Transgender Day Of Remembrance 2011: 20 Trans Pioneers

20 Transgender Pioneers

Today is the 13th International Transgender Day of Remembrance, a day when we remember trans people who have been victims of homicide.

The event was started to honor Rita Hester who was murdered on November 28th, 1998. Hester's death launched the "Remembering Our Dead" web project in 1998 and a San Francisco candlelight vigil in 1999. Transgenderdor.org notes that her murder -- like most anti-transgender murder cases -- has yet to be solved.

The Trans Murder Monitoring project reports that since 2008, there have been 755 reports of murdered trans people in 51 countries. It should be noted that this number is probably much lower than the actual figure, as it only represents known cases due to issues of language used in reporting the murders (different countries have different terms for being transgender) and due to the fact that not all trans people who are murdered are identified as trans.

Regardless, it's a heartbreaking and outrageous number and the Transgender Day of Remembrance is a day not only to mourn those we've lost and celebrate the lives they lived, but also bring awareness to the struggle and dangers that trans people face around the world on a daily basis.

In honor of the 13th International Transgender Day of Remembrance, we're featuring 20 trans pioneers in the slideshow below.

Of course there are countless others who deserve recognition and celebration and Huff Post Gay Voices endeavors to feature as many of their stories as we can all year around -- not just today.

Are there other trans people you want to remember and/or celebrate? Tell us about them in the comments section below. For more information on the Transgender Day of Remembrance, click here.

Before You Go

20 Transgender Pioneers

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