International Trans Day of Visibility
snəw̓eyəɬ leləm̓ Langara College celebrates the vibrancy and diversity of trans folx within our community for International Trans Day of Visibility (also known as Trans Day of Visibility or TDOV). Each March 31st, TDOV acknowledges the impacts of cissexism and transphobia but takes the day as an opportunity to celebrate all genders and all bodies through collective and individual empowerment and knowledge.
TDOV began in 2010 when organizer and activist, Rachel Crandell, founded the event to celebrate all the amazing things about being trans and being part of the trans community. Through positive social momentum and thoughtful activism, TDOV has grown to be recognized globally. snəw̓eyəɬ leləm̓ is proud to celebrate TDOV in its 16th iteration in 2025.
This growth has been achieved thanks to the tireless campaigning of activists. However, there is more work to be done and snəw̓eyəɬ leləm̓ accepts this responsibility in stride through a commitment to listen to the trans community, educate its leaders and the wider campus community on trans concerns, and joining its voice alongside others to end transphobia and cissexism.
Demonstrable actions of this commitment at Langara include:
- Single stalled bathrooms map
- Langara 101 Pronouns course
- Positive Space training
- Broadening the trans literature section of our library with new acquisitions
- Highlighting films and documentaries within our catalogue to increase trans visibility (see below for list)
One small act of empowerment you can take for yourself this TDOV could include dropping by the Office of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (A171) and picking up a pronoun sticker to attach to your water bottle, laptop, or anything else you would like to use to share your identity. If you’ve completed the Positive Space Training, you can also come get that sticker, too. These two actions signal openness and encourage trans, Two-Spirit, non-binary, gender fluid, gender non-conforming and other individuals to feel more comfortable sharing their pronouns themselves and to demonstrate allyship and/or community.
Resources
Feature films
- The Danish Girl
- Transamerica
- Boys don’t cry
- Tomboy
- Hedwig and the Angry Inch
- A Fantastic Woman
- Laurence Anyways
- The Adventures of Sebastian Cole
- Framing Agnes
Documentaries
- 100% Woman: the Story of Michelle Dumaresq
- Austin Unbound
- Fractal: Stories Across the Gender Spectrum
- From this Day Forward
- Just Gender (DVD)
- Transgender Parents (DVD)
- Becoming Chaz (DVD)
- Entre Il et Ailes
- Kumu Hina
- Trans in Trumpland
- Growing up Trans
- Into Light
- LEVI: Becoming Himself
- Boy I Am (DVD)
- Kiki
- Paris is Burning