[Image description: Top photo is of a white altar on the floor. In the center is a cloth-covered stack of books with a cup of water and a 7-day candle on top. It is surrounded by tarot cards, offering dishes, candles, and a framed drawing of Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P Johnson. In front of the stack are two pieces of paper covered in names, written out in small handwriting. The second image is a close up on the names.]
Night 8 with Alder and Rocket: we spent an hour and a half handwriting every name on the list this year, hailing each fallen family member, and offering them comfort and love. It is a draining, heartbreaking, and exhausting task, and an important one.
Today is the Trans Day of Remembrance, which is also draining, heartbreaking, and exhausting. Take care, and if you can bring a little of the elevation to your local TDOR vigil, we encourage you to do so.
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The seventh book I placed for the altar was Gender Outlaws. I kissed the offering jar of water to charge it with my words of intent, âForgive me my forgetfulness, may you never thirst.â I read the passage for November 18th in Glad Day. I prayed silently and after saying Amen I rang the chime.
As of now Iâm âcaught upâ and will continue the Rite to itâs last night on November 20th.
Getting stuff ready for the Trans Rite of Elevation, a novena running through till Trans Day of Remembrance, starting on the 12th Nov.
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I found this beautiful tea-towel that has âEstive aqui e lembrei-me de tiâ which in Portuguese means âI was here and I remember youâ which i thought was so perfect for elevating our dead trancestors!
I surrounded the altar with inward pointing healing crystals with quartz in the center to focus the power.
I also placed a Nazar amulet we bought in Egypt for protection. As well as rainbow beads i got from LA Pride 2015 for that queer energy/power boost!
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I made some soul cakes that i painted the trans symbol on with purple food colouring to leave as offerings.
In thinking about the transgender warriors that came before us, I'm also thinking about the transgender warriors that will follow us. I'm opening my heart and my thoughts to our ancestors and to our descendants, and I'm holding space for them, the next generation of our family, the generation after that, the future ones who wouldn't even be able to recognize us, I'm speaking to them as if they're sitting by me around a warm fire on the first really cool night of fall. I can feel them crowding to the warmth, jostling and giggling, a thousand bright colors.
Beloved children, I will not make you mourn me too. I promise to grow old for you, to be cranky and creaky and problematic. I will make you soup and you will bring me your favorite rocks to look at and I will tell you about once upon a time, when we had only shame.
Beloved Descendants, I will not pray that you never know pain or fear. I will not pray that you never know death. Pain is a path and fear is a gate; they are teachers from whose instruction you will grow, and death is only painful and frightening.
I will pray that you never know shame. I pray that you are born into love and know only generosity. Dear ones, I pray that you grow like the formation of a galaxy, that are expansive, that you seethe, that you crash in on yourself, that you are fission. I pray that nothing boundaries your self-creation; that you thrash and howl as you shapeshift; that you are never, ever told to be quiet or still.
I pray that you will never be quiet or still.
We have believed for generations that shame was our birthright, that to be us is to be crushed into clumsy mimicry, that some unfathomable rot lives inside us. I pray that you brush the shards of those beliefs from your wild hair, shake them out of your clothes, recycle them into endless compassion, that the self-hatred that plagues us becomes obsolete, that you barely comprehend it, that it creeps you out. I pray that your every step boil and bounce, your every word overflow with joy, your every outfit make you feel unstoppable.
I pray that you never have to be told that there is nothing wrong with you.
I pray that you feel unstoppable because anything that could have stopped you broke itself on us.
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#TransgenderRiteofAncestorElevation day 6 #troe2018 #transcestry #spiritwork #witchcraft #book of the day: #FareeDisfareilGenere #GenderTrouble by #JudithButler https://www.instagram.com/p/BqTFe5hAXuP/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1t9d1x5o3gogg
The Transgender Rite of Ancestor Elevation: 2018 List of Names
Below the cut, a list of names, organized by country, date of passing, and how they died (people have mixed feelings about the latter, we understand). Some include age and other notes as well, but thatâs not consistent across the names. This year we made an effort to seek out information about the lives of our beloved dead, where reported, and quotes from loved ones.Â
Link to a shareable google document with photos
Christa Leigh Steele-Knudslien, United States
As of mid-October 2018, 22 homicides of trans Americans have been reported. The first known victim was Christa Leigh Steele-Knudslien, 42, of North Adams, Mass. The founder of the Miss Trans America and Miss Trans New England pageants, she was stabbed to death at her home January 5. Her husband, Mark S. Steele-Knudslien, 47, has been charged with her murder. He turned himself in to police the same night, saying he had done "something very bad," and describing details of the crime, but he pleaded not guilty the following week in Northern Berkshire District Court. He is awaiting trial.
Christa, 42, was a flamboyant and beloved transgender activist, founder of the Miss Trans New England beauty pageant and cofounder of the New England Trans United Pride March and Rally. She believed that being trans was something to celebrate. She was forever cajoling friends to try the higher heels, the shorter dress â âShow your legs, hon!â Her joy seemed boundless.
When Halloween came, Christa struck up a friendly decorating contest with Jennifer Serre, who lives across the street. They one-upped each other, Serre said, adding lights and signs and ghouls until Christaâs yard sported a guillotine, a fortune teller, a ghost, a clown, a girl hanging from a tree, a man dressed in black carrying a shovel, and a graveyard.
Viccky Gutierrez, United States
Viccky Gutierrez, 33, was stabbed to death at her home in Los Angeles January 10. Firefighters were called to a fire at the building early that day and discovered her body. Gutierrez, an immigrant from Honduras, was described as "a beautiful soul who was really nice to everyone and would offer any type of support when someone would need it" by friends who set up a crowdfunding page to raise money for funeral expenses. She was active in the L.A. trans community, working with the Los Angeles LGBT Center on Transgender Day of Remembrance events. A few days after her death, Los Angeles police arrested Kevyn Ramirez, 29. Â Police said he admitted to stabbing Gutierrez and setting the fire. He is charged with murder during the commission of an attempted robbery, plus two counts of arson, while police continue to try to determine his motive and whether the murder was a hate crime.
Viccky was a young trans Latina woman from Honduras, and a member of TransLatin@ Coalitionâs Los Angeles organization. She often joined the team for their daily lunches, provided for free to anyone in need. Friends refer to her as âthe nicest girl in the world,â whose âsmile would give anyone comfort,â and âan inspiration for many of us.â
Zakaria Fry, United States
Zakaria Fry, 28, went missing from her home in Albuquerque, N.M., January 18, along with her housemate, Eugene Carroll Ray, 70. Their bodies were found February 19 in trash bins in a rural part of New Mexico; both had died of blunt force trauma to the head and face, police said. It is not clear exactly when they were killed. Albuquerque police arrested Charles Anthony Spiess, 27, who is also known by the name James Knight, February 27, and the next day he was charged with the murder of both Fry and Ray, along with a charge of tampering with evidence. Police said he may have lived with the victims for a time. âIt's a massive case and there's a lot of connections there. But the main thing is weâre asking the public if they ever saw these three together,â Albuquerque Police Department public information officer Simon Drobik told the Albuquerque Journal. Friends of Fry's described her lovingly. âYou were such a fun and positive person despite all the challenges you faced in life,â Tara Yvonne wrote on Facebook. âYou were a brave, strong and inspirational woman. Your spirit lives on and you are missed by many. May you rest in peace.â
Celine Walker, United States
Celine Walker, 36, was found shot to death in a hotel room in Jacksonville, Fla., February 4. A friend, Naomi Michaels, wrote on Facebook that Walker âlived a low key life where she did whatever needed to be done in order for her to surviveâ and âwas not a pageant girlâ or a clubgoer. The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office misgendered and deadnamed her when reporting her death, with officials saying they do not identify people as transgender. Activists have called for a change in the policy, which may have delayed the investigation of the crime. No one has been arrested for her murder yet, and police have revealed no details of their investigation. Some friends suspect her murder was an anti-trans hate crime.
âCeline was not a pageant girl. She didnât even enjoy going to gay clubs or events. She lived a low key life where she did whatever needed to be done in order for her to survive.â
Tonya Harvey, United States
Tonya Harvey, 35, was fatally shot on a dead-end street in Buffalo, N.Y., February 6. Social media posts by friends described Harvey, who sometimes went by the nickname âKita,â as âsweet and lovingâ and âthe black Cameron Diaz.â Police and the Erie County District Attorney's office are continuing to investigate her murder, including the possibility that it was a hate crime. Activists pointed out the widespread violence against trans people. âThere is a very real epidemic of violence targeting the transgender community, particularly those who live at the intersection of transphobia, racism, and misogyny,â Damian Mordecai, executive director of the Pride Center of Western New York, told The Buffalo News.
Phylicia Mitchell, United States
Phylicia Mitchell, 45, died February 23 after being shot in the chest outside her home in Cleveland. She and partner Shane Mitchell had been together for about 30 years, ever since Phylicia fled her less-than-accepting family in Pittsburgh. They were not legally married, but they had an unofficial ceremony last May in which she took his last name. Phylicia earned a high school equivalency diploma and worked as a hairstylist, and Shane did odd jobs. Shane said their relationship endured and even became stronger through hard times, including periods of homelessness. âI miss her tremendously,â he told Cleveland's Plain Dealer. âThatâs my soul mate. We went together everywhere. We did everything together. We always held hands on the bus. Years ago people didnât respect that, but they do now.â In April, Cleveland police issued a warrant for the arrest of Gary Lamar Sanders, 36, in connection with Mitchell's death. He was placed on Ohio's Most Wanted List and was finally apprehendedby the U.S. Marshals Service in July in West Virginia, where he had been living for more than a month. He is charged with aggravated murder.
She  will be remembered for her devotion to hair styling and being a loving and caring partner and friend, despite battling drug addiction for most of her life, her longtime partner said.  "Everyone loved her," Mitchell said. "My nieces and nephews opened up to her so much. She was just so funny and kind."
Amia Tyrae Berryman, United States
Amia Tyrae Berryman, 28, was found shot to death at the Shades Motel in Baton Rouge, La., early in the morning of March 26. Police so far have no suspects and are continuing to investigate. Berryman's family declined to speak to local media.
Amia worked in home health care in Baton Rouge. A friend was quoted as saying âShe didnât have much support [from] family...so she made family with her peers in the LGBT community of Baton Rouge.â Another friend said, âAmia Tyrae R.I.P. you were such a sweet person with a big heart...rest well my friend.â
Sasha Wall, United States
Sasha Wall, 29, was found shot to death in her car along a rural road in Chesterfield County, S.C., the morning of April 1. She had been shot several times in the neck and shoulder. Police believe she knew her killer and that her death was likely the result of a domestic dispute. Wall, who lived in a mobile home near Pageland, S.C., was remembered fondly by friends on social media. On Facebook, Donovan Dunlap recalled taking photos of her, saying, âYou stayed ready for the camera. I will miss you my beautiful sister. I cannot sleep. I hope they find who did this.â
Carla Patricia Flores-Pavon, United States
Carla Patricia Flores-Pavon was strangled to death in her Dallas apartment May 9. Police found her unconscious about 4 p.m. at her apartment, Dallas TV station KTVT reports. She was pronounced dead at a local hospital. A witness reportedly saw a man fleeing the scene. Dallas police said they do not believe her death was a hate crime. The are some discrepancies in the details about Flores-Pavon. KTVT listed her age as 26, but the Dallas Voice gave it as 18. Also, while police spelled her first name as Carla, her Facebook page spelled it Karla.âYou were a good person,â her friend Gia York Herrera wrote on Facebook, also noting that the loss âhurts so much.â Â (This is a translation; the original post was in Spanish.) York Herrera added, âGod give comfort to your family and friendsâ and âI send you a hug and a kiss as always.â Police arrested a suspect in Flores-Pavonâs murder, Jimmy Eugene Johnson II, 24, near Huntsville, Texas, May 17. Johnson, who was arrested during a traffic stop, had items from Flores-Pavonâs apartment in his car, so police believe his motive was robbery and not anti-transgender bias. He is charged with murder.
Unknown transgender woman, United States
Officers pulled what they said was the body of a black, transgender woman, approximately 5â3â and 130 pounds, from a river in Dallas on May 15th, 2018. The unidentified victim was wearing a black shirt and black scrub pants.
Nino Fortson, United States
Nino Fortson, a 36-year-old transgender man, was shot to death in Atlanta May 13. Fortson was involved in an argument with two men and two women on the street, The Atlanta Jounral-Constitution reports. A witness said he fired a small gun into the air but then walked away. But a few minutes later, the witness heard more gunshots and then saw him lying on the ground, as one of the other people involved in the dispute limped away. Fortson died shortly afterward at Grady Memorial Hospital. Initial media reports misgendered Fortson.
Many in Atlantaâs queer community learned of the death through a Facebook post on the profile of Kamaro Blahnik, father of the House of Blahnik, who referred to Fortson as âmy sonâ and used both she/her and he/him pronouns to refer to Fortson. Blahnik said that Fortson was known for walking the âButch Realnessâ category at balls.
Gigi Pierce, United States
Gigi Pierce, 28, was shot to death in Portland, Ore., the night of May 21. She was from Boise, Idaho, and it wasn't clear how long she had been in Portland. Sophia Grace Adler, 33, has been arrested and charged with Pierce's murder; she has pleaded not guilty. Witnesses and police said there had been an altercation between the two prior to the shooting. A friend remembered Pierce as someone âfull of life, always trying to help somebody.â
Her friends recall her as vivacious and enthusiastic. But they also say she struggled with drug abuse and homelessness, living a difficult life that came to a sudden end last week.
"I don't know what demons she was trying to run away from, but she spent her entire life running," says her close friend and former boyfriend Jason Johnson, who knew Eugene-Pierce for more than a decade. "And it was a beautiful run filled with glitter and cocktails." "Gigi was a performer through and through," her friend Dallas Jackson Falls said in a statement last week. "Life was her stage, and those fortunate enough to know her were her audience. Granted, you never knew whether you were getting a drama, comedy or even, in some moments, an action-filled tragedy. That was the thing about her, you just never knew what you were going to get."
Eugene-Pierce grew up in Boise, Idaho. Her sister, Nicole Emery, says Eugene-Pierce "treated my sister [Meghann] and I like princesses" and "never stood still."
Antashâa-English, United States
Antashâa English, 38, was shot to death  in Jacksonville, Fla., June 1. On a city street, she was shot in the abdomen by someone firing from a vehicle. She died at a local hospital. âShe was an unapologetic, bold, and loyal person,â friend Taliyah Smith told Firs Coast News, a program of stations WTLV and WJXX. English had won several pageants and performed regularly at local nightclub InCahoots. Police are continuing to investigate her murder.
On her Facebook page, English described herself as âa very independent transgendered woman ... who thrive[s] on being the best person I can be.â In May, just weeks before her death, English had shared a photo of herself with the caption, âI will no longer be a victim of discrimination. # Trans rights.â
Diamond Stephens, United States
Diamond Stephens, 39, was shot to death June 18 while driving home. She was shot in the back of the head, causing her van to crash into a house. She was not identified as transgender until a month later because police and local news outlets misgendered and deadnamed her. Police, who have yet to identify a suspect, say there may have been others in the car with her. Her family is devastated. âWe are hurting really bad,â Stephensâs cousin Georgia Brown told Mississippi TV station WTOK. âI donât really know what words to say other than we need God to help us and give us strength to make it through this situation and pray to God that whoever did this is found.â
Catalina Christina James, United States
Catalina Christina James was the third transgender woman murdered in Jacksonville this year, leading some to suspect a serial killer is at work. James, from Bishopville, S.C., Â was shot to death outside a Quality Inn and Suites motel June 24. The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office continued its practice of not using trans victims' preferred names. James's mother described her to First Coast News as the life of the party, with a love of travel and dancing.
Keisha Wells, United States
Keisha Wells, 58, was found dead in the parking lot of an apartment complex June 24 in Cleveland, the second trans woman murdered in the city this year. She had suffered a gunshot wound to the abdomen. Her best friend, Sheila Jones, described her to the Plain Dealer as "a tough cookie" but "the nicest person ever." Wells loved dressing up and frequenting nightclubs, Jones added. "(She) always loved the most expensive high heels and stilettos, the hats and (her) expensive sunglasses.â
Wells' aunt, Regina Spicer, said Wells loved to make everyone around her laugh. She said Wells, who family members referred to as "Pokey" and who was referred to by family as both Keisha and her birth name Maurice, also spoiled the dozen or so nieces and nephews.
"Pokey was funny," Spicer said. "Pokey liked laughing and telling funny stories about people. But when (she) loved you and cared about you, (she) loved you."
Sasha Garden, United States
Sasha Garden, 27, was found dead at an Orlando apartment complex July 19.
Garden, an advocate for transgender women and outreach coordinator for the HIV and AIDS organization Miracle of Love, was a sex worker saving money to transition and become a hairstylist. Garden was known for an outgoing spirit. "She was a firecracker â very outspoken," said Montrese Williams, who houses transgender women involved in sex work, providing free condoms, water bottles, and HIV testing. "She didnât hold her tongue for anyone or anybody. Her womanhood was one of those things she stood up for. She didnât tolerate any disrespect at all."
âThereâs a little bit of Sasha in all of us here today,â mourner Richard Sizemore said, according to the Sentinel. âHer adventure in this realm may be over ... but I have faith that on the next plane, she is somewhere where sheâs perfect â and everybody knows it.â
Dejanay Stanton, United States
Dejanay Stanton, 24, was shot to death early in the morning of August 30 on the south side of Chicago. She was found in an alley, with a gunshot wound to her head, and pronounced dead at a nearby hospital. Police initially did not know her name and identified her as "Jane Doe," but friends who saw her photo on social media confirmed her identity as Dejanay Stanton.
âShe was so sweet. Every time you saw her she had a smile on her face," said LaSaia Wade, executive director of Brave Space Alliance. âShe was just trying to live her best life as a young girl.â Police have yet to make an arrest but are continuing to investigate.
The first thing you noticed about Dejanay Stanton is her hair.
In one video, it was styled pin-straight and dark brown, though the sunlight teased it out to a golden sheen. As she twirled around on the grass, it cascaded past her hips and swished freely in the wind, almost like it had a life of its own. Other times, it would be crimped or in soft curls, in a bob with blonde tips or, toward the end of her life, dyed scarlet. âEveryone, no matter what their gender or sexuality, knew her,â Jones, 25, said. âShe was loved and never did nothing to nobody. So it was a shock.â
Jones said Stanton never had a bad word to say about anyone and was a family-first person. She lived with her mother, step-dad and four siblings, and every day she told her mom she loved her. Whenever someone was short on money, she always paid for that personâs meal or drinks.
âThere was a sweet spirit about her,â Jones said. âAlways inspirational or encouraging. She was always living life.â
Stanton also loved to travel, Jones said. One of her favorite destinations was New York City, where sheâd go shopping and restock her much-coveted wardrobe.
âShe was a girl who loved style,â Wade said. âShe was trying to live her best life. It was like a breath of fresh air.â
Vontashia Bell, United States
Vontashia Bell, 18, suffered a fatal gunshot wound August 30 in Shreveport, La. She was found on the street early that morning and pronounced dead at a local hospital. Police and media misgendered her, but a Louisiana activist organization identified her correctly. Bellâs death âis a reminder of the current climate and national discourse on trans issues,â said the release from Louisiana Trans Advocates. âDehumanizing language and actions lower the barriers to this kind of senseless violence.â The group called on city and state officials to condemn anti-trans discrimination and violence and to work against institutional racism. Police have yet to make an arrest but have asked the public for help in identifying a suspect.
Shantee Tucker, United States
Shantee Tucker, 30, was shot to death September 5 on a Philadelphia street by someone firing from inside a pickup truck. Witnesses had seen her arguing with the person in the truck just before she was shot, and police believe she knew her killer. The police also said they don't think the attack was motivated by her gender identity, but her friends and trans activists don't agree. Friends recalled Tucker, who worked in a beauty supply store, as a sincere and down-to-earth person.
Tucker had just celebrated a birthday.
London Moore, United States
London Moore, 20, was found shot to death September 8 in North Port, Fla. Her car was found the next day at a different location. Police said the crime was an isolated incident and that they believe she knew her killer, who remains at large.
On September 1, Moore posted on her Facebook that she was âgoing to give this whole love thing one more chance.â
âWish me luck,â she added.
Ms Columbia, United States
Residents of Queens are reacting with shock and grief at the news that Miss Colombia, a colorfully attired Jackson Heights personality who was a fixture at LGBTQ Pride celebrations and other gatherings, was found dead in the waters off Jacob Riis Park in the early morning hours of October 4.
Miss Colombia, aka Osvaldo Gomez, preferred male pronouns and was an attorney in his native MedellĂn, Colombia, arriving in the US in the 1970s fleeing persecution in his homeland, he stated in 2015 in the video documentary series âNo Your City.â He was 64.
At an evening vigil on October 5 in Jackson Heights, out gay City Councilmember Daniel Dromm of Jackson Height said Miss Colombia âwas an iconic figure in the LGBT community and beyond. She was beloved by all who saw her in the streets, at parades, and in the neighborhood wearing her colorful outfits and a bird on her shoulder. Her cheerfulness and ability to bring a smile to the faces of all who met her will be missed by all New Yorkers. I remember marching with Miss Colombia at the first Queens Pride Parade and at other parades across the city, including the India Day Parade and the Chinese New Year Parade, among others. While life did not always treat Miss Colombia with all the respect she was due, New Yorkers will remember Miss Colombia as a hero to everyone. May Miss Colombia rest in peace.â
Nikki Janelle Enriquez, United States
Nikki Janelle Enriquez, 28, of Laredo, Texas, was found dead near Interstate 35 in south Texas September 15. She has been shot in the head. Juan David Ortiz, 35, an intelligence supervisor for the U.S. Border Patrol, is charged with murdering Enriquez and three other women. Police and prosecutors are calling the murders a serial killing spree in which Ortiz singled out sex workers. They have not ruled out the possibility that there are other victims. Enriquez, so far the only known transgender victim, was described by family members as âvery outgoing,â âalways smiling,â and âloved by the gay community.â
Ciara Minaj Carter Frazier, United States
Ciara Minaj Carter Frazier, 31, was stabbed to death in Chicago the night of October 3. She was found in the backyard of an abandoned house and pronounced dead at the scenc. Police believe her killer was a man she had been arguing with at the house, but they have yet to apprehend him. Her death came just over a month after the fatal shooting of transgender Chicagoan Deejay Stanton. âIt feels like we are being targeted,â LaSaia Wade, executive director of Chicago trans organization Brave Space Alliance, told the Chicago Sun-Times. She knew Frazier through the local ball scene. âIâm frustrated and upset with the lack of cases turning around,â she continued. âThere is a lack of [concern for] our safety from police.â
Jessie Sumlar, United States
On July 19, 30-year-old Jessie Sumlar was found stabbed to death in Jacksonville, Florida. According to loved ones, Sumlar regularly performed in drag and identified as queer. A friend writes: âI will miss you so much! I looked forward to seeing your beautiful smile! You were such a kind and thoughtful person. Rest with Jesus my beautiful Jessie! Youve impacted more lives with smiles and good purpose than you know. Ill never forget your warm touches on my shoulder and soft voice and how you ALWAYS spoke to everybody when you entered the room.â
Roxsana Hernandez, United States
Roxsana Hernandez died while in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement after fleeing violence and discrimination in Honduras.
Hernandez recently petitioned for asylum after traveling as part of a caravan of migrants fleeing violence in Central America.
Roxana HernĂĄndez reportedly died from HIV-related complications following an alleged five-day detention in whatâs known by immigrant rights groups as the âice boxâ â Ice detention facilities notorious for their freezing temperatures.
Four months before joining the caravan, Hernandez said, she was walking home when MS-13 gang members started screaming "We don't want you in this neighborhood, you fucking faggot" at her before gang-raping her.
"Four of them raped me and as a result I got HIV," Hernandez told BuzzFeed News. "Trans people in my neighborhood are killed and chopped into pieces, then dumped inside potato bags."
Standing in front of a church in Puebla, Mexico, playing with a silver cross around her neck, Hernandez said that gangs had continued to threaten her and told her she had to leave the area where she lived in Honduras.
"I didn't want to come to Mexico â I wanted to stay in Honduras but I couldn't," Hernandez said. "They kill trans people in Honduras. I'm scared of that."
Hernandez said she was able to put some money together to head to Guatemala. Her plan was to return to the US, from which she had previously been deported three times. She had some family in the US but said they did not accept her because she was trans.
From Guatemala she went to Mexico, where she eventually linked up with the caravan of 1,200 to 1,500 migrants heading north.
MondragĂłn said Hernandez had been sick when she turned herself in to US border authorities but was in good spirits.
"She told me she loved me. She had courage, but was nervous at the thought of entering the US again," MondragĂłn said. "I'll remember her as a timid, respectful person, always giving the other girls advice and sharing her food."
Vanessa Campos, 36, a trans woman working as a prostitute, was shot dead on August 17 in Paris' bois de Boulogne. She was originally from Peru and had been living in Paris for two years. The police initially referred to her as a "male transvestite".
Local media reports said Ms Campos had been attempting to prevent one of her clients from being mugged before she was fatally shot in the chest.
âVanesa was a very soft person,â says Rincon. âShe was good at listening. After the death of her father back in Peru, Vanesa took on the role of breadwinner and she was still sending money home to her family.â
âWhen I went back to the forest a few weeks ago for the memorial, I saw how Vanesa and her friends had tried to make it safer to work,â Rincon says. She explains that the area is dark and isolated but the women had set up battery-operated lights, brought water bottles and made a makeshift shelter so theyâd have privacy with clients and avoid being arrested under French exhibitionism laws frequently used to target sex workers.
âVanesaâs friends have to keep working there, in the place where she was murdered,â Rincon says. âIt's now a communal cemetery, with candles and people going there to pray.â
Four unknown women, India
Following a false rumor that transgender women were kidnapping children for sex trafficking in Hyderabad, four transgender women were attacked by a mob on May 26, 2018. One of the women died. Local police issued an "Appeal to Public" saying that the rumors of criminal involvement by transgender women were "fake" and that the public should not "take law into your hands...so that innocents won't become a victim of those rumors anymore.
Naomi Hersi, United Kingdom
Naomi Hersi, 36, was found stabbed to death at Heathrow Palace in London at 10:30 on Sunday 18 March 2018. Jesse McDonald, 24, from Hounslow, has been charged with murder. A 17-year-old girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was released on bail after being charged with assisting an offender.
Naomi who lived in Mill Hill, north London, was described on social media as a âtennis lover, music junkie, film and tv addictâ. She was of Somali origin who had lived in the United States before returning to the UK. One neighbour said: âShe was fun to be around and a real character. She was into music and tennis. She was a nice person.â Another neighbour said: âNaomi was a flamboyant, lovely fun person. I think she had problems in her life but was well liked. We are devastated to lose a friend and neighbour.â
In April, a transgender woman was shot dead in Pakistan, making her the 56th trans person to be killed in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa region in the last three years.
Sheena, who lived in the Shewa area, was allegedly attacked by a group of armed men who beat her up and then shot her dead on Sunday night.
Sheena, Pakistan
In April, a transgender woman was shot dead in Pakistan, making her the 56th trans person to be killed in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa region in the last three years.
Sheena, who lived in the Shewa area, was allegedly attacked by a group of armed men who beat her up and then shot her dead on Sunday night.
Unknown woman, Pakistan
August: Police in Peshawar, Pakistan, have arrested two suspects in the killing and dismemberment of a transgender woman, with one found carrying a shopping bag containing the victimâs body parts. The victim, identified only as Nazo, was shot to death late Thursday, and her body was then âhacked to pieces,â Radio Free Europe reports, citing an interview that Police Superintendent Cantt Waseem Riaz gave to Pakistani media.
Unknown woman, Pakistan
September: A transgender woman in Pakistan has died after being set afire by four men when she resisted sexual assault. The men had taken the woman to an isolated area in the city of Sahiwal, in the eastern part of the nation last Thursday, The Times of India reports. She fought back when they tried to assault her, and then they set her on fire. She suffered burns on 80 percent of her body and died while being transported to a hospital.
Sheila, a transgender woman and sex worker, was shot in the streets of Tepic on March 14, 2018.
Yoselyn, Mexico
Yoselyn, a transgender woman and sex worker, was found beheaded inside the room of a short stay motel in Ălamo, Veracruz on April 5, 2018. She was seen with a client who left before the corpse was found.
Gretchen Alina, Mexico
Gretchen Alina, a transgender woman and drag queen show performer was strangled to death in Monterrey on April 10, 2018. She performed as Lorena Hererra.
Yamileth Quintero, Mexico
Yamileth Quintero, a transgender woman and beauty queen was shot in Culiacan after an encounter with a man she had met online, May 24, 2018.
Nataly Briyth SĂĄnchez, Mexico
Nataly Briyth SĂĄnchez, an undocumented sex worker originally from Honduras, was murdered during a sexual encounter on June 19, 2018 in Tapachula. The client stabbed her to death after discovering that she was transgender.[285]
Katty, Mexico
Katty, a transgender woman and sex worker was shot by an unknown man at a nightclub in Yautepec de Zaragoza on June 27, 2018.[286]\
Chanel, Mexico
Chanel, a 45 year-old transexual sex worker, was shot in the streets of Toluca, July 18, 2018.
Alaska Contreras Ponce, Mexico
Alaska Contreras Ponce, 25, a transgender beauty queen and sex worker, was found dead with her neck sliced by barbed wire after gruesome torture in Martinez de la Torre, July 25, 2018.[288]
Juan C.M., Mexico
Juan C. M., a 24 year old transgender woman and local taxi driver, was found dead in Santa Maria Atzompa on August 12, 2018. Apparently, she had a gunshot wound.
Samuel Santolli, Mexico
Samuel Santolli, a transgender woman and sex worker, was stabbed to death by her lover, a Salvadorian gang member in Tapachula, May 26, 2018.[290]
Diego Armando Sanchez Medina, Mexico
Diego Armando Sanchez Medina, 32, a transgender woman and hairdresser, was shot 28 times by armed men in Guadalajara, August 27, 2018.[291]
Arturo, Mexico
April 27th, 2018: Arturo, a trans woman, was found in the entrance to a field Villa de los Belenes neighborhood of the municipality of Zapopan .