AS LGBT Persons Age……

March 27, 2011

“Generation Silent”: Facing the Needs and Challenges of LGBT Elders

For adults, 65 and older, aging can present numerous challenges, including the ability to maintain good  health. But for many of the nation’s estimated 3 million lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) elders, growing older may also mean facing very difficult choices, such as choosing to go back into the closet when entering an assisted living home or refusing to seek medical services to avoid potential discrimination.  

These issues will be among the topics addressed on Saturday,  April 2, when UNC’s School of Social Work hosts, “Breaking  Generation Silent: Facing the Needs and Challenges of LGBT Elders.” This Chapel Hill event, which is free and open to the public, kicks off at 1 p.m. at the William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education with a screening of the 2010 documentary, “Gen Silent.”   

This film has received praise from film festivals across the country and addresses the realities confronting many LGBT elders, including poverty, isolation, inadequate access to health and long-term care services and discrimination from aging providers. The one-hour film by award-winning director, Stu Maddux, also examines current efforts to educate and train providers and caregivers about the existence of LGBT elders — a population expected to double by 2030 — and their specific social, medical, and financial needs.  

For more information, go to http://ssw.unc.edu/diversity/about/aging and for another showing of the film on Friday, April lst, see http://www.lgbtcenterofraleigh.com/site/index.php.


Who Knew This Story of Native American Tradition?

March 26, 2011

Watch for  ”TWO SPIRITS”  A Native American Story

On Emmy-Award Winning PBS Series in June 

Two Spirits interweaves the tragic story of a mother’s loss of her son with a revealing look at the largely unknown history of a time when the world wasn’t simply divided into male and female and many Native American cultures held places of honor for people of integrated genders. Powerful and moving, Lydia Nibley’s Two Spirits explores the life and death of Fred Martinez and the ancient Native American two-spirit tradition. Two Spirits will premiere on the Emmy Award-winning PBS series Independent Lens, hosted by America Ferrera, on Tuesday, June 14, 2011 (check local listings.)

Fred Martinez told his mother he felt as if he was both a boy and a girl, and she explained that this is a special gift, according to traditional Navajo culture. But the place where two discriminations meet is a dangerous place to live, and Fred became one of the youngest hate-crime victims in modern history when he was brutally murdered at sixteen. Between tradition and controversy, and freedom and fear, lies the truth-the bravest choice you can make is to be yourself.

Two Spirits explores issues of national concern including the bullying and violence commonly faced by LGBT people, and the epidemic of LGBT teen suicide, and reveals the range of gender expression that has long been seen as a healthy part of many of the indigenous cultures of North America, and of Navajo culture in particular.

The Navajo believe that to maintain harmony, there must be a balanced interrelationship between the feminine and the masculine within the individual, in families, in the culture, and in the natural world. For the first time on film, Two Spirits tells stories from the Navajo tradition of four genders. The first gender is the feminine woman. The second is the masculine man. The third is the male-bodied person who has a feminine essence-nadleehi. The fourth is the female-bodied person who has a masculine essence-dilbaa.

In Navajo, nadleehi means “one who is transformed,” and as the film traces the ramifications of Fred’s murder, it also shows the transformation being undertaken by Native activists who are working to restore the rich heritage of two-spirit people and to claim their place within their tribal communities.

“The film team is working with over sixty organizations nationwide to have six million people see the film and to help expand the national conversation about gender,” says the director of Two Spirits, Lydia Nibley.

Lois Vossen the producer and founder of Independent Lens explains, “Two Spirits is an important film that tells a modern story with deep historical roots and does so in a way that is surprising and striking. It’s a film that shows humankind at both our best and worst. It’s gut-wrenching at times, but also hopeful and very engaging.”

To learn more about the film, and the issues involved, visit the companion website for Two Spirits at www.pbs.org/independentlens/two-spirits. Get detailed information on the film, watch preview clips, read an interview with the filmmaker, and explore the subject in depth with links and resources. The site also features a Talkback section where viewers can share their ideas and opinions.


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