories and images around Aotearoa and then around the world. Trans people have a real leadership role to play not only in this country but across the Pacific and Asia. That was powerfully shown when Tapatoru and others hosted visitors who came from across Asia, the Pacific and beyond to the Outgames human rights conference in March. The Tātou newsletter is a wonderful vehicle for celebrating indigenous takataapui and trans identities and I know it has subscribers all over the world. Sometimes change can feel like it is very slow, especially trying to change laws and societal attitudes. When the Human Rights Commission released the Transgender Inquiry’s final report it made a three-year commitment to work with trans people, government agencies and health professionals on implementing the Inquiry’s recommendations. I was very pleased to be with the Commission through all that period. At the end of June this year the Commission analysed what had been achieved to date. There has been some significant progress. It is clear that trans people’s stories, whether - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz AOTEAROA OCTOBER 2011 Page 11 written as profiles in the Inquiry report or spoken aloud in workshops or meetings with government officials, have the power to win people’s minds and hearts. Workshops often created a safe place for people to learn new terms, ask questions and get a real sense of the difference they could make for trans people. There is still much work to do. The Commission does not have the resources to continue at the same intense level as during the Inquiry, but it will continue advocating for the remaining Inquiry recommendations. The cartoon below was used in the second national trans human rights training hui last year. It illustrates that trans people themselves have the power to realise their human rights and the Commission is one of the allies here to support that work. I know Jack and Julie in Auckland, and staff in the Commission’s Wellington and Christchurch offices would like me to encourage people to continue to share your successes and struggles with the Commission. Where it can, the Commission will provide support - or suggest other groups you can approach. Your experiences at school, at work, with health professionals and trying to change sex details on official documents help the Commission understand where progress is being made and where more work is needed to bring the Inquiry recommendations to life. It was great that Peri and Karen could come to my formal farewell at CARTOON by Sam Orchard PHOTO including cover by Adrian Malloch Parliament - and that they had an opportunity to meet the new Chief Commissioner David Rutherford. He shares the Commission’s commitment to the Transgender Inquiry recommendations including the need to improve the human rights of intersex people. While the Transgender Inquiry email newsletter won’t come out as frequently now, the Commission is keen to keep in touch with trans people. To receive the free To Be Who I Am e-newsletter, you can sign up on the: Human Rights Commission website on www.hrc.co.nz, or you can email [email protected]. The next issue due out in October will launch some new online resources including 2 FAQs for schools about supporting whakawāhine, tangata ira tane, fa’afafine, akava’ine, trans and qender queer students. It has really practical information including how to support trans young people who want to play sport at school. Thank you again for the opportunity to acknowledge what we have achieived together and to celebrate the resilience and leadership of Tapatoru and others. Whatever I do in the future I will carry with me all I have learned from you. Rosslyn Noonan Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere te kārohirohi i mua i tō huarahi. May peace be widespread, may the sea glisten like greenstone, and may the shimmer of light guide you on your way. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz LOLAAA! OCTOBER 2011 Having a chat with LoLaa! mammogram I have recently (for the first time ever) had a mammogram to check for breast cancer. I was a little apprehensive to say the least about having one done considering I am trans and thought that I wasn’t at risk. My endocrinologist asked me to have one as I am over 50 and have been on hormone therapy for many years. I waited for about two months for the appointment to arrive in the post. I thought I would do a little investigative research on why trans women should have a mammogram. I found on the internet alot of valuable information why we (trans women) should. It is so important to have a mammogram and I think that the biggest reason of all, is that many of us take estrogen. For many of my generation (in their 50+ years), we started taking hormones at a very early age. As for me, I was 14 years old when I started and got mine from the only doctor prescribing such hormones for us in Wellington back in those days. Anyway - the day of the appointment finally arrived and off I went to the hospital to the Breast Screening Unit. I had to answer a general questionnaire. One of the questions on the questionnaire was ‘are you on hormone replacement therapy (HRT)?’ and Page 12 of course I answered yes! After I had finished my questions, I proceeded to the waiting room which seemed like eternity waiting. Then my name was called up and I was shown in and asked to remove all my top layers of clothing including my bra, and put a cotton cape over my shoulders. The Radiologist asked me if I had ever had a mammogram before. No! was the reply, and she then proceeded to fill me in about the procedure itself. Your breasts (one at a time) are placed between two plates and compressed so that a digital image can be taken. This is done about times on each breast at different angles, (see the picture below that I have found thanks to about.com under the title breast cancer mammogram. I have to say that I found this compressing aittle painful but bearable. I think that the worst is waiting for the results and I was starting to think the worst. However, once the letter arrived and the results were negative, I was hugely relieved. I recommend our trans women to consider breast screening. It is free and if there was a problem, the early detection is best in treating it. If it is all okay, you would have that knowing as reassurance. Plus - it is free! http://breastcancer.about.com/od/breastcancerglossary/g/mammogram.htm First-five Gran’s advice to ABs Stuff.co.nz, 28 September 2011 By Michelle Duff The avid All Blacks supporter first donned a pair of rugby shorts in 1946, playing for a Hawke’s Bay representative women’s side in an era when women were more likely to wash nappies than score tries. Mrs McDavitt did both, playing first fiveeighth – the position now held by Dan Carter – before raising eight children and playing tennis, netball and basketball. She could often be spied breastfeeding at halftime. “My parents were a bit horrified, but I did my own thing actually to a certain extent, even in those days,” Mrs McDavitt, 87, said yesterday. “Oh yes, playing rugby wasn’t heard of if you were a woman.” KITTED OUT: A young Trish McDavitt in her rugby gear. She was playing rugby even before the All Blacks were a twinkle in their mums’ eyes, and Trish McDavitt has just three words for the younger generation: “Do the job.” The Hawke’s Bay women’s rugby team members were taken from other sporting codes and practiced against one another in Dannevirke before their historic clash against the Rotorua women’s side as a curtain-raiser for a Maori v Pakeha men’s game. But after just a few hours’ kip at the local marae, Hawke’s Bay was unprepared for the feisty Rotorua team. “They were serious; they had had more experience and we hardly knew the rules. We had hardly any training at all, and I PHOTO by Kent Blechynden think we were more entertainment than anything,” Mrs McDavitt said. The Hawke’s Bay women lost 3-nil, but not before Mrs McDavitt suffered an injury – though she didn’t let that slow her down. “A big Maori girl tackled me. Apparently I was concussed but I played the rest of the game. They reckoned I played really well – they were sort of examining me every now and again – but I didn’t even know where I was. I thought I was in Dannevirke.” Mrs McDavitt’s sons have paid for Sky so she can watch the Rugby World Cup games, and she has been glued to the television since the tournament kicked off – especially during the Australia v Ireland match. “I’d like Ireland or Wales or Samoa to do well and, of course, the All Blacks first of all.” - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 AOTEAROA Page 13 Fighting a losing battle against obesity www.stuff.co.nz By Tom Fitzsimons 19 September 2011 MOVING NORTH: Robyn Toomath - Anti-obesity campaigner and Wellington hospital clinical director. For 10 years now, Robyn Toomath has been leading a campaign against our bulging national waistline. She is a social gadfly, the Cassandra of the obesity epidemic. She has given countless interviews, on everything from the sex lives of overweight people to school tuckshop guidelines, from sleep-deprived kids to KFC’s Double Down burger, always making the case for regulating junk food. Unfortunately for her, and for the public health system, she has very little to show for it. “I can’t see anything appreciable, anything I can hang my hat on and say ‘Gosh, look what we’ve achieved’,” she says, laughing as she sits in a Wellington cafe. “So either I decide it’s all been a complete waste of time, which, you know, would be a completely credible stance to take, or I say that, who knows? Maybe my campaign is like water dripping on a stone, where little bits can change slowly.” There were good signs for a while, she says. New guidelines in school cafeterias were a start, but they were pulled by Education Minister Anne Tolley – “for no reason other than perverseness as far as I’m concerned: that was a terrible thing to do”. She initially criticised a big project called Healthy Eating Healthy Action as too “soppy” – but in retrospect, she says, at least it was a “cross-government approach to obesity, of which we’ve got nothing now, nothing at all”. A review of public health legislation that was moving towards regulating advertisers has been buried. “So everybody in the public health sector feels a bit crushed. I think the response from government is appalling.” Dr Toomath, 56, has mostly grey hair, a black leather jacket. She has a stern look about her, but she turns out to be talkative and open. As well as founding and speaking for the lobby group Fight the Obesity Epidemic (FOE), a job she does in her spare time, she is clinical director and a general physician at Wellington Hospital. That means she divides her paid work between hospital management, with all its squabbles and challenges, and hands-on medicine. She trained as an endocrinologist – her diabetes work first got her worried about obesity – but she has mostly given that away for general medicine. Now, after 30 years in Wellington, Dr Toomath and her husband, the poet and writer John Newton, are moving to Auckland. They have a bach on Waiheke Island. They are going to pull it down and build a new eco-house, with solar panels on the roof and a big, self-sustaining vegetable garden on the northward slope. “Somebody Facebooked me the other day when they heard I was leaving. And they said, `Oh my God, we think of you as the quintessential Wellingtonian – how can you be leaving?’ It does feel very strange, I have to say. I adore Wellington.” Her new job is the same as her old one, except it is at Auckland Hospital. She applied after being asked up there to review a service. (“It had got into a sad state and there was low morale ... they lost their way a bit,” she says.) She has a long family connection to Waiheke Island, where she has always imagined herself retiring. Her two daughters have their first jobs in Auckland, too, so she is excited about going north. And what about the campaigning role? Will she keep talking about obesity? She sighs. She has been thinking for years about flagging it, wondering if things are too hopeless. And she hates doing live TV. But then again, she does not have to look for the work. “And I haven’t lost my determination as to what should happen. I haven’t gone off the boil in terms of thinking it’s not worth it or this has been the wrong approach or whatever. My desire to get things changed is still very strong.” DR TOOMATH’S thesis is simple, but great fodder for libertarians and the talkback radio crowd. It goes like this: it is not their fault. Obese people did not choose to be that way. No-one would. Instead, they are at the whim first of their genes – especially those that control appetite – and then of an environment that is saturated in energydense, crappy food options. The combination means a population that is getting fatter with all the health problems that causes – exploding rates of diabetes chief among them. You might have already noticed this, but this view violates a core belief of people everywhere, of the modern mind even: that we are free to make our own destinies. That we are free to go to the gym and run off that beer belly – or just stop drinking the beer. Dr Toomath is honest about this. She is not a big believer in free will at the best of times, she says, and especially not in this case. “The idea that we can describe the problem in terms of personal responsibility, you know, that it can be called a choice, a lifestyle choice, its crap. There’s no choice ... To think that people choose to be obese, and if you educated them better, or if they were more steely and determined, selfdenying, that they could not be the shape they are, is just rubbish.” For evidence, she says; look at famous people who cannot control their weight – the Oprah Winfreys and Sarah Fergusons. They have every reason, every resource, to try to stay slim, and yet they cannot. “And yet here we are expecting our entire population, just ordinary folks, who walk past McDonald’s on their way home from school and what-have-you, we’re expecting them to show resources that people like Oprah Winfrey can’t amass. It’s just crazy.” Or sit at a World Health Organisation conference, as she did, and watch country after country around the world present a picture of skyrocketing obesity rates. A massive decline in global willpower? Or spend years telling people if they just lost three or four kilograms, they would not have to go on insulin – a powerful motivation – and then watching them fail. “In the hospital clinics, you’d have records that go back years and years and years. And you’d see people – they’d lose weight and then they’d regain it. I was thinking `What am I doing here? This is crazy’.” IF YOU accept Dr Toomath’s premise, the justification for intervention becomes more understandable. A fat tax, subsidised fruit and veges, school bans on tuckshops selling junk food, advertising regulations – she has backed them all. There is opposition, of course. Columnist Kerre Woodham wrote that “if Toomath and her ilk had just shut up about this burger, I would never have known it existed”, before chowing down on a Double Down. Writer Joe Bennett invited her to play him in squash (something to do with a gripe about the Body Mass Index) – “just name the day and I’ll thrash the medical pants off you”. She regularly gets painted as “a fruitcake”, or “the fat nazi”. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz Fighting a losing battle against obesity (continued). “Which is hilarious, actually. I’m actually deeply, deeply conservative in my views with regard to this ... There are thousands of academics and public health specialists for whom this is absolutely boring, breadand-butter, routine stuff.” She is not ideological about it, she says. She did not start out wanting to control the environment so much. “It was a purely practical response to a problem. And that’s still my view. If somebody came up with a pill, if somebody came up with genetic modification – you know, if anything worked, I’d be all for it.” OCTOBER 2011 about trying to harness that energy. “They whinge a bit, and they complain about this and that, but in actual fact, they’re exactly the same now as when I was a medical student.” She could never give up working with patients, she says. That has always been part of the deal since she went up the chain. It is why she still thinks medicine is the best job. “It’s not just about fixing people, because you often don’t. It’s about providing comfort for people who are frightened and ill.” About 10 years ago, Dr Toomath stopped telling her obese patients to lose weight. There was no point, she says. It was just adding misery to a lot which is already very hard. Instead, she just tries to care for them however she can. Her new Auckland life will see her catching the ferry from Waiheke Island each day, maintaining her 55-hour-a-week job, with obesity campaigning on top of that. She does not have time for passions outside of work, she says, though her dedication to her family is obvious. “I think obese people in hospital for a long time had a really rough time. I think the discrimination shown towards obese people is worse than any racism or any other kind of discrimination certainly that’s been experienced in New Zealand.” The only sadness in her life at the moment is that her burmese cat, Woody, has gone missing. He has not been home in a couple of weeks. She is hoping he has been weathering the big chill in some stranger’s warm house. DESPITE her lack of policy success, Dr Toomath is not gloomy. It does not seem to be her style. She’s actually a little optimistic, she says, after some of her recent conversations with people. She is heartened, too, that the Labour Party has backed taking GST off fruit and vegetables. She finishes up her coffee. Maybe it is chance that she is leading the anti-obesity charge. It is almost like she has not had a whole lot of will in the matter. “I’m a pollyanna maybe, but I kind of feel as though maybe the general community is starting to get it,” she says. Obligatory down note: “The terrifying thing, though, is that it’s all going to be too late. It’s all going to be too slow and too late.” Dr Toomath should be used to intractable problems, you would think. She is in management in the healthcare system, after all. She has been through junior doctor strikes and hospital revamps and the public release of information about serious medical blunders. So how do you run a good hospital? She laughs. God knows, she says. It is about the most challenging work environment around – doors always open, insufficient resources, people in pain. “You can’t fix things in a hospital. To think that you can make it all alright is a nonsense. There’ll always be challenges that exceed your ability to fix them.” But at the same time, she says, almost everyone who goes into health is highly dedicated. She thinks management is AOTEAROA “I know it’s just been the circumstance in which I’ve found myself, that having been a diabetologist, and having been in a position where I can speak, that I kind of feel I have to, really.” FAST FACTS • A 2006-07 survey found 63 per cent of Kiwis were overweight or obese. • That number was expected to be even larger now. • More than a third of children were overweight. • Those figures put New Zealand in the same bracket of obesity as the United States – one of the fattest countries. • According to the Health Ministry, about 826,100 (26.5 per cent) of New Zealanders are obese. Another 50,000 are extremely obese. Page 14 Letters to the editors Dear sisters, It’s always such a great pleasure to see a new issue of Tatou and reading this magazine makes me feel so proud of all my great sisters around the globe. And icing of the cake was your interview after the Outgames with my dear sister Ms Shabeena Francis Saveri who’s activism and research will make us all so proud, Many hugs from Ms. Maria Sundin Member of the Board RFSL Secretary Transgender Europe - TGEU Thanks again Karen for a wonderfully Newsletter. I always look forward to receiving your Newsletter and reading. It is very inspiring and empowering and we at Rainbow Women’s Network are emulating what Tapatoru is doing. Thank you again. Lorraine Foster Kia Ora Karen, Hope you are doing well. We met in wellington last March at the Asia Pacific Outgames conference. I participated in your workshop and bought this wonderful Tatou calendar. It was a great pleasure meeting you. Thank you very much for sending us the latest issue of Tatou. We always enjoy reading it. Arohanui from Berlin Kia Kaha Carla Kia ora Peri and Karen. What a fantastic edition of Tatou. I am going to print it and keep it so I can re-read some of the articles. The Wellington community is extremely fortunate to have such dedicated folk as yourself producing such a high quality magazine. Kia kaha ROSE • The ministry’s Nutrition and the Burden of Disease report showed being overweight was a risk factor in 11 per cent of all deaths. Thanks Karen for sending me the newsletters have not read them all yet, you put so much work into them, I think it’s great to keep the community together like that. I’ve always been very impressed with the work that you & ‘Peri do to keep everyone in touch, we would be lost without it. • Obesity is more common among Maori and Pacific people. Love you both Karen Karen Bates-Timbs - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 Our Pets Page 15 What to do if your pet goes missing? By Kathryn Ching For many of us our pet is a constant around the house. They are there when we wake up, get home from work and are seemingly always there round about tea-time. Yet when that routine is upset and for whatever reason the pet goes missing it can become a very stressful time for all of the family. So, what can we do to try and ensure this doesn’t happen, and manage the situation if it does. Let’s look at the different types of domestic animals and why they might leave the family home. DOGS Dogs are probably one of the easiest animals to ‘contain’ within a home situation. A good owner will ensure their property is fenced so there is no chance the dog can escape – either jump over or digging under, and this will also ensure no unwanted visitors (even more important if you have a bitch in season on the property). The most common reason dogs go missing is often due to human error. Someone comes on to the property and forgets or chooses not to close the gate or door, and the dog simply wanders out. Now the problem start – if your dog, wanders and causes a motor vehicle accident, then you (as the owner) can be held responsible – can mean a big claim on your insurance (or paying for years if you have none). Dogs must be under the direct control of their owner or handler at all times, a wandering dog isn’t. So, what can we do to ensure the dog doesn’t get out and go missing? One - make sure gates have a self-closing mechanism on them. That way if the courier or meterreader simply doesn’t close the gate then it will of its own accord. Have your dog in a totally secure area on the property at all times – regularly check boundary fence for possible escape routes – especially if you have a little dog – small hole + bit of digging = dog has escaped!!! The other reason a dog may go missing is because it is targeted because of its breed – ie: a valuable one for breeding, or worse-case scenario – for fighting, or used within the bounds of dog fighting. Again, the simplest method is to ensure you have control of your dog at all times – at home on your property, when out walking on a lead and not letting it run off over great distances where it may not be able to hear (or chooses not to hear) your commands. This is a common situation, especially on wide expansive beaches, for dogs to be taken. Part of the registration process now ensures all dogs are micro-chipped. This can prove invaluable. A small ‘chip’ injected under the skin around the area of the shoulders contains ownership details, so if the dog is found wandering, the pound, vet, or SPCA can wave a reader over the animal’s back and the code for that animal will show on a screen, then it is simply a matter of contacting the data base to retrieve the info and re-unite the animal with its family. A recent story about a dog from the Hutt found hundreds of kilometers away shows the importance of micro-chipping. Had this dog not had this done, then it would have been next to impossible to re-unite them – how many owners would expect to find their dog in a rural town a long, long distance away? X-ray of micro-chip under the skin over the neck. Its size is slightly bigger than a grain of rice. CATS Cats by virtue of their nature are a lot harder to contain, they are very independent beings and don’t take well to leads, collars and restraints. And the fence which surrounds the property is looked at, as no more than a challenge to get over, through, or under, to see what lies beyond its palings! Why do cats go missing? Some will become disoriented, especially after a move from one house to another, and will try to find their own way home. Some do successfully, some don’t. A cat might get ‘spooked’ in its home situation and take off, unaware of where it is heading and then simply not be able to find its way home. Other cats may simply wander, have a regular routine of houses to visit and other cats to hiss at; yet on an unfortunate occasion a trip across a road may prove fatal. For some pedigree cats, they simply become targets of thieves. Whether they are stealing to order, it is not known, yet a year or so back, Burmese cats seemed to be the target of this and were literally being picked up off the street, never to see their families again. Some cats will choose to go missing, and you sometimes see this with elderly, sick animals. If you suspect your animal has become ill (or you know it may well decline due to illness) then try and pre-empt this. It is often nicer for older cats to be kept inside, or brought inside to sleep at night, this way you can control the situation and intervene if euthanasia is required – far nicer than dying without their family, all alone. How can we stop our cats from going missing? – apart from keeping them in a purpose built catorium – which they would never leave. It can prove virtually impossible. But we can do a few things to minimize any risk. As we mentioned with the dogs, have your cat micro-chipped and registered on the database. That way if the cat turns up at a vet clinic, SPCA, or pound then they can be identified. Take regular pictures of your pets, that way if one goes missing, you can put together a flyer. These need to be eye catching, and simply worded, and often a reward will go a long way as an enticement. Have a picture of your animal – good quality, an accurate description – colour, markings, sex, (desexed if male) collar and anything else you consider important. A contact number or two and a reward if you are offering one. Print out as many flyers as you feel necessary and take them to all vet clinics in your city (some people will take an animal they find injured to a clinic they are familiar with, even if there is another one close by). Take flyers to the local SPCA, pound, animal rescue facilities, schools, kindys, libraries, post shops and anywhere a notice board is available for public use, and of course do a mail-drop in your street and those surrounding. If you get a chance, ask people to check in sheds, cars or anything an animal may have got locked in - a great way of meeting your neighbours! Ring up ALL the vet clinics in your area and keep phoning back on a regular basis, same applies with SPCA and the pound (though if your animal is microchipped, hopefully this will make reuniting a simpler process). Hopefully this plan of attack will have the desired effect and you and your pet will be re-united. In some situations, sadly, this may not happen – it is so much easier to scan a deceased animal, - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz Our Pets (continued) contact the owner and give them closure – a body to take home and bury or cremate gives them something tangible to deal with. When you never find your pet, this is when it becomes a hard situation for all the family to deal with and you are left constantly hoping it might return. • So what can we do so we don’t get separated from our furry family members? Microchip, secure property, and under your direct control when out and about – dogs. • Cats kept in if becoming elderly or unwell, micro-chipped, and if the animal will tolerate it (both cats and dogs) a collar with a contact number. Make sure this is updated if you move or change phone companies. So there are lots of little things we can do to ensure we don’t get separated from our ‘special’ friends and if we are separated; that we are hopefully quickly re-united! Gay, Lesbian, Trans, Questioning? 0800 OUTLINE 0800 688 5463 Confidential Helpline [email protected] www. outlinenz.com Anonymous, Confidential, Free Information, Support, Counselling, Referrals Talk to us about: Relationships, Coming Out, Substance Use, Bullying, Legal Help, Human Rights, Mental Health, Family, Whanau, Meeting People, Spirituality... OCTOBER 2011 OUTGAMES Page 16 Outgames crew honoured with award By GayNZ.com 29 September 2011 The organisers of the March AsiaPacific Outgames are the Supreme Winner of the 2011 Wellington Airport Regional Community Awards. 2011 Inc, hosted the second Asia-Pacific Outgames in Wellington, which contributed between $1.3m and $1.7m to the local economy. The awards, presented at a ceremony hosted by Mayor Celia Wade-Brown in the Council Chamber, acknowledge the contribution of voluntary and non-profit organisations and their volunteers. They are sponsored by Wellington International Airport in partnership with The Community Trust of Wellington. Wade-Brown said the event was a celebration of the community and volunteer sector, which was the driving force of Wellington’s community spirit. The Supreme Award winner, Wellington “I’m delighted for Wellington Inc, organisers of this year’s Outgames. The event was a huge success and made a significant impact on Wellington’s culture, diversity and our local economy,” Wade-Brown said. Pictured above (left to right): Kevin Haunui (secretary); and David Hindley (co-chair). Outgames legacy fund recipients announced By GayNZ.com 22 September 2011 The first of the legacy grants from the proceeds of the March Wellington AsiaPacific Outgames have gone to everything from a hui for queer youth, to projects to research our history, a national GLBTI swim meet and further development of a programme for schools. The legacy grants committee has transferred $35,000 has just been transferred to the bank accounts of lgbti groups around the country. The committee says it faced a difficult job in making its decision, as 48 applicants asked for funds, with the amount requested totaling over $180,000, many times the funding actually available. “In a few cases, grants awarded were for less than the amount requested,” Outgames co-chair David Hindley explains. Recipients of grants include: Wellington Gay Welfare Group Pride NZ Tapatoru Waikato Queer Youth Lilac Collective Different Strokes Swimming Club Lesbian Elders Village Homophones Youth Services Trust (Wanganui) Charlotte Museum Trust (Auckland) The committee says it’s likely a smaller amount of funding will be available in October. Existing applications will be reassessed at that time, and announcements made later in October. The Outgames legacy group is also working towards support for lgbti groups in the Asia/Pacific region, including projects that support community building and human rights in developing countries. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 The Village People are on their way GayNZ.com 4 October 2011 The Village People are bringing their catchy camp disco to New Zealand in March. The group known for seemingly timeless party hits like YMCA and In The Navy and Macho Man will play at Party in the Vines at the Matakana Ascension Estate on 9 March. GayNZ.com Daily News will have details of their other shows soon. After being created to play on gay fantasy personas, The Village People erupted into the mainstream in the late 1970s, and most of the current touring line-up were there in the group’s heyday. Notable exceptions are original leatherman Glenn Hughes who died from lung cancer in 2001, and original lead singer Victor Willis who left the group in 1980. According to the The News, Australia the performers are “Still as sexy as ever audiences warmed to their enthusiasm, strong versatile vocals and choreography,” while the London Evening Standard said, “Fabulous! Village People took the crowd by storm, singing live and performing brilliantly!” Adoption: The next step GayNZ.com By Craig Young, 7 September 2011 The adoption reform debate seems to be heating up once more. Why might this issue become the next remaining LGBT inequality to be tackled in New Zealand? Legislative reform is likelier to occur if there have been earlier Law Commission Reports on the matter, and professional organisations and associations have had the chance to think through the issues, assess evidence-based professional research within their disciplines and professional associations and undertake public policy positions as a consequence. If overseas professional associations have undertaken supportive stances, and there is also affirmative research evidence within peerreviewed publications and journals, then this increases the likelihood of professional support and legislative momentum. Other parenting options are already available to LGBT New Zealanders, including in vitro fertilisation, fostering, guardianship and informal whangai adoption amongst whakawahine and takatapui. Hence, one has witnessed the formation of Adoption Action as a coalition of concerned professional associations active in the field of child health, welfare and development who want reform to occur in this context and replacement of New Zealand’s archaic Adoption Act 1955 with Law Commission recommendations. Much has changed in adoption practice since the passage of this half-century old legislation. Whereas most adoptions occurred in the context of ‘unwed mothers’ before the access of the Pill in 1961, recent New Zealand statistics indicate that only three hundred or so adoptions occurred in 2007/8. These are often married heterosexual step-parent adoptions of the children of the biological mother or father. Recent adoption case law also indicates that the courts are willing to extend this right to long-term unmarried cohabitant de facto partners of straight biological parents. Individual lesbians and gay men can adopt in New Zealand. Due to the rise of solo parenting, contraceptive and abortion access, the adoption catchment AOTEAROA Page 17 has contracted over the last forty years. The legislation also lacks reference to Maori customary parenting values like whangai adoption, which may have advantages in terms of continuity of care related to adoption procedures. Indeed, it could be argued that the Adoption Act 1955 obstructs takatapui and whakawahine from undertaking parental responsibilities in case their biological parents are incapacitated or indisposed. I imagine the Mana Party would consider that, as might some Maori Party MPs. The United Kingdom, Western Australia, Victoria, New South Wales, Israel, the Australian Capital Territory, all Canadian provinces and territories, Tasmania, Andorra, Argentina, Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, Iceland, Norway, South Africa, Sweden, Uruguay, Finland, Germany, Greenland and Slovenia all have either coparent or full eligible same-sex parental access to adoption. In the United States, the District of Columbia, New York, New Jersey, Indiana, Maine, California, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Oregon, Vermont and Florida have no restrictions on eligible samesex parental adoption. Unlike same-sex marriage, the US Christian Right has been conspicuously unsuccessful in obstructing or preventing adoption reform. Florida is a particularly cogent example. In 1979, it passed an anti-gay adoption ban under the malignant influence of fundamentalist anti-gay campaigner Anita Bryant, only to see it struck down in 2010. Mississippi, Wisconsin, Utah and Michigan are the only states that bar eligible same-sex parents from adoption, while only Utah and Nebraska explicitly ban co-parent adoption. Moreover, there are few US Christian Right resources available that target same-sex parenting. Added to which, the Catholic clergy paedophilia scandal has adversely affected the credibility and authority of statements about child welfare from that quarter of the Christian denominational spectrum. Added to which, it doesn’t seem to have struck the Christian Right that we’re monitoring related overseas developments with keen interest. Family First is parroting the UK Christian Institute on this issue, even given that the Christian Institute conspicuously failed to halt any of the Blair administration’s LGBT affirmative reforms during the last decade, including adoption reform back in 2002. In the case of New South Wales, the Australian Christian Right seemed to behave in a particularly derivative manner, even going so far as to include references to discredited not so ex-gay ‘psychiatrist’ George Rekers, as well as importing references to ‘rebuttals’ of same-sex parenting from Patricia Morgan Robert Lerner, Althea Nagai, Stanton Jones - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 “The Visit” by Jonathan Marden It had been thirty-four years past since he’d last walked in this field A ten year old’s place of pain, never spoken of, never healed Where alone in the early sunrise, feeling frightened and without hope The boy had held his ghostly mother’s hand – telling her he couldn’t cope Then years and miles had rolled by, leaving behind this awful loss And seemingly did the goodness drain away, retaining only the dross Yet now crossing over the fence style – such an unexpected return Retracing childhood steps where grief and fear had been his concern And so much to his amazement – nothing seems to have altered The same group of trees and hedges, as if time had been halted And there the single row of houses, standing all semi-detached Made out of 1930’s brick, with windows and chimneys matched And in the stillness of this rolling countryside - on this bright sunny day All the memory banks erupted letting familiar demons come out to play The haunting of so many sorrows let alone the condemning despair Rose up and out of inner depths, ferocious wolves leaping from their lair And he remembered now with unchecked tears - flowing as if in a flood How he’d been torn between the withered twig and the yearning bud As there in the hawthorn hedgerow, where the stinging nettle still grew rife Had been a small fruiting tree – by which he could have escaped this life Oh how he’d wanted those red berries – their poison juices in his mouth to melt To have removed him from the ogre of his stupid self - so frequently had he felt Instead to seek somewhere kind and caring – so desperate for such a find Away from this place where paternal fear had had him so gagged and blind But the hidden hand that gently guides us all - throughout our thick and thin Had better plans for life ahead - not a time for death to swallow him in Instead the gay man now understands and compassionately seeks to bless While the hidden hand caringly lays upon the boy - the cloak of loving kindness. Pictured below: Hurley Common 1999 POEM Page 18 Adoption: The next step (continued) and Mike Yardhouse that do not recognise that mainstream child health, welfare, paediatric and developmental psychology research has developed a consensus around same-sex parenting. Mainstream research points out that lesbian and gay eligible parents have excellent spousal and parental communication skills and that samesex parenting does not adversely affect educational and later adult employment outcomes. In fact, young women are likely to take up well-paying non traditional jobs and young men have better interpersonal skills than children of straight couples. The Christian Right is isolated on this issue. The rise of Adoption Action and Jacinda Arden’s private members bill bode well for the eventual resolution of this remaining area of LGBT parenting inequality in this country. Sex change on passports for transsexuals www.stuff.co.nz 19 September 2011 Letting transsexuals carry passports in their preferred gender without the need for a sex change will save them from needless embarrassment and delays, transgender advocates say. The Australian Coalition for Equality said people would now be able to travel overseas without being stopped by officials because their passport doesn’t match their public identity. “From that point of view, it’s a huge step forward,” spokeswoman Martine Delaney. “It’s an incredible embarrassment to be a woman for years but still have a passport that says they’re male.” Ms Delaney said she knew of a man who had lived as a woman for 25 years but was unable to have a sex change for medical reasons. In this case, US customs officials had detained her because they were confused about her gender. Ms Delaney, 53, was born a man but underwent a sex change eight years ago. She spent two years in a “transition” period, but did not travel overseas during that time. She met senior advisers to Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd at Parliament House in Canberra in July to be told about the new guidelines. Ms Delaney commended Mr Rudd and Attorney-General Robert McClelland, - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz Sex change passports for transsexuals (continued) saying the changes would give “greater recognition” to transgender and intersex Australians. “The flow-on effects acknowledge these people are human beings with rights,” she said. Under new rules unveiled this week, gender reassignment surgery will no longer be a prerequisite for “sex and gender diverse” people to get a passport identifying them the way they wish. But they will need to present a statement from a doctor supporting their preferred gender. The changes are expected to affect only a handful of people. Mr Rudd said the reform was in line with the government’s efforts to remove discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation. Topps to help show ‘real’ NZ to Cup visitors GayNZ.com 14 August 2011 New Zealand’s favourite crossdressing lesbian twin entertainers will take a starring role in a promotion designed to entertain Rugby World Cup visitors a sample of traditional rural New Zealand. The Topp Twins, in the guise of their country bloke aliases Ken and Ken, will be commentators for a ‘running of the sheep’ event which will see 1,000 sheep shepherded down Auckland’s Queen Street as part of the Cup entertainment programme. The sheep will take over Queen Street at lunchtime on Monday October 17, just a few days before the Cup final. The flock, which will be accompanied by shepherds and bikini-clad models on quad bikes, will start near Aotea Square and head for Quay Street, echoing by-gone days when such flocks frequently passed down the city’s main street heading for the docks on the waterfront. AOTEAROA OCTOBER 2011 Page 19 Man tells of battle with flesh eating bug www.stuff.co.nz By Kate Newton 28 September 2011 A Canterbury fishing guru’s loss of his legs serves as a warning as a flesh-eating disease affects more Kiwis. Researchers are alarmed by a dramatic increase in necrotising fasciitis, a disease that kills one in five people who get it. Ross Millichamp will never know if it was a fish or a sandfly that got him. The Canterbury fishing guru, a keen outdoorsman, was on a boys’ trip to Stewart Island in February 2007 when he came down with what he thought was the flu. “It was bad enough that I didn’t go out hunting for the rest of the trip.” The day before the group was due to go home, he felt an intense pain in his shoulder and knew he needed medical help. The last thing he remembers clearly is walking to the rescue helicopter that flew him to Invercargill Hospital. “All I remember [after that] is someone saying we’ve figured out what it is, you need surgery and there’s a possibility you’ll lose an arm.” Instead, he woke up in Christchurch Hospital’s intensive care unit three weeks later to find both his legs amputated, after the necrotising fasciitis he’d contracted on the trip had ravaged the tissue from his knees down. How he became infected will never be clear. “All they know is that it came in through my left hand and it was either a cut from unhooking a fish or from a sandfly bite.” Two prosthetic limbs have helped Mr Millichamp, 47, head out on a few fishing trips but his more extreme outdoor exploits were over, he said. FLESH EATING BUG CASES RISE A University of Otago Wellington study, published in Journal of Infection yesterday, found that New Zealand numbers of people with necrotising fasciitis – a severe bacterial infection that rapidly destroys soft tissue – increased from fewer than 10 cases a year in 1990 to more than 70 in 2006. The rise – which researchers say has continued since 2006 – is in line with increases in other serious infections in New Zealand in the same period. A study published earlier this year found the number of children taken to hospital with serious skin infections had doubled since 1990. Associate Professor Michael Baker, who co-authored the latest study, said the results were “part of a very concerning rise in New Zealand of serious infections”. “[Necrotising fasciitis] is now sufficiently common that people in high-risk groups need to be aware of it and seek treatment quickly.” Maori and Pacific people, along with the elderly and people with suppressed immune systems, were more likely to contract the bug. The researchers identified 812 cases of the disease, including 148 people who died – a fatality rate of 18 per cent. Those who survived sometimes were severely disfigured by amputation or surgical removal of muscle, Dr Baker said. The infection, which can stem from something as small as an insect bite, was feared by both doctors and the public because of its rapid onset. “From the first wound to potentially being severely ill and perhaps dying is only two or three days. “People talk about this as advancing at a rate of two or three centimetres per hour.” The causes of the disease were not well known, Dr Baker said. Nor were the reasons behind its rise in New Zealand. “We have quite a lot more people living with impaired immunity from things like diabetes so that could be a contributing factor. “We’re particularly concerned about the changing socioeconomic inequalities in New Zealand. The reason we think that’s probably a major driver is we’re seeing the same pattern with other skin infections and infectious diseases [associated with poverty].” People with even minor skin injuries should seek urgent medical attention if they suffered intense pain or fever that was greater than they might expect from the size of the injury. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz AOTEAROA OCTOBER 2011 Page 20 Our Communities GayNZ.com By Jacqui Stanford 22 September 2011 Gay, lesbian, bisexual trans and intersex people who went to school in Marlborough are being asked to share their experiences from the schoolyard and the classroom, in a campaign driven by the local police Diversity Liaison Officer to push local schools to wake up to the reality of life for queer teenagers. On top of her job in the Blenheim CIB, Detective Kirsten Norton also volunteers as the Marlborough DLO, a role where she acts as something of a mediator and even something of an interpreter between the glbti community and the police, as well as between glbti police officers and other staff. Part of her role is assisting with the development of strategies for glbti victims of crime and on the back of a meeting with the sexual health co-ordinator at Wairau Hospital one of the key issues raised was the particularly ‘unsafe’ school environment for students who are attempting to come to terms with their sexuality or gender, or who have been ‘labeled’ by other students as being so - with no input from them. “Recently there was an article in the Marlborough Express relating to Luke Hinkley, an ex Marlborough Boys’ College Student and a letter to the editor from the mother of a former student who struggled immensely during his time at MBC. Both highlight the real issues still present within our schools,” Detective Norton has written in an email calling for former students to come forward. “The general issue is that generally our schools refuse to acknowledge that students are struggling with this issue and therefore tolerate behaviour from other students which is having a very negative effect on these students.” “Schools should be actively supporting safe areas/support groups within the school.” “Occasionally these things come to a head and schools have to deal with ‘diversity issues’ but I suspect they can discount it personally by, in a way, laying some blame at the student involved rather than acknowledging the wider issue which is the culture within the school.” Detective Nolan says some groundwork needs to be laid to try and make schools see what they can’t or won’t see. “But the current students affected are not in a position to say it for fear of intimidation, so a bit of a change in strategy,” she says, explaining that’s why she is trying to spread the word to as many present and past students, or their parents, in the hope they will write letters outlining their own experiences at their school in Marlborough. In particular she is asking people to cover the following topics: 1. Years at school and what school. 2. Where they were at in their school years in acknowledging their sexuality/ gender? 3. What school was like for them in relation to this? 4. If they were “out” how was this treated by the school/teachers/students i.e. did they try and keep it under wraps, was it acknowledged, or the opposite? 5. How did their school experiences/ attitudes affect their behaviour at school/how long they stayed/choices they made at school? Detective Norton says from her perspective, like any organisation, this needs to come from the top and unless the message really gets through to the teachers and counsellors then any positive gains will come and go from year to year. 6. How important was the attitude/ treatment received by teachers regardless of whether they were out or considering it - ie: what messages were being sent and how did this affect them? “Clearly there are a number of teachers that really just don’t get it and are happy to adopt a head in the sand approach or else they would not turn a blind eye to the behaviour going on around them from name calling to physical bullying to assaults,” she says. 7. How has their experiences at school affected life from here on in eg: wanted to complete a school year but felt couldn’t stay, leaving Blenheim, counselling, work choices, since? 8. A snap shot of life now eg: occupation, orientation etc. “Obviously this will have greater impact if the students are able to sign their name and identify themselves because this in itself will help break down stereotypes but this is not necessary if people are uncomfortable identifying themselves, the important thing is to make it real and personal rather than just stats,” Detective Nolan says. She is happy to receive and collate the responses, in any format whether it be email, a letter or another. “The intention is to create a real life document that we can take into the schools to show teachers etc that even in Marlborough what they do and how they react does matter and although these students feel safer remaining invisible at the moment in our schools they still exist and they still hurt,” she continues. “There are some really successful exMarlborough students out there that can add real value to this, there are also some students that haven’t made it and I think that the opportunity for parents of all students to write as well. “It is also an opportunity for those who have struggled in the past to both be acknowledged but also help those that are struggling now.” “Interest has been pouring in from queens all over Wellington and further-afield.” Here are the details to contact Detective Norton regarding the questions asked within this article: Postal address at the Police Station is Detective NORTON Blenheim Police Station PO Box 342 Blenheim or Detective Norton can be emailed at [email protected], or contacted through the Blenheim Police Station - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz HEALTH & WELLBEING OCTOBER 2011 Page 21 Enjoying Julz People who exercise always presume us exercisy types have some natural madness or unique ability when it comes to exercise, so that something that makes what is a pain and a chore for most is something that is easy for fitness folks. I wish!!! I didn’t start out as an exerciser, in fact I barely broke a sweat by choice until I got a Jane Fonda video (yep I’m that old!) and started working out with it. Who knows what I was thinking at the time but obviously Jane had some impact, as here I am 20 years later still feeling the burn. So after that initial rendezvous with Ms Fonda why did I not just leave the video playing and stay on the couch instead of embarking on a life of being a gym bunny? 1) While I’m happy being a girl I ain’t a very good one. I’m never going to win a beauty contest, and you’ll never hear the words delicate, feminine or slight in association with me. So I’m all about strong, and to look strong I need to lift weights. It was a choice between dumbells and being a builder or bricklayer, and though I’m not very good at being all girly I’m truly useless when it comes to hammers and nails! 2) I was the (self described) fat, stupid and ugly kid. I knew I was crap at sport and looked daft when I did try so didn’t bother. I exercise because now I know I can and sometimes when I’m exercising that fat kid inside me sees me exercising she smiles. (And sometimes she catches sight of me in the mirror and laughs but all that loud music in aerobics classes has rendered me virtually deaf so I don’t hear her). 3) Because of my job. OK so I’m in fitness so I should exercise, as that’s what I tell other people to do. But that’s not what I mean. I exercise because I have to go out and get around the place from morning to night and if I get unfit it’s too much like hard work and ultimately I’m pretty lazy. 4) Because I like eating - more than I should. Exercising means I can eat 2 king-size blocks of chocolate rather than just the one and still fit my jeans (whoever invented stretchy denim deserves a sainthood). 5) Because I get depressed and exercise on a good day makes me a much happier and self-aware person. (And on a bad day at least I’m too tired to care) [email protected] u “I exercise because now I know I can and sometimes when I’m exercising that fat kid inside me sees me exercising she smiles.” 6) When I’m not depressed I’m overly anxious. Exercising means I spend less time contemplating what could happen in the world that would cause me pain and suffering and can focus more on what is causing me pain and suffering at that moment (the treadmill usually). For lots of people exercise seems to be all about changing the body you’ve got into something better (smaller, more toned…) but the best thing about exercise is when you allow it to become part of your life and it becomes about enjoying the body you’ve got. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz More gay and trans parents needed for panel GayNZ.com 19 September 2011 OUTLine is looking for people who live in or near Auckland, who are raising children within same sex relationships or involving trans parents, to take part in a groundbreaking Families Commission panel. The Commission is including glbt households in its panel discussions on the nature of families in New Zealand, for the first time. “Our goal is to ensure a broad cross -section of people so that we can get a sense of what it is like for people from the rainbow community and their children growing up in rainbow families,” says OUTLine General Manager Vaughan Meneses. “It is important that we also get to hear from gay dads who play an active role in the lives of their children - they may for instance have a child with a lesbian couple and are still part of the family unit,” he says. “Although this is about the experience of being a queer parent, it is also about the experience of our children growing up in the current environment with two mums, two dads, or the variation on that theme. This is definitely about queer families, and the emphasis is on the experience of family in same sex or trans parented settings.” Meneses says OUTLine appreciates this does not cover every possible configuration of rainbow family life, but it has have to start somewhere and does already have some participants who fall outside of this definition. “Only one parent from each family can be part of the panel - this is to ensure that conversation flows freely and to get as broad a range of families involved as possible,” he explains. There will be three forums per year and they will generally run for 2-3 hours on a Sunday with a shared lunch. The Families Commission set us a general topic for discussion, and there is also the opportunity to discuss other topics that the group feels are relevant. OUTLine’s aim is to have the same people involved in each panel over the next two years. “In reality there are very few chances for the voices of our families to be heard our needs are often seen as having less importance or validity and we are often silenced by an overwhelming dominance of the ‘traditional’ family structures,” Meneses says. “This is a chance for us to be heard, and for our families to have a place at the table. Too often the phrase ‘family values’ is used NEWS OCTOBER 2011 as a euphemism or blatant representation of an arrogant sense of religious morality. This is a chance for us to challenge this, and the Families Commission has shown real leadership and understanding by actively seeking our voices.” In consideration of the time and commitment each participant will receive a $75 voucher for each panel they attend. Our first panel was scheduled for the 2nd October. Cynthia Borne and Vaughan Meneses will be the facilitators of the panels. If you have further questions or would be interested in attending please contact Vaughan at vaughan@outlinenz. com or by phoning OUTLine during business hours on 0800 688 5463 (0800 OUTLINE) Archie Comic’s first gay character Kevin Keller to wed www.pinknews.co.uk 16 September 2011 The first gay character in Archie Comics, Kevin Keller, will get married in an upcoming issue. In the storyline, in Life With Archie #16, Kevin returns to Riverside as an adult after serving in the Army. With friends keen to know how he met Mr Right, he announces his wedding. However, the happy news coincides with Archie and Veronica’s split. Kevin first appeared in Veronica last autumn, with some critics expecting a token character. But that issue, 202, sold out, prompting Archie Comics to issue a reprint for the first time in its history. The character appeared in a mini-series this summer and will also have his own eponymous solo title, to be released early next year. Veronica writer Dan Parent was nominated for a GLAAD award for his creation. Speaking last year, Archie Comics cochief executive Jon Goldwater said: “The introduction of Kevin is just about keeping the world of Archie Comics current and inclusive. “Archie’s hometown of Riverdale has always been a safe world for everyone. It just makes sense to have an openly gay character in Archie comic books.” Mr Goldwater added that people who might be offended by a gay storyline “aren’t the kind of people we want reading our comics anyway”. Page 22 Stonewall goes global www.gayuknews.com 2 September 2011 Stonewall is delighted that the Charity Commission has approved a request to extend its strategic lobbying to include overseas work. For the very first time, the charity will be permitted to ‘promote human rights as set out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequent UN conventions throughout the world’. “We’re delighted at the Charity Commission’s decision,” said Stonewall Chair David Isaac. “After our biennial supporters’ survey last year a number of supporters raised the importance of international work with us now that the legislative landscape in Britain is almost equalised. Having canvassed a wide sample of our supporters during the last 12 months and reviewed our obligations under charity law, we’re clear that our lobbying and research teams now have the opportunity to influence overseas without undermining the important work – such as our pioneering Education for All programme – to which we’re absolutely committed in Britain. We look forward to working with other groups seeking to deliver change internationally. As Stonewall will seek to influence from within the UK our focus will, we hope, complement the work of others.” “When we became a charity in 2003 there was an extensive outstanding legislative programme which we thought would take 10-15 years to secure,” said Ben Summerskill, Stonewall’s Chief Executive. “Having achieved almost all of those legal changes, we’re now in a stronger position to commend Britain’s legislative framework to other countries around the world. The dogged support of tens of thousands of individual donors means that we’re one of the few charities in the country whose income has continued to grow throughout the recession. That commitment means that involvement in overseas advocacy will not dilute any of our existing domestic activities; we retain our ambition to make Britain a worldwide beacon for equality. sourced from http://www.gayuknews.com/latest-news/ main-news/politics/1455-stonewall-goesglobal - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 First ever international intersex forum Submitted by Mani Mitchell Dated 6 September 2011 The world’s Ist International Intersex Organising Forum took place in Brussels between 2-5 September 2011. The historic event brought together 24 activists representing 17 intersex organisations from all continents. Around the world intersex individuals are being subjected to inhumane and degrading altering surgical and hormonal procedures, without consent of the intersex person, at the discretion of doctors and outside legal regulation. This is done to ‘normalise’ genitals and bodies in order to fit intersex people within the sex binary of men and women. Pathologisation of intersex individuals results in gross human rights violations and abuse bodily integrity and personal dignity. The Forum agreed on the demands aiming to end discrimination against intersex people and to ensure the right of bodily integrity and self determination: 1. To put an end to mutilating and ‘normalising’ practices such a genital surgeries, psychological and other medical treatments, including infanticide and selective abortion (on the grounds of intersex) in some parts of the world. 2. To insure that the personal, free, prior, and fully informed consent of the intersex individual is a compulsory requirement in all medical practices and protocols. 3. Creating and facilitating supportive, safe and celebratory environments for intersex people, their families and surroundings. This newly established informal network will campaign for the respect of intersex people’s human rights on international, regional and national levels. The next meeting of the Forum is expected to take place towards the end of 2012. The Forum was facilitated and sponsored by ILGA (International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association) and its European Region, ILGA-Europe. The Forum also reached out to representatives of TGEU (Transgender Europe) and IGLYO (the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Youth and Student Organisation) and will continue building wider alliances with other human rights and equality organisations working in such areas as women’s rights, the rights of indigenous people and people with disabilities. Ends. INTERNATIONAL Page 23 WPATH announces new standards of care for transgender and gender nonconforming people www.thegavoice.com By Dyana Bagby, 25 September 2011 There were champagne toasts and rounds of applause as the World Professional Association for Transgender Health released on Sunday its newest Standards of Care for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender Nonconforming People at a symposium at the Emory Conference Center in Atlanta. WPATH revision committee chair Eli Coleman launched the 7th version of the standards of care to some 300 people who attended the symposium as part of a partnership with the Gay & Lesbian Medical Association and the Southern Comfort Conference, the largest transgender conference in the nation that takes place annually in Atlanta. “This is a momentous occasion,” Coleman said before he conducted a brief outline of the standards of care. “This was a very, very important task. Just the title is a fundamental change — you do not see Gender Identity Disorder,” Coleman said to a warm round of applause from transgender people and physicians and psychotherapists who work with transgender individuals. “We’ve made a clear statement that gender nonconformity is not pathological,” a pronouncement greeted with another round of applause from attendees. “We’ve set a whole different tone. It’s more about what the professionals have to do” and not about transgender people having to prove their health needs to the professionals, he explained. And when Coleman announced that the new standards of care state in no uncertain terms that “reparative therapy is unethical,” there was even more applause. “This is no longer about hormones and surgery — it’s about health in a holistic sense,” Coleman said. Ushers brought out champagne flutes to attendees and to members of the standards of care revision committee and all raised several toasts after version 7 was announced. Walter Bockting, the outgoing president of WPATH, said in an interview before the launch that the version 7 of the standards of care represents a significant departure from the past six versions — the original version was published in 1979 with revisions made in 1980, 1981, 1990, 1998 and 2001. “Some of the changes we’ve made really incorporate the latest science,” Bockting said. “Research in this area is really increasing so it is still a growing area but there has been a boom in research publications. Our standards of care are more evidence based.” Some key revisions: • Psychotherapy is no longer a requirement to receive hormones and surgery, although it is suggested. “It used to be a minimum amount of psychotherapy was needed. An assessment is still required but that can be done by the prescribing hormone provider,” Bockting explained. • A number of community health centers in the U.S. have developed protocols for providing hormone therapy based an approach known as the Informed Consent Model. These protocols are consistent with version 7 revisions of WPATH’s standards of care. “The SOC are flexible clinical guidelines; they allow for tailoring of interventions to the needs of the individual receiving services and for tailoring of protocols to the approach and setting in which these services are provided,” Coleman explained. (continued on Page 29) - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 KAI (FOOD) & Page 24 Potato Bread Bug Rewana REWANA BREAD TO MAKE THE BREAD Rewana (Maori bread) is one of the best-loved dishes in the Maori cookbook but it can take years to master. Step 1: Make a well in the flour, add starter bug and mix well with warm water. Ingredients: 2 cups of flour 3 slices of a medium-sized potato 1 teaspoon of sugar 1 cup of water Step 2: Take a portion of the mixture in a jar. Add a raw potato for flavour and leave in fridge for the next time you want to make a loaf. STARTER BUG: Step 1: Boil the potato slices in water to mixing consistency and leave to cool. Step 2: When lukewarm, mix in all ingredients together to a fairly firm texture. Step 3: Add more warm water if needed. Cover and leave in a warm place to rise. This is the starter plant or bug from which you can make a few loaves of bread by only using what is needed and storing what’s left. Step 3: Add sugar to your mixture for sweetening and mix with warm water. Step 4: Knead the dough, folding in as you go. Step 5: Sprinkle flour over a flat board to stop sticking. Knead until firm, roll into a big ball. Step 6: Cover with a teatowel or cling wrap and leave to rise for a few hours or overnight. (Hint: If you’re in a hurry, try leaving it in the warming drawer of the oven or in the back window of the car if it’s a nice day). Step 7: Bake for one hour at about 200C. Article sourced from nzherald.co.nz http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10453825 Thanks to this blog site, we found some pictures to show you what a rewana looks like. Taste wise - you’ll have to make one to find out. Kia ora! http://curiouskai.blogspot. com/2007/01/rewena-bread-conclusion.html Beat around the Bush! This episode, ChooChoo reflects on his stay in Wellington. I’ve enjoyed my stay in Wellington. It’s very sanctuaried! There’s a sanctuary for marine-life at Island Bay... There’s also a sanctuary for native and wildlife - like me... Just out of town in Karori And a sanctuary for humans too!.. in Courtenay Place! - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 ELECTIONS Page 25 Rainbow Wellington’s party questionnaire GayNZ.com By Rainbow Wellington 3rd October 2011 Rainbow Wellington has collated the responses it’s had from the majority of major parties to a number of crucial questions heading into the election. You can find out where the parties stand on the major glbt issues here. The questions were put to the parties ahead of Rainbow Wellington’s candidate forum on 12 October. New Zealand First declined to respond as it does not answer such surveys as a general rule, while there has been no response from the Mana Party. The policies of the parties which have responded on the matters Rainbow Wellington raised with them are: 1. What is your policy on or view of the need to make progress on the extension of rights of adoption by same sex couples on the same basis as mixed sex couples? ACT ACT supports ending the discrimination same sex couples face when trying to adopt a child. The Adoption Act 1955 is out-dated and the criteria for adoption should focus on how fit a person or people are to be parents, not their sexual orientation. Greens The Green Party policy on this is that parenting skills are distinct from sexual orientation or gender identity. We support equal criteria for both rainbow and heterosexual couples in their assessment for suitability and eligibility for parenting. Spokesperson Kevin Hague has formed and convenes a cross party group to reform adoption law. Essentially the 1955 Act is archaic legislation that is flawed at its very heart, in that it does not place the interest of the child at the heart of decision making. The Act requires either comprehensive overhaul or complete replacement. It seems certain that while a small change to the law would provide the change required on the specific issue of same sex couples, the chances of achieving this change with the current parliament are remote, and will be enhanced in any parliament by being advanced as part of a larger reform. Steady and careful progress in the cross party group provides the best opportunity to secure the reform when that becomes possible in parliament. Labour Labour believes that the current adoption laws are antiquated and discriminatory, which need to be modernised and updated. The current Act fails to take into account the number of legislative changes introduced over the past decade areas such as assisted reproduction technology, surrogacy and the legal status of de facto relationships and civil unions. A Labour-led government will enact legislation that will require the Law Commission to review and update adoption law to better reflect modern New Zealand. Labour has already drafted and tabled a Bill to give effect to this. Maori Party The Maori Party is a strong believer that in issues of adoption, it should be whanau who should be first port of call in adopting mokopuna or children. In actual fact we see adoption as a legal fiction in the presumption that biological parents can be replaced. It is our view that the connection that we have through our whakapapa to our genealogical history should be protected. Whangai arrangements which operate within the broader context of whakapapa are a way of maintaining those genealogical links while still supporting children. Whanau is where children find the strength and support to become productive, caring members of society that we need them to be. If there is a need for children to be cared for we believe strongly that whanau, regardless of sexual orientation, must be encouraged to care for these children within the family. National In the current internationally volatile financial environment National is focused on providing stable government with a strong plan to create jobs and certainty for households, reducing debt and returning to surplus by 2014. We are aware of issue with the Adoption Act. It’s an old piece of legislation and has been identified as an area for potential review. We are currently running a very full justice agenda focused on making New Zealand safer, putting more police on our streets, and reducing crime. In the context of the current economic environment reform of adoption laws is not a priority for the Government. United Future It is time to revisit all aspects of the Adoption Act. 2. Does your party have a policy or view concerning the need to provide for same sex marriage? ACT When the Civil Union Bill came before parliament in 2004 it was put to a conscience vote, meaning all M P s were allowed to vote according to their personal opinion. Five of the then nine ACT MPs voted for the Bill. I was then leader of the National Party and voted for the first reading of the Bill. But I opposed subsequent stages of the Bill, on the grounds that the Bill was proposing to make such far reaching changes to our civil institutions that the matter should instead be put to a referendum. I said that I would vote in favour of allowing civil unions in such a referendum. In other words, I managed to confuse everybody. To be clear now, I should have voted in favour of the Bill in all its stages. I admit I don’t understand why, having legalised civil unions between two people; irrespective of their gender, there is still pressure to provide for same sex marriage. In the English language I have always understood marriage to be between a man and a woman. Greens Rainbow and heterosexual partnerships are equally entitled to respect and support. We support the extension of all legal partnership arrangements and rights to same sex couples. The Green Party strongly supports full equality and believes that this will eventually be achieved either through the amendment of the Marriage Act to include us, or through the repeal of the Marriage Act (which would leave civil unions as the method by which the state formally recognises relationships, and marriage as a purely religious institution). All Green M Ps would support a Bill to achieve this. Labour Our initial focus has been to ensure that existing rights under marriage should also extend to civil unions, and we will complete that work. But Labour believes in formal equality before the law for people in any relationship status, including marriage. Maori Party The Civil Union Act to establish the institution of civil union for same sex and opposite sex couples was passed by Parliament on 9 December 2004. The Act has been described as similar to the Marriage Act with reference to marriage replaced by civil union. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 Rainbow Wellington’s party questionnaire (continued) National In the context of the current economic environment and our strong focus on providing stability, reducing debt, and returning to surplus by 2014 the government currently has no plans to amend the Marriage Act. United Future United Future proposes no changes to the Civil Union Act but acknowledges to need to clarify the discrimination issues referenced [this refers to the problem of the legal status of same sex marriages in other jurisdictions if the couple comes to New Zealand to which we alluded in our questions]. 3. What is your position on the need to complete and speed up the implementation of the 2008 Human Rights Commission Report To Be Who I Am? ACT ACT strongly believes that everyone should be treated equally by the government and by the law regardless of their gender and their sexual orientation. As such we would look carefully at any proposed changes to laws such as the Human Rights Act to ensure everyone is protected but would only support change if we thought it was necessary. Greens Rainbow communities are entitled to equal opportunities in law and in practice. We support making the government comply fully with the right to freedom from discrimination on the grounds that were established by the Human Rights Act 1993 and its amendments. We support programs that eliminate prejudice, discrimination and harassment. Regarding surgical procedure, we would need to see the results of the trial before committing to support the recommended outcomes. We do support the inclusion of transgender and related statuses as specific grounds for non-discrimination under the Human Rights Act, and would support both sex and gender being specified as prohibited grounds for discrimination. Labour Labour will advance the development of legislation to address outstanding issues in transgender rights. It will also give clear direction and support to government agencies in support of rights to services and advocacy. Maori Party The Maori Party opposes any form of discrimination and prejudice. As part of government we have negotiated the support of the government for the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, a key part of which is about removing prejudice and discrimination against indigenous people. We will support measures and initiatives that remove discrimination based on sexual orientation. National Government agencies are making good progress in implementing the To Be Who I Am report. A wide range of work is under way in a number of agencies including the Department of Internal Affairs, Department of Labour, Ministry of Education and New Zealand Police. United Future United Future supports the recommendations within the Human Rights Commission Report 4. Will you make a specific commitment to a priority allocation of resources to grapple comprehensively and realistically with the problem of homophobic bullying in schools if you are a part of a government following the election? ACT Bullying for any reason at schools is unacceptable and dealing with it should be a priority for any government. When it comes to resourcing, ACT believes that the individual school is best placed to allocate its own resources because each school has bullying problems of different degree; there is no one size fits all approach to a problem. Greens Green spokesperson Kevin Hague is on record as expressing a desire ELECTIONS Page 26 to rekindle the flame for collective action in our communities, not for specific law reform, but to make a safe and supportive environment for young people both before and after coming out. As an adult gay man my life is actually pretty great nowadays, but for young people many of the same forces that made me scared, confused and desperate as a teenager are still there. To this end the Green Party has commissioned an intern from the University of Waikato to work with our communities and others, and review overseas experience, to develop a program of measures to create a safer and more supportive environment for young LGTB people. This draft program will be released before the election, and the Greens will then work to secure commitment from our communities to act together to campaign for its implementation. The Green Party is committed to giving priority to allocation of resources to this area. Labour Our schools can still be unsafe places for members of rainbow communities. Too often, this lack of safety can lead to low self-esteem, self-harm and even attempted or actual suicide. Labour will support schools to ensure that they protect the safety of all students and staff, expressly including members of rainbow communities, and monitor schools’ success in achieving safe environments. Maori Party As Associate Minister of Social Development I have been working towards reducing bullying as part of the broader context of violence within our communities. I am a strong believer in the notion of Mauriora that in order to achieve change in family violence we must first dispel any notion that violence is normal and acceptable. I believe that bullying is but one part of the spectrum of violence which we must challenge. National Any form of bullying in schools is completely unacceptable. The evidence is clear that bullying in schools can cause mental health problems for victimised kids. I am personally very concerned about the mental health of our youth and I have asked my department, the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, to lead a cross-government project on youth mental health. One of the things I have included in that work is a focus of the impact of conduct disorders, including bullying, on youth. That is also why the government is investing $60 million in the Positive behaviour for learning Action Plan, developed the Ministry of Education and eight education sector groups including NZEI. During the next three years more than 7,000 teachers will receive additional training in effective classroom management. Staff from 400 schools will receive training in how to promote positive behaviour and lift student engagement as part of the school wide program. Feedback the Minister has received from schools and teachers involved with this initiative has been extremely heartening. This is a long run project and we must continue to support and monitor it and evaluate the results. Other support for schools includes a new rapid response service following the most extreme behaviour incidents, and an Intensive Behaviour Service to target the most complex and challenging students. Families also have a very important role to play. More than 15,000 parents in at risk families will be supported to build more positive relationships with their children. United Future United Future strongly supports comprehensive anti-bullying programs. 5. Is your party committed to abandoning the legislation (present initiatives) to end the compulsory student levy for membership of student associations? [Note: This Bill became law at the end of September] ACT ACT M P Heather Roy is the sponsor of the Education (Freedom of Association) Amendment Bill and the ACT Party strongly supports this legislation. Freedom of association is protected by S.17 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act so it is appalling that students are forced to join a students association. Students associations are not just welfare - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz 1 CROSSWORD OCTOBER 2011 Page 27 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 13 11 12 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 ACROSS 3. Complete this title: Hunt underway for...... 4.EclipseCrossword.com Who became a successful recipient of the Outgames legacy fund? 6. Who did Rosslyn take the opportunity to remember in her article? 8. What is the title of the Chiropractic column? 10. What is Robyn Toomath fighting a losing battle with? 13. What is the name of the new sports centre in Kilbirnie? 15. Who is the new President of Agender NZ? 20. Who is our new columnist? She talks about enjoying the body you’ve got. 21. Tapatoru are advertising their new project which is to produce another ......... 22. Where in Wellington is the native and wildlife sanctuary that ChooChoo visited? 25. Which 70’s music band is coming to New Zealand next year in March? 27. What was Rosslyn Noonan’s official title/appointment? DOWN 1. The Greens Party spokesperson is? 2. Name the movie at the fundraiser where Karen and Peri met Hospi the mascot? DOWN 5. What is the title of Jonathan Marden’s poem in this issue? 7. In Tributes - what is Toni Taylor known as (as in her nickname)? 9. The Canterbury fishing guru caught a F - - - - E- - - - - B- 11. Who does Cher take on to defend her son? 12. Name the person on the cover of this month’s issue. 14. Necessity is the mother of invention, was written by? 15. In the letters to the editors - who is from Berlin? 16. Which Wellington endocrinologist moved to Auckland? 17. What is the name of the Maori bread in the kai section? 18. Who was the ex-Governor General who recently passed away? 19. What city did Sara Chez grow up in the 80’s? 23. An Australian transman entered what competition? 24. Lolaa went to have what type of examination? 26. Who celebrated their 40th birthday that Karen attended? - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 Rainbow Wellington’s party questionnaire (continued) organisations; they frequently make political statements and lobby on behalf of their members just like workers™ unions. No New Zealanders should be forced to join and pay money to a political organisation. Some students associations do provide popular services, including support for gay and lesbian students, and if those are high quality services students will be lining up to voluntarily join. I would point you to Rainbow Wellington as an excellent example of an effective but voluntary gay lobby group. All your great work would be undermined if people were forced to join. Greens The Green Party has been strongly opposed to the VSM Bill, in part because of the marginalisation of minority groups which would likely result. Labour Labour is opposed to the Education (Freedom of Association) Amendment Bill because it removes the right of student to choose via referendum whether association membership should by compulsory. Voluntary student membership will severely curtail student services like media, welfare, clubs and orientation as well as destroy the student advocacy. Labour has put forward several options for a compromise on this bill which would have led to an enduring and fair solution but National and Act are driven by ideology and have refused to cooperate. If this Bill passes, when Labour is returned to government it is our intention to move to repeal this legislation. Maori Party The Maori Party worked closely with NZUSA to reduce the impact of the Voluntary Student Membership Bill, including proposing a Supplementary Order Paper to the bill which would have delayed the enforcement of the bill to give student unions the chance to better transition into the new situation. We voted against this bill and would be open to reversing it. National The Education (Freedom of Association) Amendment Bill seeks to ensure that no student is compelled or unduly pressured to join students associations. It aims to uphold the right of students to freedom of association. This Bill is about choice. The National Party believes in freedom of association and encouraging personal choices. In no other sector of New Zealand is union membership compulsory, we are hoping to remove this anomaly. Student associations will still be able to support students, tender for commercial contracts from institutions, and advocate on behalf of their members. Their rights will be unchanged. This Bill will not destroy unions. They will still be able to offer all the services they currently do, including advocacy/ lobbying; they just have to attract members on merit, not legal force. United Future United Future supports voluntary student union membership 6. Will you vote to repeal the provision of 90 day no appeal workplace legislation if you become a part of the government after the election? Act Act strongly supports the 90 day probationary period for new employees. It gives people who would otherwise be on the unemployed scrap heap (such as some school leavers or those with convictions) a chance to prove themselves in the workplace. The vast majority of employers act in god faith and treat their employees fairly. Importantly, the ninety day trial period has to be agreed by both employer and employee; it is not mandatory and has to be negotiated in good faith. Also, employees who feel they have been discriminated against due to their sexual orientation during the 90 day period can still bring a personal grievance under the Employment Relations Act 2000. Greens The Greens are completely against the 90 day workplace legislation, would vote to repeal it, and won’t allow any of their parliamentary or ELECTIONS Page 28 party staff to be placed under such a contract. Labour Labour believes that the Employment Law changes that took effect earlier this year whereby every wage and salary earner who starts a new job are now subjected to a 90 day no-rights trial period, are unfair, unnecessary and will do nothing help the nations stalling economy and bleak outlook for jobs. They allow employers to fire staff without having to give any reasons for dismissal and the worker has no means of challenging the decision. Labour believes that this law erodes the protection of all New Zealander workers and will disproportionately impact on those already disadvantaged in the labour market, the un-unionised, low paid, women, Maori, Pacific, younger and older workers. A Labour-led Government will move to repeal this legislation as soon as possible. Maori Party We voted against this legislation because it penalised those who need the most support, the unskilled and the unqualified. We will continue to support any measure that will help protect the most vulnerable members in society. National The Government is committed to creating more jobs and lifting the long term performance of our economy. We want to see New Zealanders in work. We want them to be successful and we back them to make the right decisions for their families. Our introduction and extension of 90 day trials is pragmatic, credible and effective. Its one more on the road to growing the economy, helping New Zealanders find work, and encouraging employers to hire new staff. Trial periods have brought opportunities to many New Zealanders and we want to see more people benefit from this great policy. New Zealanders deserve every opportunity they can get and we want families to succeed. That’s why we extended trial periods to all businesses on April 1. We expect to see increased hiring as larger businesses provide more opportunities for job seekers through the 90 day trial period. The New Zealand Institute of Economic Research report last year found that 13,000 New Zealanders got jobs in small businesses they otherwise wouldn’t have. United Future United Future supports the status quo 7. Will your party return to the status quo ante of the right of prison inmates to vote in accordance with our international commitments if in government following the election? ACT Voting is an important right but it also comes with responsibility. ACT supported the Electoral (Disqualification of Sentenced prisoners) Amendment Bill because we feel those who have committed crimes serious enough to warrant a prison sentence have broken the social contract, and should forfeit the right to vote for the duration of their incarceration. Prisoners sentenced to a term longer than three years have not had the right to vote for some time and this legislation simply extended that to all prisoners. The right to vote is returned upon release of course, and ACT believes that that should always be the case. Greens The Green Party opposed this when the Bill passed. We believe prisoners should have the right to vote and would vote to return to the status quo ante if the opportunity arises. The Bill constitutes an unjustified violation of the right to vote in the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act (noted by the Attorney General in his report on the Bill), is contrary to Article 25 of the United Nations Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which New Zealand has ratified, and is out of line with international law on this subject. Labour Labour opposed the Electoral (Disqualification of Convicted Prisoners) Amendment Bill when it went through Parliament last year. Given the bill amended electoral law, it would have been far more appropriate for it to have been referred to the Electoral Legislation Committee, - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz ELECTIONS OCTOBER 2011 Rainbow Wellington’s party questionnaire (continued) or at least the Justice and Electoral Committee in the first place. Furthermore, the Department of Corrections was assigned as the advising agency for the bill, even though the Department of Corrections does not have any experience with electoral law. Labour and Green members on the Law and Order committee asked that the Ministry of Justice also be invited to provide advice on this bill, given that the Ministry of Justice is the agency that deals with electoral law. However that request was blocked by the National and ACT majority on the Committee. A Labour-led Government will repeal this legislation. Maori Party We opposed this bill and support the reversal of this law National The government has no plans to reverse the Electoral (Disqualification of Sentenced Prisoners) Amendment Act United Future United Future has no policy in this area 8. Does your party intend to proceed with the change to the right to silence in alleged criminal matters under proposed legislation if in government after the election? ACT ACT strongly believes that the state must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt in all criminal cases. The ACT Party is committed to the retention of the right to silence. Greens The Green Party was the only party to oppose the Criminal Procedures (Reform and Modernisation) Bill at First Reading. In fact, the Bill substantially reverses a number of the fundamental bases of our criminal justice tradition. We are strongly opposed to these changes and will work to reverse them if they become law. Labour The Labour Party wrote a strongly argued minority report (http:// legislation.govt.nz/bill/government/2010/0243/latest/DLM3865700. html?search=ts_bill_criminal+procedure_resel&p=1&sr=1) against certain provisions in the Criminal Procedure (Reform and Modernisation) Bill, particularly the provisions restricting the right to silence. This Bill is currently stalled as Labours opposition to the Bill is now shared by the Greens, Maori and ACT parties. Labour has approached the Minister offering support for the bill if the offensive provisions are taken out. We have had no response. In the event that the bill in its current form passes, Labour would repeal the constitutionally offensive parts of the legislation. Maori Party This issue is currently being discussed in caucus. The right to silence needs to be balanced with the need to remove “Stonewalling” in criminal investigations. National The Criminal Procedure (Reform & Modernisation) Bill does not seek to remove the right to silence. It contained a provision that simply required prosecution and defence counsel to meet before a trial to discuss whether there are any issues that they are voluntarily willing to agree on. After listening to public submissions on the Bill, this clause has now been removed. United Future United Future supports the right to silence WPATH announces new standards of care for transgender and gender nonconforming people (continued from Page 23) “Access is more open and acknowledges transgender care is being provided in community health centers. This certainly makes it easier to access hormones,” Bockting added. • There are now different standards for surgery, as well. For example, a transgender man who wants a hysterectomy no longer has to live one year as a male in order to receive the surgery. Likewise, a transgender woman who wants her testicles removed does not have to live one year as a female. For people who want genital reconstructive surgery, however, the standards of care recommend living a year in the role of the gender they are transitioning. • Another major change, Bockting explained, is that the standards “allow for a broader spectrum of identities – they are no longer so binary.” “There is no one way of being transgender and it doesn’t have to mirror the idea of a change of their sex,” Bockting explained. “These standards allow for a gender queer person to have breasts removed without ever taking hormones,” he said. The WPATH conference in Atlanta, along with the Southern Comfort Conference and the conference of the Gay & Lesbian Medical Association, was a joint effort to show the world what is being done in the area of LGBT health. But, Bockting added, the new WPATH standards of care also show the tremendous effort that transgender people themselves are doing to ensure their access to healthcare. “Oftentimes the standards of care were perceived as a barrier even though they were meant as access to care for hormone therapy and surgery,” he said. “The new standards showcase the important role [transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people] have played in changing the landscape of transgender health in the U.S.,” Bockting added. We are going to do another calendar starting very soon! Would you like to feature in our Calendar? Contact us today either by email or facebook so we can discuss the concept with you. Email: [email protected] Facebook: tapatoru Postal: Tapatoru PO Box 19008 Courtenay Place Wellington 6011 New Zealand Election Day in New Zealand is 26 November 2011 You can vote at a polling place between 9.00am and 7.00pm on election day. If you are not going to be in your electorate on election day you can vote in advance from the Wednesday 17 days before election day. Page 29 Txt: 022 602 3199 inspiration from .org toru .tapa www .nz - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 The ‘GYPTIANS’ Club The ‘Gyptians’ Club will bring to you any readings or exerpts of interest on Egyptian culture, history and mythology. If you have an interest in Egyptology and would like to share with our whanau, please email us your contribution(s). Daily Life in Ancient Egypt http://www.ehow.com/about_6317476 _art-ancient-egypt.html The daily life in ancient Egypt was actually much different than the vision that commonly comes to mind. Relics found in archeological digs as well as paintings and drawings on pyramid and tomb walls depict images of life in ancient Egypt that was, in some regards, not that much different than life in Egypt today. Life in ancient Egypt was primarily centered toward a polytheistic religion, the pharaoh and the importance of family. In ancient Egypt family life began early. Men and women tended to marry quite young in ancient Egypt and everyday life reflected their commitment to the sanctity of the family unit. Divorce was known to have existed but does not appear to have been that prevalent or common. Marriages were generally polygamous; at least in the royal and noble circles, with the husband having several wives. In most cases there was usually a senior wife or chief wife; however it is apparent that husbands were quite fond of all their wives. Children were a very important component of life in Egypt and were considered to be a great blessing from the gods. Also in the noble and royal families, children were highly regarded. Paintings of King Akhenaten and his wife, Queen Nefertiti, indicate they had a very close and loving bond with their six daughters. The role of women in ancient Egyptian society is often a surprise. It is usually assumed that women were relegated to the role of a second class citizen, when actually the opposite was true. Women were allowed to own property, testify in court and conduct business dealings. More than one woman even ruled the Egyptian land as pharaoh. While women were highly regarded and given rights that most of their contemporaries in other lands could only dream of, daily life in ancient Egypt for women also involved responsibilities for most of the duties of the home. It was the woman’s responsibility to raise the children, see to the home and prepare the meals. The daily life of people of ancient Egypt was very involved with the various gods and goddesses who ruled Egyptian mythology. It was quite acceptable to THE ‘GYPTIANS’ CLUB worship more than one deity and most towns and villages throughout Egypt did so, although a city would normally claim a patron god. Temples were built and scattered throughout Egypt, reflecting a religion that involved frequent rites, rituals and practices. Peasant life in ancient Egypt was not always pleasant. Most peasants made their living off the land through agricultural means. Grain, particularly wheat, was a staple crop of life in ancient Egypt. As a result of few grazing lands and the expense of meat, most peasants subsisted off a diet of ground wheat foods, subsidized with meager vegetables. The Egyptians were one of the first people to introduce the use of the ox-drawn plow; however the work of plowing, planting and harvesting would have still been very difficult. Taxes were also imposed on the crops, which would have also made it difficult for most peasant families to move beyond their poor means. Modern views on slave life in ancient Egypt are largely contradictory. Many scholars theorize that slaves in ancient Egypt actually performed more in the role of servant than actual slave; while other others have contended that those who were less fortunate in ancient Egyptian society were forced to work in humiliating and degrading positions. A long held theory indicates that the great pyramids of ancient Egypt were built upon slave labor, although this theory has been open to much conjecture. Life in Egypt today is a reflective blend of a modern society who still appreciates a rich and cultured past. In many ways, not much has changed. The Egyptian people still have a very strong regard for family and children and feel very bonded to the land. Page 30 Maryland teenager jailed for five years over attack on transgender woman www.pinknews.co.uk by Jessica Geen 15 September 2011 A teenage girl from Baltimore, Maryland, has been sentenced to five years in jail for attacking a transgender woman in a McDonalds’ restaurant. The attack on Chrissy Lee Polis, 22, was recorded on a mobile phone and showed her being verbally abused, kicked and pulled across the floor by her hair. The end of the film, recorded by a restaurant employee, showed her apparently having convulsions. Teonna Monae Brown, 19, pleaded guilty last month to first-degree assault and a hate crime. She was sentenced to ten years in jail with five years suspended, plus three years of supervised probation. Brown cried in court as she was sentenced. As her lawyer asked for her to be given probation only, she said: “My mother didn’t raise me like this. I would really like to apologise to the victim.” Baltimore County Circuit Judge John Grason Turnbull II called the attack “absolutely outrageous behaviour”. The teenagers apparently attacked Ms Polis after seeing her come out of the women’s toilets. Ms Polis, in a statement read to the court, said she did not forgive Brown and her 14year-old accomplice. The victim, who did not come to court, wrote: “While being beaten, I felt like I was going to die that day. “My private life has been exposed to the world. I lost my job. I cannot go anywhere without the fear of getting hurt again. I want to go into a hole and hide.” Following the attack, Ms Polis said she would have been injured more seriously, had a middle-aged female customer not come to her aid. The woman was punched in the face for trying to help the victim. Brown’s accomplice has admitted her part in the attack and remains in a juvenile detention facility. The McDonald’s employee who filmed the attack, Vernon Hackett, has now been fired. McDonald’s condemned the incident. The attack made headlines around the world and renewed calls for more to be done about transphobic violence. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 Transman has X-Factor www.samesame.com.au Local News by Travis de Jonk 2 September 2011 Earlier this week transman Chaz Bono was announced to be on the next season of Dancing With The Stars in the US. Closer to home, a fascinating and talented transman is making headlines, capturing the attention of Australian TV audiences last night on reality talent TV show X-Factor. “Music is the thing that means the most to me, and I would love it to be the thing that I do in my life… and I haven’t been ready until now,” Phoenix told judges as he took the stage. When X-Factor judge Ronan Keating asked why he hadn’t been ready, Phoenix explained how he hadn’t been overcoming both physical and mental barriers associated with his transition from female to male. “I’ve needed a whole bunch of things to fall into place in my life… and um, probably the most significant thing was a gender transition… I’m a female to male transsexual,” Phoenix said, to much applause. “My decision to live as a man has been one of the best decisions I’ve made. Living as a female was really hard and really painful… The transition that I went through has enabled me to become the person and the artist that I am now… I couldn’t have auditioned for X-Factor as a woman. It wasn’t me. It wasn’t me.” Keating commended Phoenix for his bravery sharing his story and auditioning for the show. Check out Paige Pheonix’s amazing performance below http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyZIagtyiUo&feature=player_embedded#! Phoenix’s husky soulful rendition of the INXS hit Never Tear Us Apartwon massive favour with the crowd, resulting in a standing ovation as well as a triumphant three thumbs up from judges Natalie Bassingthwaite, Ronan Keating and Mel B. He progressed to the next round of the show. www.stuff.co.nz 4 October 2011 IT WAS LOGICAL: The man behind the original Mr Spock, Leonard Nimoy, has retired from attending Star Trek conventions. Leonard Nimoy has attended his final Star Trek convention. The 80-year-old actor, best-known for playing Mr Spock in the original TV series that began in September 1966, formed four fingers into a V sign and intoned to fans Spock’s most famous phrase: “Live long and prosper.” Nimoy has said the convention in suburban Chicago celebrating the 45th anniversary of Star Trek would be his last. He spoke for an hour about his life and career, and thanked fans for their support over the years. Some held signs saying: “We love you Leonard! Live long & prosper.” Page 31 stupid bigots who (mess) with their children!” the 65-year-old singer wrote. Bono, 42, is paired with pro dancer Lacey Schwimmer on the reality show, where celebrities and their professional partners perform various ballroom dances for judges’ scores and viewer votes. Dancing with the Stars fans have posted both angry and supportive comments on the show’s message boards. One called the casting choice “disgusting” and said “ABC should be ashamed of theirselves for harassing mainstream Americans and Christains.” When hunky Paige Elliot Phoenix took to the stage for his X-Factor audition, he clearly already had the attention of the crowd and the judges. Nimoy retires from Star Trek cons INTERNATIONAL Cher takes on Twitter to defend son www.stuff.co.nz 1 September 2011 Cher is taking to Twitter to defend her son Chaz Bono. The superstar posted several tweets defending his participation on the upcoming season of the US version of Dancing With the Stars. Bono is the first transgender competitor on the hit ABC show. Cher says her son, who was born female and underwent surgery to become a man, is being “viciously attacked” on blogs and message boards since the new cast was announced Monday. “This is Still America right? It took guts 2 do it,” Cher wrote, adding that she supports him no matter what he chooses to do. “Mothers don’t stop Getting angry with Another wrote: “I never and mean NEVER watch DWTS but will this season to support/ vote for (Chaz).” On his own Twitter page, Bono described himself as “the luckiest guy around” and thanked his fans for their support. He also thanked Cher. “Thanks for all your support mom,” he wrote. “The haters are just motivating me to work harder and stay on DWTS as long as I possibly can.” The 13th season of Dancing With the Stars is set to premiere in the states September 19 DC Comics’ Stormwatch features gay male couple www.stuff.co.nz By Jase Peeples 6 September 2011 Gay superheroes in mainstream comic books have often had an easier time beating the bad guys than they have gaining visibility. Marvel Comics made history in 1992 when Northstar uttered the words, “I am gay” in Alpha Flight #106. While the issue sold out, the controversial nature of a superhero sailing the same-sex seas proved to be a hot-button issue for the comics company and no reference to Northstar’s orientation was made for several years. Since then, gay characters have been introduced in a variety of comic books, and while they have been allowed to come out of the closet, very few of them have done little else. Because of this gays have become like many minority characters in pop culture—portrayed as tokens or, even worse, eventually removed from books altogether. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz Lest We Forget GayNZ.com Posted by Craig Hoyle 13 August 2011 Rudolf Brazda died a few weeks ago. Like you, I had no idea who he was till I heard of his passing. Brazda was an unassuming elderly man who lived out his last days in a rest-home in eastern France, and on the face of it there was nothing to distinguish him from any of the other rest-home residents. Yet he will be remembered as a symbol of a by-gone era that will hopefully never be repeated. 98-year-old Rudolf Brazda was the last surviving person who was sent to a concentration camp by the Nazis because of his homosexuality. Rudolf was born in 1913 and grew up in a post-World War One Germany. He was sent to Buchenwald after clashing with the Nazi authorities over his sexuality. Homosexuality was forbidden by the Nazis, who condemned it as being contrary to their Aryan ideal of marriage and children. They sent between 10,000 and 15,000 gay men to the concentration camps where they were forced to wear pink triangles on their uniforms. (This is one of the earliest links between the queer community and the colour pink.) Few of those men survived. Concentration camps seem very distant these days. We vaguely know what they represent, but most people are hazy on the details. They are seen more as a symbol than something that actually happened, and they are distant enough that they can be made light of – a recent radio advertisement joked that New Zealand should have concentration camps for smokers. My attitude was similar until I visited Auschwitz Concentration Camp last year. Walking under the sign “Arbeit Macht Frei” (work sets you free) at Auschwitz is a surreal experience. The things I saw that day will remain with me for the rest of my life. Mountains of shoes, mountains of suitcases with names like “Klara Goldstein” scrawled over them, and mountains of curled locks of human hair. (The Nazis shaved camp inmates and wove their hair into rolls of fabric.) The torture cells, the rooms used for medical experiments, the death chambers – these things remain as a stark reminder of the potential brutality of the human race. Nearly seventy years later the pungent odour of burnt flesh still hangs over it all. Modern Germany has gone to great lengths to ensure the atrocities of the Nazi regime will not be forgotten. It’s impossible to walk around Berlin without coming across a memorial to a group of people who were persecuted – a tribute to the dissenting German politicians who were silenced by the Nazis stands outside the Reichstag, INTERNATIONAL OCTOBER 2011 and a memorial to the gypsies is round the corner. The enormous Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe is a bit further down Eberstrasse, as is the Memorial to Homosexuals. The Germans are adamant about the importance of these memorials, explaining that in remembering the tragedies of yesteryear we will hopefully be able to avoid repeating the mistakes of past generations. I am a firm believer in this concept of remembering the past. I think it’s important that we remember the horrors that earlier members of the queer community were forced to endure, and that we keep their memory alive. It is for this reason that I support events like Pink Shirt Day. Such events are a tribute to those who have endured persecution for expressing their identity, and make a powerful statement that such atrocities should not be repeated. It’s easy to treat these subjects lightly as the memories fade with time, but the memories must be kept alive. As George Santayana said, “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it”. Brazda moved to France after his liberation from Buchenwald. He dedicated his later years to speaking out against the persecution he and other gay men endured, and was appointed a Knight of the French Legion of Honour in recognition for his work. His ashes have been interred alongside those of Edouard Mayer, his partner of more than fifty years. Leonardo DiCaprio to play gay J Edgar Hoover in film penned by writer of ‘Milk’ www.pinknews.co.uk 20 February 2011 Former teenage heart throb Leonardo DiCaprio will play J Edgar Hoover, in a biopic of the FBI’s first director as a cross dressing repressed homosexual. J Edgar, which is directed by Clint Eastwood will see DiCaprio play Hoover as an “emotionally tortured figure trapped in a highly charged relationship with his mother,” who is played by Dame Judi Dench according to the Sunday Times. The newspaper says it has seen copies of the script of the film that while containing no over sex, show Hoover struggling with sexual feelings for his protégé, Clyde Tolson. The pair would often dress identically, holiday together and were buried a few yards apart from each other. The film has been written by Dustin Lance Page 32 Black, who won an Oscar for Milk, the biopic of America’s first openly gay politician Harvey Milk. Last week Mr Lance Black said he would deal with Hoover’s sexuality in “in a human, realistic way: homosexuality without gay stereotypes”. Although the script makes reference to Hoover’s alleged cross-dressing, DiCaprio said that he was unlikely to be seen onscreen in a frock. “We have not done the fittings for those,” he said when asked if he would be cross-dressing. “So I don’t think so.” In 1995, DiCaprio depicted the gay relationship between poets Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine in the film Total Eclipse. In 2009, papers revealed the investigations that the FBI under Hoover conducted into the sexuality of well known individuals including presidential aide Jack Valenti. Gay marries transsexual in Cuban first www.stuff.co.nz 14 August 2011 A gay dissident and a transsexual woman married on Saturday in what was said to be a first for Cuba, then draped themselves in the rainbow flag of gay pride and rode through the streets of Havana. In a simple civil ceremony surrounded by much hoopla, Ignacio Estrada, 31, and Wendy Iriepa, 37, signed a marriage certificate, exchanged rings and kissed before a state official, who wished them much happiness. It was not technically a same-sex marriage, which is prohibited in Cuba, and drew no interference from authorities because Iriepa is legally a woman after undergoing Cuba’s first state-sanctioned sex change operation in 2007. But the wedding, held on Fidel Castro’s 85th birthday in what the couple had called a “gift” to the former leader, was aimed at advancing homosexual rights in Cuba and tinged with politics as some of Cuba’s best-known dissidents participated and US diplomats attended in a public show of support. It also signaled changing attitudes on the island, where homosexuals were placed in camps in the 1960s for being “counterrevolutionary” in a part of history that prompted a mea culpa from Fidel Castro last year. Applauding supporters, a throng of reporters - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz CELEBRITY OCTOBER 2011 Page 33 and dozens of curious Cubans awaited the couple as they arrived at a government marriage office in the Havana suburbs. The bride, wearing a strapless white wedding dress, made an exuberant arrival in a 1950s Ford convertible, sitting up on the backseat and holding the gay pride flag high with both hands as she smiled with happiness. “I’m very happy and very nervous,” the statuesque Iriepa said as she stepped down from the car. “This is really the happiest day of my life.” ‘A STEP FORWARD’ Estrada, decked out in a white suit and red tie and arriving separately in a white Mercedes, said he was also happy and nervous, but that the day’s importance extended beyond him and his bride. “This is a step forward for the gay community in Cuba,” he said. The couple met three months ago and fell in love, said Estrada, who has AIDS. After the ceremony, they had their photographs taken in front of a two-tiered wedding cake, kissed again and then followed Cuban tradition by riding through the streets in a convertible, the horn blaring a few notes of wedding music. The only difference was the rainbow flag they draped across their shoulders. They were to honeymoon in an undisclosed location. The reaction of Cuban onlookers, who crowded the sidewalks and watched from apartment windows, ranged from applause to derisive laughter to bewilderment. “What does she have here, mami?” a young girl asked her mother, putting her hands to her chest. “I don’t think they should be able to marry. It goes against nature,” said middle-aged Iris Gonzalez, who also asked “Where did she get those breasts?” Prominent dissident bloggers Yoani Sanchez and husband Reinaldo Escobar participated in the wedding, while Laura Pollan and Berta Soler, leaders of the dissident Ladies in White attended. “We are very happy with what has occurred today. A big step in a small Cuba,” Sanchez twittered from the ceremony. The United States government has spoken of giving financial aid to gay dissidents as part of its long-standing campaign to promote political change in Cuba, but it is not known if money has begun to flow. Notably absent was Mariela Castro, Cuba’s biggest proponent of gay marriage and daughter of Cuban President Raul Castro. Mariela Castro, who heads Cuba’s National Centre for Sex Education, said earlier she had not been invited to the wedding, but congratulated the couple. Iriepa recently left a job at the centre. Whitney Houston sourced: http://www.whitneyhouston.com/ us/content/biography With over 170 million combined album, singles and videos sold worldwide during her career with Arista Records, Whitney Houston has established a benchmark for superstardom that will quite simply never be eclipsed in the modern era. She is a singer’s singer who has influenced countless other vocalists female and male. Music historians cite Whitney’s recordsetting achievements: the only artist to chart seven consecutive #1 Billboard Hot 100 hits (“Saving All My Love For You,” “How Will I Know,” “Greatest Love Of All,” “I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me),” “Didn’t We Almost Have It All,” “So Emotional,” and “Where Do Broken Hearts Go”); the first female artist to enter the Billboard 200 album chart at #1 (her second album, Whitney, 1987); and the only artist with seven consecutive multi-platinum albums (Whitney Houston, Whitney, I’m Your Baby Tonight, The Bodyguard, Waiting To Exhale, and The Preacher’s Wife soundtracks, and My Love Is Your Love). In fact, The Bodyguard soundtrack is one of the top 10 biggest-selling albums of alltime (at 17x-platinum in the U.S. alone), and Whitney’s career-defining version of Dolly Parton’s “I Will Always Love You” is the biggest-selling U.S. single of all-time (at 4x-platinum). Born into a musical family on August 9, 1963, in Newark, New Jersey, Whitney’s success might’ve been foretold. Her legendary heritage is as familiar as America’s greatest icons: the daughter of famed singer Cissy Houston (who made her name in the Drinkards gospel quartet, and later the Sweet Inspirations vocal group of Aretha Franklin and Elvis Presley renown); and the cousin of singers Dee Dee Warwick (who introduced the original ‘60s versions of “You’re No Good” and “I’m Gonna Make You Love Me”) and her sister, superstar Dionne Warwick. Whitney’s mother and cousins nurtured her passion for gospel music since birth. As a teenager, Whitney was already singing on the scene in New York, and records with her first young performances in the ‘70s and early ‘80s album credits with such eclectic acts as Michael Zager, Chaka Khan, Herbie Mann, the Neville Brothers, Bill Laswell’s Material, and others are much sought-after collectors items. In 1983, near the end of Arista’s first megasuccessful decade of operation, Clive Davis was taken to a New York nightclub where Whitney was performing and signed her on the spot. Two years went into the making of her debut album, but the results were worth it. The self-titled Whitney Houston (March 1985) launched Arista’s second decade, and yielded a string of hits including “You Give Good Love” and three consecutive #1 singles, the Grammy-winning “Saving All My Love For You,” “How Will I Know,” and “The Greatest Love of All,” which has become a veritable anthem. Not only did the album establish her as an important new recording artist, but it went on to sell over 12 million copies in the U.S., plus many millions more abroad. This LP set the record as the biggest selling debut album by a solo artist. - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz OCTOBER 2011 “Not the Lesbian Ball” coming to Wellington GayNZ.com 22 September 2011 The organisers of the event, Rockstar Productions, have arranged a special rate at the James Cook for out-of-towners who want to head to Wellington for the night. They are planning the event, which they have jokingly dubbed ‘Not the Wellington Lesbian Ball 2011’, on the back of a successful first outing in 2009, and because everyone publicly asked them to do it again. “At the last Ball everyone brought out their inner rockstar, we are soooo looking forward to what costumes will be created this time with added Halloween theme. There will of course be prizes... for everything and anything.” Uber-hot DJ Sandi Hotrod is flying over Sydney to play along with DJ Bullit, and there will also be burlesque, shows from other artists and food, lashings of food. “There will also be hundreds of women dressed up in fabulous outfits,” they add for anyone not yet convinced. The pair is also thinking of having a business card draw, for single girls only. “But really the highlight will be the wonderful gorgeous women that attend and make the night one of fun,” they say. “This is an event aimed at lesbians and their partners. We can assure you there’ll be no gender or sexuality policing on the door. We’d love you to join us and have a good time if it sounds a bit like you.” The special James Cook rate is $150 room only and $185 with breakfast for 2. Bookings can be made from group reservations on reservations04@ NAU MAI HAERE MAI We welcome you to make contact with us to be a part of our next calendar project. Contact us if you would like to know more. Karen Tapatoru email: [email protected] facebook: tapatoru phone/txt: 022 602 3199 PROJECT ‘WHANAU’ starts end of this month Page 34 “We broke a glass ceiling” - Chris Carter GayNZ.com 6 September 2011 After a long career which ended with a year of stinging controversy, New Zealand’s first openly gay MP Chris Carter has farewelled Parliament with a comparatively low-key and placid valedictory speech where he proudly stated he and two of his colleagues broke a glass ceiling by being out and proud MPs. Those mourning the apparent demise of Auckland’s annual Lesbian Ball are being invited to head to the capital and get their bad selves on the dance floor for ‘Rockstar Halloween’ at the James Cook Hotel on Saturday 29 October. The previous ball was rockstar themed, and the organisers are excited about what people might come up with based on the added thematic component of Halloween. AOTEAROA jamescookhotel.co.nz or phone +64 4 495 0279 or fax +64 4 499 9800 and quote Wellington Lesbian Ball or the group booking number 27995 or 27996. Please note there are 2 group booking numbers. One is for bookings at room only rate and the other one is for bookings at breakfast inclusive rate. More info, especially for Auckland women: Online ticket sales are now open, please email lesbianball2011@ xtra.co.nz for tickets. Earlybird price is $40. Full price sales of $45 start 3 October, both online and at Unity Book and D’vice Willis St. Please join the group Not the Lesbian Ball 2011 on Facebook for regular updates of information. *The long-running Auckland Lesbian Ball has an uncertain future after the group which ran it, LESO, decided earlier this year it had served its purpose, and it was time to call it a day for the organisation. It expressed hope someone would take up the challenge of producing events like the Ball in the future. The independent MP who was expelled from Labour in a storm of controversy last year, wore a red rose on his chest as he spoke. He explained that he was the first MP to openly acknowledge being gay, as being a former teacher he knew that gay and lesbian teenagers faced huge amounts of prejudice and had few affirming messages or positive role models. “By being open and honest about my sexuality, and joined soon after by my industrious gay Labour colleague Tim Barnett and my remarkable transsexual colleague Georgina Beyer, we broke a glass ceiling” he said. “Today having gay and lesbian MPs is no big deal and thank goodness for that”. Although he slammed the media for its intrusion into his personal life and pointed out the impact it has had on both his partner and their three children, Carter spent most of his final say in Parliament thanking those who have stood by him and listing his proudest achievements through his 15 years at the Beehive. During his time in Parliament Chris Carter started one of the first branches of Rainbow Labour, and held a number of Ministerial portfolios, including Education and Conservation. He particularly thanked the Green Party for its support over the past year. Carter received applause and hugs from a number of MPs after his speech. The next issue of Tatou will be December 2011 If you would like to contribute an article, picture(s), or information that would benefit our communities, please email us your details. Thank you. [email protected] - TATOU www.tapatoru.org.nz Agender Christchurch NOTICES OCTOBER 2011 Page 35 Advertising in our Panui section is simple. Just send us an email with your details and we will coordinate with you. Space is first-in, first-served and open to all whanau and friends of Tapatoru. All emails and inquiries are welcome at: [email protected] By Cherise Witehira As we all know, Christchurch City was rocked by a devastating magnitude 6.3 Quake on February 22nd 2011. For many people, this date will be forever ingrained as the worst natural disaster to hit Aotearoa in modern times. Not only was the city decimated, but 182 people lost their lives. It was a truly devastating day that many will never forget. Located in the Christchurch Community House in the heart of the city, were 52 community organisations. One of the organisations was Agender Christchurch Incorporated, which is the Trans support organisation that supports trans people of all ages encompassing all of Te Wai Pounamu, Te Waka a Maui. Six months following the quake, Agender Christchurch has risen from the ashes, has a new Chairperson (whom, for the first time in its history, is Maori) and is now operating out of larger, safer premises on the fringe of the city called Te Whare Puakitanga, Transition House. Puakitanga meaning to flourish, to blossom, to transition. It is a safe, secure, accessible premise where trans people of all ages and backgrounds can come and relax, talk, seek support and just be themselves without the fear of discrimination from the outside world. They also offer temporary accommodation for the community at a very reasonable rate. For more details on this, please contact them at the office. Their resource library of books, pamphlets and videos were in the Christchurch Community House. Agender Christchurch is working on recouping the resource library as best they can. They are accepting donations towards the library, so please contact them if you can help with this. A support group open to all trans people, significant others and supporters used to be held in the Community House. There hasn’t been a support group meeting since December 2010. Agender Christchurch will be restarting this on the Transgender Day of Remembrance at Te Whare Puakitanga, Tuesday, 29th of November 2011 from 7pm-10pm. Nau mai, haere mai koutou! Contact Details Cherise Witehira Chairperson and Regional Coordinator PO Box 261437 North Avon Christchurch 8148 DDI: (03) 372-9298 Fax: (03) 372-9288 Email: [email protected] TOP WEBSITES www.hrc.co.nz www.maoriartmarket.com www.pinknews.co.uk www. outlinenz.com www.wellington2011.org www.julzdarroch.co.nz www.roostertailscomic.com www.sanctuary.org.nz http://www.nzonscreen.com/title/footrotflats-a-dogs-tale-1986 TOP YOU TUBES http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=TZ860P4iTaM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1ljDeBiPo http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=Cz3wscJMbuo&sns=fb http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cyZIagt yiUo&feature=player_embedded - Closing Prayer Me Inoi Tatou Kia tau ki a tatou katoa, te atawhai o to tatou Ariki a Ihu Karaiti Me te aroha o te Atua me te whiwhinga tahitanga ki te wairua tapu Ake! Ake! Amine. The contents of TATOU are a collective of articles and advertisement related material sourced from whanau and friends of Tapatoru. The views expressed within this publication are solely for the purpose of providing communication and marketing opportunities to it’s community. Tapatoru’s community are Maori trans, some Non-Maori trans who affiliate to, and some agencies, community groups and individuals who support the work of Tapatoru. We welcome your comments, advertising, stories, ideas, feedback and contributions. Please email: [email protected]. Facebook (tapatoru). Contact details are: Tapatoru, PO Box 19008 Courtenay Place, Wellington 6011, New Zealand. Ph/Txt 022 602 3199.