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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 2003)
- ■' : s o ç im o f N o m H A merica Hermaphrodites ' V The historic 1996 action in Boston included a large turnout of members from the Transsexual Menace, who provided a model of protest actions for the Intersex Society. Max Beck (right photo) is an intersex activist from Atlanta. use of sex reassignment surgery, and the case of Reiiner continues to act as proof of success despite the fact that he reverted to his original genetic identity of male. Conservative estimates, based on studies at Brown University and elsewhere, indicate that 1 in 2,000 hahies, or five a day, is horn intersexed in the United States. Yet data on how many have suffered as Reimer did have been difficult to gather. The silence around this issue, both from the medical establish ment and in the families affected, has been deafening until recently. Another statistic: 9 out of 10 of these surg eries are clitorectomies. A quote from a Har vard doctor is often cited in this context: “ Its easier to dig a hole than to build a pole.” describes what must he done about the condi tion once it becomes apparent. His choice of words is telling. “The finding of ambiguous genitalia in a newborn is a medical and social emergency. When the cause is established and gender assignment is made, the abnormal geni talia must he corrected." Advocates increasingly question why this is such an emergency. Medically speaking, radical surgery is not necessary unless there is an underlying pathology, which is fre quently not the case. Socially speaking is another matter. “ Many doctors believe (surgery] will make the parents’ distress end and will prevent the child from feeling any distress,” ISN A board member Alice Dreger says. “ In fact, these surgeries carry great risks, including risks to TH E M E D IC A L E S T A B L IS H M E N T genital sensation, which the child will need later for a healthy sex life; continence; fertil t the Creating Change conference ity; and life.” last Novem ber in Portland, the New Koyama talks about the difficulty of deal ing with doctors, who tend to dismiss the Jersey-based intersex advocacy or ganization Bodies Like Ours presented a concerns of intersex activists, even those forum on this complex issue. According to who can personally attest to the failure of outreach director and co-founder Betsy Dri these surgeries and the ver, parents are kept in the dark about the long-term conse- entire process and may in fact he frequently I quences that are misled to think that “there are no people essentially irreversible. who survived like her.” She notes a typical They arc simply told that in the case of doctor’s reaction: “You boys with micropenises, for example, ‘.‘This say you have problems child is better off being raised female.” The with your sexual sen medical motto, according to Driver, seems to sation because of he “Do it, do it early, and don’t discuss it." surgery, hut 30 percent Tlie activist, who described an array of of women are not emotional and physical problems that have orgasmic anyway, so how do you know it’s plagued her since her surgery, asserts, “Surgeries rob children of the quality of life and the right because we chopped off your clitoris?” to bodily integrity.” She spoke about the strange “desperation” by the medical establish For Koyama and ment to “make it right" regardless of the cost others, the whole process has the aura of ritual on the individual child. abuse. These operations are “something done Koyama, who taught the first course in by adults who are supposed to he trusted, per intersex studies at Portland State University, ceived as normal,” she says. “There is so much agrees. “They don’t want queer HxJies.” secrecy and silence going on that the children Getting rid of these troubling “queer hxxl- grow up feeling the secrecy and isolation. You ies" has for decades been the province of doc can’t tell anyfxxJy about it. Children learn that tors. One of the tools used by advocacy groups there’s something horribly wrong with them such as the Intersex Society of North America and their sexuality”— a concept reinforced by and fkxlics Like Ours is a standard medical the frequent genital scarring and a pervasive training video in which a d(x:tor calmly feeling of disconnect between the body and the mind that makes the much-touted goal of a “normal life” elusive. “Society doesn’t want deviation in general,’ Koyama continues. “Physical differences are corrected without consent, even if it doesn’t help the child’s quality of life." The goal of the ISNA and other activist organizations is to change the protocol. The medical establishment’s reaction— with some recent exceptions— is typified in comments like that of Dr. Aydin Arici, an obstetrician and gynecologist at Yale-New Haven Hospital, who performs such surgeries: “It is irrelevant if the sex assignment is male or female, as long as there is an early sex assignment, and the parents understand what they have: either a boy or a girl.” Nurture trumps nature. TH E IS N A L eading the charge against unwilling sex- reassignment operations are those most viscerally affected by them: the now- grown children who have been subjected to genital surgeries for decades. Wresting power from an often hidebound medical establishment is never easy, hut groups like A C T UP have shown how effective grassnxus organizing can he. Children operated on within the first two years of life have no way to judge whether the procedure makes sense and no way to protest or stop it if it doesn't Hermaphnxlites Speak! director Cheryl Chase was horn a boy hut surgically altered to become a girl at 18 months when doctors decided that her micropenis was in fact an unnaturally large clitoris and had to he removed. W hat fol lowed were a troubled adolescence, a family nearly destroyed by what she calls the “secre cy and shame" and eventually a move to San Francisco, ground zero for gender-bending. There she found a vibrant, welcoming queer and tranny community, as well as the emotional and financial support necessary to start ISN A , the world’s first advocacy group for the intersexed, in 1993. This month the group is moving its headquarters from north ern California to Seattle. “ I found others who had been treated in ways very similar to myself,” Chase told Curve magazine. “Everybody that I had met had suffered in complete and total shame and isolation and believed that they were the only one.” ISN A , she decided, would he organized around ending that shame. The stated mis sion: “to create a world free of secrecy, shame and unwanted genital surgery for intersexed people." Koyama, who has worked with ISN A as an activist-in-residence, notes the group’s success in outreach to both the intersex community (partially through a robust Web site) and to the medical community, which has been a tougher sell. “Before IS N A ,” she says, “there was no organizing. Nobody was making a political movement. Cheryl was really persistent and really patient.” The organization has been highly visible, working through the media and at academic and medical conferences to make more people aware of the issue. This success has also spawned other, more specialized groups. Bodies Like Ours, for example, has shown particular expertise in the medical issues surrounding intersex. “They do a really good job o f speaking to the medical field,” affirms Koyama. “ It’s easy to shout something at the medical comm u nity, hut it’s really difficult to get them to listen." ISNA’s message has not been to stop all surgeries, only medically unnecessary ones. The organization supports a “patient-centered model” rather than a “concealment-based model.” This preferred model calls intersex “a problem o f stigma and trauma, not gender” and emphasizes the need for professional mental health care to handle the challenges involved. Parental distress should not be treated by surgery on the child. And “all children should be assigned as boy or girl, without early surgery.” Som e of the complexity and controversy surrounding intersex is evident from the last Continued on Page 24