Hewwo! Can a Spanish speaker educate our mostly anglo group about good terminology, or point us to reliable web sources in English or Spanish that can help with this? Only one of us at the moment is a native Spanish speaker, and his background doesn't have a lot of non-gender-binary organizing, so this is new linguistic territory for all of us. Also, he's from Argentina, so he says that sometimes his phraseology might not translate well for other Latinos.

One example: we have a line about our planned programming that says "Women and trans-only workshops solely for those identifying as women, trans, or gender-nonconforming" and our guy was like "I don't know how to translate that." He suggested "Talleres exclusivos para mujeres, trans, o para quienes se identifiquen como mujeres, trans, o genero no definido" but we would love some help.

And while we're at it, here'ss another phrase we're struggling with: "Allied programs with organizations in youth enrichment, gentrification resistance, economic enfranchisement, transportation equity, and environmental justice." He wrote: "Programas aliados con organizaciones de enriquecimiento Juvenil (**¿? No se cómo se traduce), resistencia a la gentrificación, economic enfranchisement (**¿? No se cómo se traduce), equidad de transporte, y justicia ambiental."

¡Gracias por ayudarnos!

Josh
The New York Mechanical Gardens / El Jardín Mecánico de NYC

On Mon, Apr 6, 2015 at 1:13 AM, Ariel C <ariel.climer@gmail.com> wrote:
Ideas: some people in Los Angeles have taken to saying say WTF night for womyn/trans/femme and then in the explanation say- or for anyone who has felt marginalized in a primarily cis-men environment. But it might help to find a group that serves those populations and email them to ask for wording and/or suggestions.

-Ariel

On Sunday, April 5, 2015, Lauren Warbeck <lauren.warbeck@gmail.com> wrote:
Still in development.  We're in the middle of a move so most of our programming revamps are on hold

On Sun, Apr 5, 2015 at 9:15 AM, Angel York <aniola@gmail.com> wrote:

Bike Farm does women & trans night for anyone who identifies as either of those.  What did you end up doing with multilingual nights?

On Apr 29, 2014 3:21 PM, "Lauren Warbeck" <lauren.warbeck@gmail.com> wrote:
Oh HEYYYY again...

It's a double email kinda day.


1) Multilingual Nights

We're hosting our first ever multilingual nights YAYYYYY!  We now have a posse of rad mechanics who are fluent in English, Spanish, French, Cantonese, and Mandarin and we are planning to hold a series of multilingual instruction nights.  We're about to have our first sub-committee meeting about how we're going to go about the planning of these nights (ie: Do we have a strictly Spanish night, or a Spanish & French night?  What is the role of Anglo mechanics in these nights?  What are the underlying needs of these communities beyond language instruction?), but first I wanted to find out if any of you have feedback or resource materials about your own experiences hosting multilingual nights.  What did you set out to do?  Did it work?  What did you learn?

2) Women on Wheels

We're in the process of reconsidering the reach and name of our women's night, Women on Wheels.  This name has been revisited several times by our collective, and again we're feeling the need for change.  Those of you who commit energy to thinking about providing services across the gender/sexuality spectrum...I'm looking for your input.  The key challenges for us, (and maybe all of us?) I think, are two-fold:

First, it's about holding space for those who adhere to identity politics (tangible and named - Woman, Lesbian, Dyke, sometimes Transwoman etc) while also holding space for folks who exist all along the gender and sexuality spectrum (intangible and variably named - Queer, Tomboi, sometimes Transwoman, Genderqueer, etc ).  As in, how do we hold safer space for butch grandmas and trans women and gender queer folks all at once?  Is it feasible or possible to hold safer space strictly around gender variance?  Or is it presumptuous as fuck to try to lump these diverse communities together?  Or reductionist to assume gender experience is the key connecting factor between these individuals (and not race, or class, or ....)?

Second, it's about negotiating the instances of inclusion and exclusion that emerge as a result of differing levels of awareness and knowledge around these varied philosophies and ways of identifying.  This is the crux of why we've called it Women's Night for so long.  While in practice our "women's night" is attended by trans-women, cis-women, femmes, masculine-identified genderqueers, tombois, etc etc, we have continued to call it women's night to make sure that people who aren't familiar with the world of post-modern gender identity know they are welcome, and cis-men know easily and clearly that it is not for them.  I guess, to make it legible to mainstream communities, while still welcoming to non-mainstream communities.   

Meanwhile, we've also had interest from femme-identified cis-men and trans men in having services for masculine-presenting folks or folks who are presumed masculine (which again, is on a really broad spectrum).  We're in convo with folks about their needs and wants, but it would also be great to have input from other shops.  Where I'm really seeking is input about how your shops are drawing the lines around participation in nights for marginalized communities (including communities bonded around race, ethnicity, ability, etc) and/or how to meld diverse communities in appropriate and supportive ways. 

I know that Plan B has Ladies, Trans, and Sissies Night, and BICAS has Women, Trans, and Femme night.  Where are folks at with their organizing process around this?  What are other shops doing?  


You are all so great.

Lauren


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