Tag Archives: Gender Review

Transgender Day of Visibility in Calgary

On March 31st 2026, I attended the annual flag raising for Transgender Day of Visibility (TDoV) at Calgary City Hall. I attend this flag raising almost every year, and while listening to this year’s speakers, I felt compelled to write about this event’s local history. 

Blog post author Levin Ifko’s artistic impression of TDOV 2026

Trans Day of Visibility was first conceptualized in 2009 by Michigan trans activist Rachel Crandall Crocker as a way to acknowledge and celebrate trans people. The creation of TDoV came about, in part, as a reaction to transgender people’s lack of recognition in LGBTQ+ culture and spaces. At the time, the only widely recognized day that centred trans people was Trans Day of Remembrance (TDoR), a day of mourning the loss of trans people due to violence. Deeming it necessary to have an occasion to celebrate, a handful of cities in the USA marked the first ever TDoV that same year, hosting community organised rallies, events, and flag raisings. 

As word spread about this day, events celebrating TDoV started popping up internationally. In 2013, Naheed Nenshi, as Calgary’s then-mayor, proclaimed March 31st as Trans Day of Visibility in the city. This came at the same time in Edmonton, where the mayor had proclaimed the day and subsequent days as Trans Awareness Week. This proclamation undoubtedly reflected ongoing discussions between local trans community members, as well as the work and resource sharing that the Trans Equality Society of Alberta (TESA) was doing at the time. 

One of the speakers at this year’s event was Amelia Newbert, Co-Founder and current Co-Executive Director of Skipping Stone Foundation. During this year’s event, Newbert recalled her experience being involved with the first large-scale Trans Day of Visibility event in the city, which took place “right across the street,” at the Jack Singer Concert Hall in 2016. 

When the 2016 event was covered in the Calgary Herald, Newbert expressed excitement about growing public support for LGBTQ+ rights in the province, particularly the guidelines introduced by the province in Bill 7 to “ensure respect for gender diversity in Alberta schools.” Ten years later, a different story is being told in the legislature. In the past few years, TDoV has continued to be celebrated by our community alongside our growing fears that the provincial government may implement legislation targeting trans youth. This has now become a reality. 

When I think of my own experience attempting to access gender-affirming care as a teenager living in Calgary in the same year as this first TDoV event, I recall just how meaningful and important it felt that these strides were being made provincially at the same time. It made the process of coming out less lonely – I talked openly to my teachers, friends, classmates, counsellors, and medical professionals about my concerns. At the time, it felt empowering and hopeful to know that there was growing support for trans people in the province at a provincial level. Now, I feel there’s a growing need to define empowerment and hope on our own terms. 

Reflecting on a speech she made during the 2016 TDoV event, Amelia Newbert remarked, “ten years ago, I said that our stories as trans people are triumphant. And if you’re not feeling particularly triumphant today, it’s just because our story isn’t over.” 

Just as our story isn’t over, it’s also worth noting that trans stories can not and should not be defined only by harm and suffering. In the spirit of TDoV, community organiser and director of TransAction Alberta, Dr. Victoria Bucholtz asked us to use our time and energy on March 31, 2026 to celebrate the trans people in our lives, instead of giving more attention to the provincial government’s violations of healthcare and attacks upon trans youth. (Of course, these remain issues that absolutely warrant our continued attention and action at other times.) 

As of 2026, TDoV celebrations in the city seem to grow larger each year. Speakers encouraged those at the flag raising to attend a drag show with an all-trans cast later that evening. The flag raising was attended by over one hundred community members, support organisations, union reps, and more. It was also attended by almost all city councillors, including Mayor Jeromy Farkas, who decided to break from their council meeting to be present. 

Speakers included trans elder and Lakota Two-Spirit knowledge keeper Karrie-Lynn, who candidly discussed stories from her childhood, and experiences which led her to coming out in 2021. She also expressed that being “comfortable, open and honest with not just the world, but ourselves” is what trans people are “truly fighting for and towards.” Other speakers included local drag artists, a parent of a trans child, Queer Momentum’s Executive Director Faye Johnstone, NDP member and local organiser Beau Shaw, alongside Mayor Farkas and MLA Court Ellington. 

The final speaker of the day was James Demers, who finished his words by listing the names and contributions from trans people across history. Including Wendy Carlos, Alan Hart, Lynn Conway, and the Wichowski sisters, among many others. 

I’d like to conclude this piece in the same way, by mentioning the names of people who have been pivotal to our local trans history. This includes Rupert Raj, a nationally recognized trans activist who started the Federation for the Advancement of Canadian Transsexuals (F.A.C.T.), and the publication Gender Review: A FACTual Journal, while living in Calgary in the late 1970s. 

This also includes Mardi Pieronik, who was born in Calgary in the 1960s. After living “stealth” for the majority of her adult life, Pieronik started talking publicly about what it was like to be trans in her teens and early twenties in Calgary and Vancouver. Now 64 years old, she tells these stories via social media and on her podcast A Life Lived Trans (which you can listen to and support here). 

As well as Anna Murphy, whose passionate political involvement and community activism I’ve looked up to since coming out in the 2010s. 

Prominent figures in Calgary’s trans history also include many of the speakers at the 2026 TDoV event, representing decades and years of experiences as organisers, artists, and activists that have shaped this city’s trans history and will continue to shape its trans futures.

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Before the Net: Calgary’s 70s Gay Press

The history of gay publishing in Calgary goes back virtually 50 years. In a time before the internet existed, local gay publications served as an essential medium for bringing the community together. They served as the connective tissue to Calgary’s LGBT body politic: allowing for reflection, celebration, and debate. They also were the main advertising vehicle for promoting gay businesses and services.

Some publications were decidedly modest affairs and others more professional. The Calgary Gay History Project presents this stroll through our community’s past press – part one….

Carousel Capers: The newsletter of Club Carousel – this monthly publication which ran from 1969 to at least 1975, was a hand typed and drawn, mimeographed affair. It grew to 24+ pages in its heyday with columns such as Chatter Box, and Cecil’s secrets. Club business, including attendance figures, budgets and meeting minutes were presented – keeping the Club leaders accountable to their membership.

Gay Information and Resources Calgary (GIRC), founded in 1975, was Calgary’s first peer support centre and community hub. It had a series of publications changing format, name, and page length – with the occasional hiatus – as budgets and volunteers waxed and waned. GIRC’s first newsletter published in late 1976 became “Gay Moods” in 1977. In January 1978, the publication changed to newsprint and a tabloid design, called “Gay Calgary.” As GIRC helped spearhead the formation of the Alberta Lesbian and Gay Rights Association in 1979, Gay Calgary became provincial. They published the first issue of “Gay Horizons” in December 1979 with expanded distribution to Red Deer, Edmonton, and later, Medicine Hat.

Gender Review: Canada’s first national transgender publication was started in Calgary in 1978 under the leadership of Nicholas Ghosh (now Rupert Raj). In the 70s, a handful of local doctors created a leading gender dysphoria clinic based out of the University of Calgary’s Faculty of Medicine. Providing both counselling and surgical services, the Sexuality Clinic attracted trans individuals from across the country, like Ghosh, who later moved back to Toronto in 1979. Note: transgender replaced transsexual as a more expansive umbrella term for the trans community in the 1990s.

New Wine: a publication “printed for the ‘glory of God’ by members of a Christian fellowship” reads an early editorial. The monthly newsletter of Calgary’s Metropolitan Community Church (MCC), offered the meditations of a gay-positive church, as well as news, a community calendar and church happenings from MCC congregations across the country.

Dignity Alberta: was a combined newsletter for Dignity Calgary and Dignity Edmonton. Dignity chapters represented gay Catholics across the country and the 1978 issue reported a circulation of 100.

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The Calgary Gay History Project has an incomplete collection for many of these early publications. If you have any in storage and would like to donate them to the archives (we do not mind having multiple copies), please contact us – we can even pick them up.

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Trans History in YYC

In June 1978, a national Trans publication was began in Calgary. Called Gender Review: A FACTual Journal, it was the publication of the Foundation for the Advancement of Canadian Transsexuals (FACT), which began in January of the same year. The non-profit organization focussed on public education of gender dysphoria.

Gender Review‘s premier issue had an article  on “Transsexual Oppression” about Montrealer Inge Stephens; information about transsexual resources; news items such as trans woman Canary Conn’s appearance on the Phil Donahue show; and a listing of books and articles by and about trans people.

The founding president of FACT was Rupert Raj, who moved the organization and publication to Toronto in July 1979.  Raj has gone on to be a leading Trans activist and  educator in Ontario and Canada and in 2013 was inducted into the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives (CLGA) National Portrait Collection.  His personal records are also housed at the CLGA as the Rupert Raj Trans* Collection.

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The University of Victoria’s Moving Trans History Forward 2016 conference’s concluding event is a Founders Panel, on Sunday March 20th from 9:30 AM – noon.  Raj will be one of five panellists.  Unlike other conference events the Founders Panel is free and open to the public – we hope to see you there.

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