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Découverte de la non-binarité : le témoignage de Cami

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    Even if you do not understand,
    you can still support us,
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    And accept us.
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    Our identity is real, and it exists.
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    My name is Cami, I'm 22 years old.
    I'm non-binary.
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    I am here to tell you
    about the term "non-binary".
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    "Non-binary" is an umbrella term
    which embraces all gender identities
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    That are not exclusively masculine
    nor exclusively feminine.
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    So it can be agender,
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    Meaning "without gender",
    which is neutral.
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    Or it can be all gender-fluid identities.
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    If we imagined gender
    like a spectrum, with two poles,
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    Masculine and feminine,
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    With all non-binary genders
    included within this spectrum.
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    So, all who are gender-fluid,
    demigender, pangender, etc.
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    I have never really identified
    with femininity.
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    At 18, I already started
    questioning my gender identity.
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    And I met a trans man
    who I was with for some time.
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    We were able to put words together
    to describe my identity,
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    Which was non-binary.
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    Because he knew more than I did,
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    He was able to help me find
    the words concerning my identity.
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    Gender identity, it is what we are,
    it is the gender that we feel,
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    That we live, that we experience.
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    And this gender expression
    is what we show to others.
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    It is the manner
    with which we express this identity.
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    We can have a gender identity
    that is masculine, and we are a man.
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    Or we can have
    a feminine gender expression,
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    With many traits
    seen as feminine in the society,
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    Like Bilal Hassani, who is a man
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    With a gender expression
    that is feminine.
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    I came out to my parents
    that I was non-binary,
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    I also told them
    I wanted to change my first name.
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    I was 20 then,
    that was two years ago.
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    And my mother took it very well.
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    She was no stranger
    to the subject of gender identity.
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    She was unconventional,
    and incredibly accepting.
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    And I felt very safe.
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    With my father,
    it was a little more awkward.
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    It took me longer
    to speak to him about it,
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    And I didn't do it directly,
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    I sent him a message, in fact,
    because it was easier this way.
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    He reacted quite well.
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    He said
    that he didn't understand completely
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    But no matter what,
    he would be there for me,
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    It changes nothing for him,
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    That he loved me all the same.
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    As for my grandmother,
    it was less obvious.
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    It was a concept foreign to her.
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    She grew up in the countryside.
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    Then moved to Paris.
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    She lived with my grandfather
    for 50 years.
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    Her ways of thinking
    were very cis heteronormative.
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    She never questioned her identity,
    nor the identities of others.
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    When I spoke to her about it,
    she was astonished.
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    But she was always careful,
    and did her best around me.
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    She made enormous efforts,
    and rarely made mistakes
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    In the use of my preferred first name.
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    I submitted an application
    to change my first name in 2019.
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    I submitted my application
    to the town hall
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    In the city where I was living.
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    I took a file and filled it
    with testimonies from my loved ones.
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    To say that they were using
    the first name "Cami" to address me.
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    I asked my school
    for a letter of support, etc.
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    Then I submitted my file.
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    I waited a few months,
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    In fact, wait times vary,
    depending on the town halls,
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    And my name change was accepted.
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    The act of misgendering a person
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    Is to address this person
    using inappropriate pronouns.
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    Gendering a non-binary person
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    Who would have explicitly said
    to use neutral pronouns like "them"
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    Is actually gender-identifying them
    as feminine or masculine.
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    Personally, for me,
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    I use feminine pronouns
    when speaking,
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    And neutral pronouns when writing.
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    But it is true that in general
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    That I tend to say right away
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    That I prefer to be addressed
    by feminine pronouns when speaking.
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    If a person does not do the same,
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    And you want to be sure
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    That you are gendering them correctly,
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    You can ask them for their pronouns.
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    Or wait until the person identifies
    their gender to you,
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    So that you can respect
    their identification.
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    Following previous videos that I've done,
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    There were a lot of comments
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    That invalidated our identities,
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    That denied our gender expressions,
    and our gender identities.
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    For me, I rarely read these comments,
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    Precisely because I know
    that for the most part,
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    They are unkind, and very thoughtless,
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    And they would just cause me grief.
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    I participated in a report
    in which they said
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    It's a result of fad,
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    That it appeared only a few years ago
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    In the United States, 10 years ago
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    That it has to do with trends,
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    Unisex trend, and so on.
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    This is completely untrue.
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    I think that it's a point of view
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    That's extremely white,
    and extremely Eurocentric.
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    Because, in fact, in a lot of cultures,
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    We find many gender identities
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    That have been totally erased
    during colonization.
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    Frequently, we hear that it's problematic,
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    Or that it is troublesome
    to create more and more gender terms
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    To self-identify,
    to re-self-identify, etc.
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    But I think it's extremely important,
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    In the first place, to be able
    to self-identify with something
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    To disidentify from an identity
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    That has been assigned
    to us randomly.
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    I think yes, it's necessary
    to get into community,
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    To create connections,
    to know that we're not alone
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    That there is support.
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    That there are other people like us,
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    Who understand us, who listen to us
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    If I could say one thing,
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    I think it would be
    that even if you do not understand,
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    You can still support us,
    and accept us.
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    You can learn,
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    You can deconstruct set ways of thinking,
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    You can educate,
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    You can help your loved ones,
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    Even if you do not understand entirely
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    What their gender identity means.
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    A second thing, all non-binary people
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    Have different ways
    of expressing their identity.
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    There are folks
    who will undergo medical transitions,
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    Who will take hormones,
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    And who will have operations,
    and others not.
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    No matter how they transition, or not,
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    Socially, medically, etc.
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    Our identity remains real,
    and it exists.
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    And there are a lot of us.
Title:
Découverte de la non-binarité : le témoignage de Cami
Description:

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Video Language:
French
Duration:
05:55

Flemish subtitles

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