Yahoo – AFP,
Jo Biddle, 21 Oct 2014
For Donna
Harding, joining the Australian army was a bid to try to suppress what she had
known from an early age -- she was a girl trapped in a boy's body.
"It's
quite a common pathway for people who are gender conflicted, trying to fix what
we see is wrong with us, and see the military as the way of doing that,"
Major Harding said.
Eighteen
countries around the world expressly allow transgender personnel to serve,
including major US allies like Australia, Britain, Canada, Sweden and New
Zealand.
But in the
United States, despite the 2011 repeal of the divisive "Don't Ask, Don't
Tell" law, which banned gays from serving openly, there is little talk of
extending the same rights to transgender people.
There are
an estimated 15,500 transgender people believed to be serving in the US armed
forces, but, under the current rules, if they are discovered the military is
required to dismiss them.
Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel said earlier this year he was open to reconsidering the
current ban. But as yet no review is underway, and any move to incorporate
transgender people openly into the ranks is likely to stir controversy.
Harding
joined the Australian reserve forces in 2000 before entering the regular army
in 2004. She said she had "lived under the constant anxiety and fear that
someone would find out my secret."
"I've
lost count of the number of times it would have been so easy to drive into that
oncoming truck," Harding told the audience at the event organized by the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), noting that 80 percent of transgender
people have contemplated suicide, and some 40 percent have tried it.
Now after
transitioning to become a woman, Harding works with the Royal Australian
Nursing Corps and says that being "open and authentic is the key to being
able to perform your job."
Major
Alexandra Larsson, an intelligence officer with the Swedish Air Force, insisted
she had been very lucky to receive good support once she plucked up the courage
to become a woman, saying she has "the best job in the world."
"The
problem today is that it depends on who you are and where you are. And it
shouldn't be like that. Everybody should have the same opportunity ... but
hopefully people can look at me and say at least 'for her it was
possible.'"
Being
true to yourself
Key to
ensuring that transgender people can be embraced by the army is education, and
working so those who undertake the difficult decision can do so with dignity
and security.
There is
little to suggest that including them has any effect on a military's
operational effectiveness.
"Without
doubt, the more mature our inclusive policies become, the better our
operational delivery becomes, because we have got people who are being
themselves, they are being authentic in the workplace, without having to have
personal challenges alongside that," said Squadron Leader Sarah Maskell,
who promotes equality and diversity in the British Royal Air Force.
Issues such
as sharing showers or medical costs and care should be relatively easy to deal
with by applying some common sense, the panellists argued.
Sergeant
Lucy Jordan, the first person in the New Zealand Defense Forces to become a woman
while serving, praised the support she had been given by her commanding
officers.
"What
my organization gave me, and what we are doing here, is primarily about
investing in the most important thing that an organization has: its
people."
Related Articles:
"The Akashic Circle" – Jul 17, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: Religion, The Humanization of God, Benevolent Design, DNA, Akashic Circle, (Old) Souls, Gaia, Indigenous People, Talents, Reincarnation, Genders, Gender Switches, In “between” Gender Change, Gender Confusion, Shift of Human Consciousness, Global Unity,..... etc.) - (Text version)
“… Gender Switching
Old souls, let me tell you something. If you are old enough, and many of you are, you have been everything. Do you hear me? All of you. You have been both genders. All of you have been what I will call between genders, and that means that all of you have had gender switches. Do you know what happens when it's time for you to switch a gender? We have discussed it before. You'll have dozens of lifetimes as the same gender. You're used to it. It's comfortable. You cannot conceive of being anything else, yet now it's time to change. It takes approximately three lifetimes for you to get used to it, and in those three lifetimes, you will have what I call "gender confusion."
It isn't confusion at all. It's absolutely normal, yet society often will see it as abnormal. I'm sitting here telling you you've all been through it. All of you. That's what old souls do. It's part of the system. …”
Old souls, let me tell you something. If you are old enough, and many of you are, you have been everything. Do you hear me? All of you. You have been both genders. All of you have been what I will call between genders, and that means that all of you have had gender switches. Do you know what happens when it's time for you to switch a gender? We have discussed it before. You'll have dozens of lifetimes as the same gender. You're used to it. It's comfortable. You cannot conceive of being anything else, yet now it's time to change. It takes approximately three lifetimes for you to get used to it, and in those three lifetimes, you will have what I call "gender confusion."
It isn't confusion at all. It's absolutely normal, yet society often will see it as abnormal. I'm sitting here telling you you've all been through it. All of you. That's what old souls do. It's part of the system. …”
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