Trans March in Toronto draws hundreds in support of transgender community - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 02:49 AM | Calgary | -9.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Trans March in Toronto draws hundreds in support of transgender community

Hundreds of people took part in the Trans March in downtown Toronto on Friday night in solidarity with the city's transgender community.

'There's an excitement here,' says LGBT leader, who helped to organize 1st march in 2009

Consent Comes First, a team at Ryerson University's Office of Sexual Violence Support and Education, tweeted this photo on Friday night of the Trans March. (Consent Comes First @RUPleasure/Twitter)

Hundreds of people took part in the Trans March in downtown Toronto on Friday night in solidarity withthe city's transgender community.

Nicki Ward, a Toronto LGBT leader and director of the Church-Wellesley Neighbourhood Association,helped to organize the first Trans March in Toronto in 2009.

As Ward admired thelarge crowd that gathered on Church Street and Hayden Street at the start of the march on Friday night, shesaid the march has come a long way.

"There's an excitement here, a sense of engagement that what we're doing actually has meaning," Wardsaid.

Ward said the first march did not have the support of Pride Toronto and did not gain that support until2013, when the march movedto Yonge Street.

Now, the march is much larger than it was then, Wardsaid.

"I think a lot of people have embraced it as an event that really speaks to the heart of what Pride and the Stonewall riots were all about."

Since then, the way that people view the transgender community has changed, Wardsaid.

As well, transgender rights in Canada have been enshrined in law, after the CanadianSenate passed a bill more than a year ago that addsgender identity and gender expressionto the Canadian Human Rights Act and the Criminal Code.

Under the law, it is now illegalto discriminate on the basis of gender identity or expression.

"People saw that we actually existed in very large numbers and also that our alliescame out to support us, and that moved people's hearts and minds at Ottawa."

From Church and Hayden Streets, the march went north toBloor Street East,south on YongeStreet and east on Carlton Street to Allan Gardens.

With files from Greg Ross