Tag: news

  • Two Trans: Two Spirits Stopping Trans Genocide

    Two Trans: Two Spirits Stopping Trans Genocide

    Two Trans: Two Spirits Stopping Trans Genocide

    Charli Christine Marker and Criage Lynette Althage

    Two trans women with one big problem to solve while poet and filmmaker Charli Christine Marker’s approach is very different from Criage Lynette Althage’s, who is a university librarian. They both dream of the same result.

    Captivated by those who represented extremes Chicago-based poet and filmmaker Charli Christine Marker admitted one of her first sheroes was a plus-size model from  the 2000 Guinness World Book of Records, Teighlor, who weighed in at 718 pounds, made her the world’s heaviest supermodel. Now, Marker is a film director who is using her own size to create trans joy. This joy is a wonder to behold as a friendship blossomed between Criage Althage and Charli Marker during an interview at WZRD Chicago 88.3 FM where they unpacked the heavy topic of transphobia. Althage, a reference librarian for professorial research at the Ronald Williams Library at Northeastern Illinois University has a more serious perspective that supports her identity as a trans woman living in Englewood, one of the most violent and underfunded neighborhoods in Chicago.  

    While Althage is participating in outreach and marches with Stop Trans Genocide, Marker is making feature films that celebrate her individuality as a trans woman. Both acknowledge their privilege as white people who do not have to deal with the same racial bias and bigotry as their black sisters in the trans community , hence Althage’s advocacy for Brave Space Alliance.  According to a June 28, 2022 Pew Research Report, “Most Americans favor protecting trans people from discrimination, but fewer support policies related to medical care for gender transitions; many are uneasy with the pace of change on trans issues… Roughly eight-in-ten U.S. adults say there is at least some discrimination against transgender people in our society.”  This discrimination is rampant in places like Northwestern hospital where Marker sought medical treatment. 

    At the hospital, Marker was faced with bigotry and hatred when she expected compassionate care.  

    “My pain was so bad that it led to extreme autistic meltdowns, which caused cops to restrain me, threaten to arrest me, and joke about me being anally raped in prison. This is how intersectional violence works, where transphobia doesn’t reach a fever pitch until it mixes with ableism and fatphobia in me, or race and immigration status in the other.” 

    Marker was able to survive the episode, however, it left her with an indelible scar of distrust and fear of the police, whom she refers to as ACAB (as in All Cops Are Bas—-). 

    According to Criage Lynette Althage, the intersectionality of race, socioeconomic status, and gender identity impacts her experiences with transphobia because “It sadly causes divisions between communities of privilege and those who are marginalized with trust being a barrier for trans communities of color. I think we are constantly working towards merging our collective interests with those of Black and brown communities…”

    Yet, it is bullying that causes gender non-conforming youth to withdraw from school or even commit suicide. Notable cases such as those of Matthew Shepard and Fred Martinez, who were murdered for their gender identity, are the ultimate manifestation of a gender binary culture where there is literally no room (neither bathrooms or locker rooms, in Florida for example) for someone who presents differently. Martinez’s identity as a young Navajo who was beloved by their own community, but despised by those in mainstream culture was explored in the film Two Spirits by Lidya Nibley. Nibley aptly points out how integrated genders are sacred in cultures such as the Navajo. 

    The radical division of gender into a binary of male or female leads to hatred of those who present outside of the status quo, which causes fear and bullying. Native Americans like the Navajo believe in embracing those who have integrated gender identities. The Navajo have at least four words for various gender identities in their language with a legacy focused on honoring everyone’s individual spirit and humanity. 

    Meanwhile, Charli Christine Marker, and Criage Lynette Althage are working on creating their own legacies of standing up for the underdog. Althage does this through activism, and Marker does it through writing poetry and expressing herself in filmmaking. Marker’s next feature film is titled Racine Grace about filmmaker Khloe Gwen from Los Angeles. Racine Grace will premiere on June 10, 2024, at Sweet Void Cinema at 3036 W Chicago Ave 1W, Chicago IL 60622. The free event features free soft drinks, and is mask-mandatory. Find out more about her work by going to her all my links page at https://allmylinks.com/cookierill. Althage can be found working behind the counter at the Ronald Williams Library on the campus of Northeastern Illinois University on days when Northeastern Illinois University is in session.

    Here is a recent poem by Charli Christine Marker, used with permission of the author:

    On Feedist Dysmorphia

    I know a girl whose father wrote for The Simpsons. He wrote the best episode.

    The Best Episode of the Best Show.

    But when I got around to watching it, and observed Homer supposedly comically getting fatter for Disability, it felt like an insult to the beauty of all those I love.

    It made me want to die.

    Four days ago, the girl whose father wrote the episode posted a selfie, four years and over 200 pounds in the making. She was over 60 pounds more than Homer was when he was immobile in the episode, but she was standing upright and happy with a gallon of whole milk in her hand.It was the most beautiful image I’d ever seen in my life. But when I showed my aunt the picture, she was insulted by how it treated the beauty and brilliance and productivity of the niece she loved.

    It made me want to die.

    I am an autobiographical filmmaker, whose work aims to be somewhere between the Simpsons and that selfie. I’ve had friends tell me that they like my work more than The Simpsons even, but I am currently sitting in a 

    Padded Cell

    Because of how I wish I could be an artist like the Girl in the Picture.

    Pacing endlessly and worrying every step about the calories they are burning.

    Charli Christine Marker, 2024

    Charli Christine Marker is a poet and filmmaker with a new feature film titled “Racine Grace” about filmmaker Khloe Green which is being released on June 10, 2024.

  • Poetry, Prison and CommUNITY

    Poetry, Prison and CommUNITY

    Poetry fills the gap in our souls that is left by our need for connection and beauty as human beings. Prison widens that rift, and enhances the importance and impact of true friends. Anthony Spaulding, whose poetic performance To Cut a Barber’s Hands has sparked a flurry of performances across the city, has a loyal friend in Anthony Jones who, at the age of 20, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Jones had his sentence commuted by J.B. Pritzger in 2021 after serving 29 years in prison, met Anthony Spaulding, (incarcerated at the age of 16) at Stateville Correctional Center. “We are good friends.” said Jones of Spaulding in an April 13, 2024 interview, “We met when we both were incarcerated at Statesville. We talk every day.”   

    While Spaulding has a free performance of his one-man show planned at Walls Turned Sideways at 2717 W. Madison on Saturday, April 20th from 6-8 pm. Jones is now a community navigator for the Illinois Prison Project who is teaching both inmates and the formerly incarcerated to navigate their lives in a positive and productive way.

    Part of being good friends is supporting each other through the highs and lows of life, and Jones’ friendship with Spaulding is no different. The lows of being incarcerated together have provided ballast to navigating society in their newfound freedom. Both men are now fully self-supporting individuals with adult responsibilities. While Spaulding’s focus has been on artistry both as a barber and as a multi-faceted performer, Jones’ focus has been on giving back to the community through his work with the Illinois Prison Project, a not for profit run by Jennifer Soble which is celebrating its third year in existence. 

    Jones’ work there is focused on helping incarcerated individuals navigate a complex prison structure that has systemic racism at its core. According to Jones, this is due, in large part to a clause in the 13th Amendment which states, “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” (Italics added for emphasis.) According to the 2020 United States Census, African Americans are minorities who comprise only 13.6 percent of the population, but account for 33% of the prison population according to a 2020 Pew Research Center report

    Both men worked hard on redemption while in prison. Spaulding began his barber’s license in prison, and Jones earned his paralegal certificate and two college degrees. Jones, the father of a 30 year old son, is now engaged and the proud owner of his own home. These two community advocates work to contribute to their communities, each in their own way.

    “You know, I just cut the hair of a family that couldn’t afford to get haircuts this morning.” said Spaulding during a March 28, 2024 interview.

    Meanwhile, Jones is helping people return home to their families after years of incarceration. “We call them freedom rides. I picked up this elderly gentleman from prison recently…he is a dynamic speaker. When I saw him, I asked him to do Dr. Martin Luther King’s I have a Dream speech, and he did!” Enthralled by his friend’s oratory gift despite physical infirmity, Jones glowed with pride and excitement as he explained how he had taken this gentleman home to his family, who were friends with Emmett Till during the 14 years that Till was alive.

    Find out more about Anthony Jones work with the Illinois Prison Project at their website. Anthony Spaulding can be found at Walls Turned Sideways next Saturday, April 20, from 6-8 pm, here is where to find him on social media.

  • “When the Night Finds You” by Dwight Okita

    “When the Night Finds You” by Dwight Okita

    Dwight Okita performs When the Night Finds You video shot and edited by C. Schandelmeier, March, 2024.

    “When The Night Finds You” by Dwight Okita

    It is Oscar night, and a blue heaven of the miraculous surrounds Dwight Okita as he opens his door to his 29th floor studio condominium, an island in the sky of Chicago, where he writes, works, and dreams.  He offers a chair, the city cloaked in night, and sparkling below. As the evening progresses, The 2024 Academy Awards are disappointing for Okita because Oppenheimer’s Oscar sweep was a tragedy for Barbie. He was also rooting for the director to at least win for Best Adapted Screenplay, but not this time. American-born, third generation Japanese, Okita has insider knowledge about what happened when the bomb dropped, having co-authored a Joseph Jefferson award-winning play with Nick Patricca, Anne McGravie and David Zak titled The Radiance of a Thousand Suns: The Hiroshima Project  (1995) which may be the reason why the Oppenheimer win rankles. 

    He shares some of the ramifications of the dropping of the bomb on Japan: the fact that most of the people who were killed were ordinary citizens, the flesh that literally came off their bones when touched, the imprint of a kimono pattern word at the time of the blast permanently seared into the skin of the wearer. By contrast, the hope-filled promise of Barbie gives the post-pandemic audience a reminder of what happiness feels like. For the author of The Hope Store (2017), this is understandably important.

    Dwight Okita points out the larger than life version of the cover for his 2017 novel, “The Hope Store.” (Photo by C. Schandelmeier, March 10, 2024).

    “Let’s break it down, Cathleen,” he said. “Oppenheimer is about a white man who feels a little bad about creating a bomb that could’ve destroyed the world – and did destroy tons of Japanese civilians. A story of white guilt. Barbie is about a female doll that has an existential crisis when she realizes that humans actually die. She makes a decision that I found moving and heroic. Barbie was the movie the world didn’t know we needed to see! It was entertaining and hopeful after the endless pandemic.”

    Dwight Okita’s cover on the Kellogg’s Corn Flakes box is proudly displayed in his Chicago home. (Photo by C. Schandelmeier, March, 10, 2024)

    Okita shared a story about appearing on the cover of the Corn Flakes box. “Dad was a grade school teacher and he bought twenty boxes. He had me autograph them for his fellow teachers,” he said concealing a smile. Oddly, his father was less boastful about the first poem Okita got published, perhaps because it was in a small Chicago publication, whereas the cereal box was Kellogg’s after all. The poem “In Response to Executive Order 9066 (which refers to the order that caused Japanese Americans to be forcibly removed from their homes, and interned during World War II) went on to be included in scores of textbooks and in the Norton Introduction to Literature. 

    Okita has it, the gift of poetry, the ability to weave magic with words, the unique perspective of someone who tackles issues head-on while viewing them dreamily, from a distance in his fantasy land in the sky, where the dream factory of Hollywood colors and impacts  his very real life. To learn more about Dwight Okita or his book go to his website at dwightokita.com.

    Dwight Okita in his Chicago home on the 29th floor. (Photo by C. Schandelmeier, March 10, 2024).