QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 317 - November 2020

Page 16

16  |  QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE  |  NEWS

Qsaltlake.com  |

ISSUE 317  |  NOVEMBER, 2020

From gun violence activist to arming the LGBTQ community

BY MICHAEL AARON

Ermiya Fanaeian

was still in high school when she organized one of the largest rallies to happen in the state of Utah to protest gun violence. She was the face on local television news stations speaking about the need to control gun violence. Today she is running a group that seeks to train and arm people in the LGBTQ community. “My position shifted because of the continuous violence that I saw happening

to trans women across the nation,” Fanaeian told QSaltLake Magazine. “Nothing was being done about violent attack after violent attack that was happening against working-class trans women.” She said that she gave up on politicians solving the problem of murders most often perpetrated by those with guns. “We kept protesting for years, and all politicians would do is end up letting the attackers off the hook with a slap on the wrist,” she said. “And often these were the same liberal politicians who were calling

to disarm people.” She then realized, she said, that it was up to the LGBTQ community to protect itself. She organized a local chapter of the national Pink Pistols organization. Pink Pistols was founded in 2000 under the slogan, “We teach queers to shoot. Then we teach others that we have done so.” “Armed queers don’t get bashed,” the organization’s website says. “We change the public perception of the sexual minorities, such that those who have in the past perceived them as safe targets for violence and hateful acts — beatings, assaults, rapes, murders — [so that they] will realize that now, a segment of the sexual minority population is now armed and effective with those arms. Those arms are also concealed, so they do not know which ones are safe to attack, and which are not … which they can harm as they have in the past, and which may draw a weapon and fight back.” Fanaeian said that a recent assault in Michigan was the final straw for her. The brutal beating of a black transgender woman named Iyanna Dior in June enraged activists after a video of the assault went viral. Another wave of nationwide calls for justice and awareness of the high rates of violence against black transgender women were raised. “That’s when I thought it was time for us to put safety into our own hands,” Fanaeian said. “I never thought I would own a gun.” She now has an AR-15, which she takes to local gun ranges to practice shooting along with other members of Salt Lake City Pink Pistols. “We typically practice at TNT [Gun Range], and we also like to utilize outdoor nature spots,” she said. “We are partnering with professional trainers who have trained all different kinds of folks. From people who are experienced but want to learn more, to people that have never even held a gun. It’s important to get that kind of professional training in as well.” While she has the AR-15, she recognizes that is difficult to carry around during


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