Category Archives: Gay history

A Trans Pioneer Making Excellent Theatre at the High Performance Rodeo

Belgian artist Vanessa Van Durme is in Calgary this week performing in her autobiographical play, Look Mummy, I’m Dancing, at the High Performance Rodeo.

One Yellow Rabbit presents: Look Mummy, I’m Dancing

The play is a heartfelt monologue that leaves the viewer with a lingering insight into her life as a transsexual woman; leaving an artistic impression of both the pain and triumph it caused her.  Born male in 1948, Van Durme struggled with her gender identity, coming into conflict with her parents and society at large.  As a young adult, she turned to prostitution in order to survive in an ignorant and marginalizing society.

However in 1975, her life took a turn when she travelled to Morocco to undergo a sex change operation.  The operation was conducted at the Clinique Du Parc, in Casablanca, which for decades was a spot of international pilgrimage for those suffering from “gender disphoria syndrome.”

Clinque du Parc was founded by Dr. Georges Burou, an innovator and pioneer of modern male-to-female sex reassignment surgery.  He invented the technique in 1956, and by the time Van Durme had her surgery the clinic had performed more than 3000 operations.

British born April Ashley (née George Jamieson) underwent the gender reassignment surgery at Clinique Du Parc in 1960 and found herself later in high-profile divorce proceedings with her aristocratic husband. The case hinged on a court deciding her gender and caused ripples through the Commonwealth.  Her husband was successful in nullifying their marriage by establishing that she was not legally a woman (whose precedent in England did not get overturned until 2004’s Gender Recognition Act).

Clinique Du Parc had Canadian patients as well.  In the early 1970’s, Canadian Provinces struggled to amend their vital statistics laws to allow transsexuals to change gender on their birth certificates – controversial in its day.  Alberta amended their Vital Statistics Act in 1973 to allow post-operative trans-sexual persons to be able to change their birth certificates.

I will be interviewing Van Durme about her artistic practice this evening at 6:30 PM in the Laycraft Lounge, EPCOR CENTRE for the Performing Arts, 225 8th Ave SE (2nd floor).  Please come out to this free event.

1200 Visits to CalgaryGayHistory.ca and a leave of absence

Dear Readers,

Thank you for all of the feedback and encouragement in the Calgary Queer History project.  Due to the current by-election in Calgary Centre and my work with Elections Canada, I am taking a break from the project for six weeks.  Look for new posts in early December.

I am excited to report that there have been over 1200 visits to the site since we launched at Pride in the beginning of September.  Despite the project being hyper-local in nature, there has even been some international readership!  Have a great November and see you in December,

Kevin

Calgary’s role in decriminalizing homosexuality in the ’60s

Although today we think of Canadian Courts as a progressive force in the country (as in the case of same-sex marriage), in 1967, the Supreme Court made a decision that left Canada the western country with the most draconian approach to dealing with homosexuals.

Everett George Klippert (1926 – 1996), was the last person in Canada to be arrested, charged, prosecuted, convicted, and imprisoned for homosexuality; the reforms which led to Canadian legalization of homosexuality were a direct result of the Klippert case.

In the court proceedings, Klippert stated that he had engaged in homosexual activity actively when he started work in a Calgary dairy at the age of 16 or 17; and had continued being active until he was found out and arrested by Calgary Police in the late ’50s who charged him for gross indecency.  Klippert did not defend himself or consult a lawyer.  He cooperated with his captors in order to avoid scandal.  He was sentenced to four years in the penitentiary.

Upon his release in 1963, Klippert felt his continued presence in Calgary was bringing shame on his family, so he moved to Pine Point, Northwest Territories where he secured a job as a mechanic’s helper and tried to maintain a low profile.  On August 15th, 1965, RCMP brought in Klippert for questioning about an arson case.  The RCMP upon reviewing his criminal file quizzed him about his homosexuality.  According to Klippert, he was told that unless he pleaded guilty to homosexuality, he would be charged with arson.  Consequently, Klippert admitted to having had consensual homosexual sex with four separate adult men.  He was subsequently arrested and charged with four counts of gross indecency and sentenced to three more years in prison.

Three months into his prison sentence, he was given official notice by the RCMP that the Crown was proceeding to have him declared “a dangerous sexual offender.”  A court-ordered psychiatrist assessed the mild-mannered Klippert as “incurably homosexual”, and he was sentenced to “preventive detention”  – indefinitely – as a dangerous sexual offender.  Klippert appealed to the Court of Appeal for the Northwest Territories; his appeal was dismissed. He then appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada; his appeal was dismissed in a controversial 3-2 decision. [See the judgment: here.]

The Globe and Mail declared, “it is strange to the point of being unbelievable that conduct in Britain, which would not even bring a criminal charge, can, in Canada, send a man to prison for life.”

On November 7, 1967, the day Klippert’s conviction was upheld by the Supreme Court, there was political outrage, ultimately causing the government to present the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1968-69 (Bill C-150), which, among other things, decriminalized homosexual acts between consenting adults.

It also was the source of Pierre Elliot Trudeau’s, then the Minister of Justice, famous quote, in a media scrum outside the House of Commons on December 21, 1967:

“Take this thing on homosexuality, I think the view we take here is that there’s no place for the state in the bedrooms of the nation, and I think what’s done in private between adults doesn’t concern the Criminal Code. When it becomes public, this is a different matter…”

The law passed, and homosexuality was decriminalized in Canada in 1969.  Police across the country were opposed to the change.  Calgary Police Chief, Ken McIver, said the new law represented a decay in Canadian society.  He described homosexuality as “a horrible, vicious and terrible thing.  We do not need it in this country.”

Klippert remained in prison until July 21, 1971, whereupon he was released. He lived 25 more years before his death from kidney disease in 1996.

Listen to CBC Radio, November 7th, 1967, interview with Klippert’s Member of Parliament, Bud Orange, and Justice Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau.