Is Trans Day of Remembrance being dropped down the memory hole? This time last year, Stonewall was urging followers to observe November 20 as an “important day to honour the lives of our trans siblings who have been taken from us too soon”, by finding “a vigil near you”. Yet this week there was no mention at all of the day on the LGBTQ+ charity’s website, and its X account marked the occasion with 24 hours of silence.
Former vassal states of Stonewall, once enmeshed in one or other of its EDI schemes, also fell strangely mute. There was nothing from the Labour Party, previously so assiduous in its solemn commemorations; nothing apparently on the BBC, whose emotive headlines on the tragic shortness of trans lives were once a mainstay of late November. And what about that time four years ago when the Bank of England building in Threadneedle Street was lit up in the colours of the trans flag? Or the time in 2022 when the Welsh Parliament’s social media manager seemed to confuse the day with Remembrance Sunday, writing a touching eulogy to “the trans individuals who have lived, loved, fought and fallen”? All gone now. Perhaps it was just a dream.
But no. For nearly a decade, as FOIs have since made clear, Stonewall encouraged hundreds of private and public sector organisations to mark Trans Day of Remembrance (TDoR), on pain of losing points in its annual workplace rankings. The most craven performances of fealty came from universities, where vigils would be held on campuses across the country. At the trend’s zenith, vice-chancellors would give awkward introductions, circles would be formed, and candles would be lit. Slowly, haltingly, movingly, some anointed young spokesperson would start stumbling over the pronunciation of the names of hundreds of Brazilian and Mexican people working in the sex trade.
For somewhat inconveniently, every year records would reveal that around three quarters of reported murders came from gun-loving Latin America and the Caribbean — where general murder rates were already horribly high — and around half of victims would be in prostitution, probably the most dangerous occupation in the world anyway. Even so, committed celebrants somehow knew that the root cause of every single death was that ubiquitous phenomenon, “transphobia”, while all other circumstances were just downstream effect.
Even today, despite consistently and thankfully tiny murder rates for trans-identified people in the UK and Europe, the habit of such ceremonies occasionally lingers. Wednesday’s ceremony at University of Central Lancashire involved the trans flag being “lowered to half mast”. A spectacularly mawkish vigil in Reading, streamed live to YouTube, included poetry, sermons, and secular hymns sung by a choir. Still, even in strongholds of the declining empire, it seemed as if hearts are not entirely in it. Cambridge University’s LGBT+ society reminded its members this week that, though it would be offering a service, “You are not any less valid if you don’t come, TDoR is a lot of feelings and we each grieve in different ways”.
Perhaps, now that that this very weird day of observance is apparently on the way out, we have a bit of room to stand back and ask ourselves what exactly was going on there. In an age when Millennial and Gen Z participation in formal religious services is at an all-time low, and mainstream public commemorations such as Remembrance Sunday show similar patterns of decline, how did such a patently ridiculous event ever get embedded in the national calendar?
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SubscribeI have only ever officiated two wedding ceremonies in my life, both at the requests of two couples related to me who are agnostic and unaffiliated with any religion but who still wanted a “ceremony” that I had the legal authority to conduct. Although they were very happy with my presentations, I was deeply saddened. The notions about love, life, and marriage they presented to me as guidance for how to construct their vows were naive at best and borderline narcissistic. There was no “for better or worse” to it; no “in sickness and health”; and certainly no “til death do us part.” It was all a bunch of crap about everyone respecting their mate’s right to fully realize their individuality unencumbered by any other duty to the other. I put on a good game face and performed to their specifications but still feel shame and disappointment to have intimately participated in something so shallow and disconnected from the collective wisdom of generations.
Do you know if the couples are still married? I’ve witnessed the same kind of behaviour in my circle of friends and acquaintances and that kind of “me-me-me” approach to marriage never works out – which is deeply unshocking.
I remember a friend of mine on her hen night (dear Lord, I hate hen nights…) being asked as part of a silly truth-or-dare game “what she expected from her marriage”.
Her serious, considered answer: “my wedding”.
Her husband left her after 4 years.
Exactly, well said. It is the approach to the marriage, not the splendour of the ceremony which leads to long-term success.
I have an ex-colleague in the USA who has a daughter. She lived with her boyfriend for a few years but Mom wanted an official send-off. The parents spent tens of thousands of dollars on the big day; there were stag nights and hen nights, the ceremony, an expensive honeymoon – and it all collapsed after a couple of years.
Wedding ceremonies today are for the parents, who are in competition with each other.
From what we’ve seen, especially amongst couples younger than us (we are in our early 40s), weddings are all about how “Instagrammable” everything is. These sorts of weddings are the most depressing to me: everything seems so superficial and overorganised. Guests don’t seem to be celebrating two people embarking on a big journey so much as being pushed and pulled around into different awkward poses that can be published for likes and shares.
I’ve been with my other half for 17 years now; I knew very quickly that we were in it for the long haul. And yet we aren’t married yet. We will tie the knot, but I’m really happy that the nature of that ceremony (which we’ll just go through very simply at the registry office without a big “do”) is now more or less bureaucracy. Just the legal cherry on the top of a relationship that truly works.
See my post below about graduation ceremonies.
He did well to last that long
“When a marriage ceremony stands in need of an accompanying PowerPoint, you start to wonder what was so very wrong with the Book of Common Prayer.” 🙂
As usual Kathleen Stock disarms the rubber hammer of hypocrisy around pseuds’ rituals. In the football of life King James Bible 1 : Powerpoint Nil.
Stock! Our patron saint of sanity in an insane world…
Matron saint, surely?
Great article, thank you. What is terrifying is the way universities and many other institutions capitulated so readily to this Maoist in all but name insanity. I’ve also noticed a ready and eager acceptance amongst younger generations to lap up stories of ancient pre Christian societies that are characterised by female domination or at least equality, a fantasy of love, peace and magic rejoicing in Mother Nature rather than the short, brutal, sacrificial and warring, enslaved reality that history shows to be the case for many. They efficiently get rid of inconvenient history of our past by declaring that it was “written by men” and white ones at that.
a fantasy of love, peace and magic rejoicing in Mother Nature
That is very much one aspect of feminism in the 70s. It was the idea the women had a connection to the earth because of giving birth and the way their bodies functioned: menstruation, the moon, etc. leading to the Wimmim only communes where they ended up hating each other. I think it was of necessity that they claimed this relationship because there was nothing else for them. How could they claim what the men had when they’d declared it destructive. Plus because of childbirth and procreation it was a place men couldn’t go. Of course they had no more of a connection than men who farmed or the hunter-gatherers of the past. So it was pure fantasy. But what developed alongside, which we see now, is an odd infantilism that requires no thought and responds to challenges with meaningless tantrums and then tears, the classic bully/victim ruse. Naturally none of this was going to lead to anything constructive. How could it? You’re correct that it’s a refusal to deal with reality.
“Plus because of childbirth and procreation it was a place men couldn’t go”
Are you sure about that?
Not any more.
I waiting for the first non-binaries to get maternity leave. I predict that the NHS will be the first to allow this.
Now why doesn’t that surprise me.
Very well said. You are obviously a bully.
I’ve been married for a long, long, long time. Every year we argue a lot about what we want to do in our vacation and we have always come to a reasonable answer. About 3 years ago we had that argument – my wife wanted A and I wanted B. After a few minutes she called me a bully because I wanted my own way. She had been reading all of the feminist c**p in the press and now she new that men couldn’t be allowed their own way in things because they were always bullying the women.
I hear you, but bear in mind that in Babylonian times, guys would probably have said the same thing! Can’t win!
“But what developed alongside, which we see now, is an odd infantilism that requires no thought and responds to challenges with meaningless tantrums and then tears, the classic bully/victim ruse. Naturally none of this was going to lead to anything constructive. How could it? You’re correct that it’s a refusal to deal with reality.”
Exceedingly well said.
My God what an insightful and beautifully written analysis. The loss of connections with our past, the narcissism of our society, the diminution of structure and rhythm in our lives, the continuing need to feel part of something bigger but we don’t know what. It’s a melancholy read for sure but the Prof continues to be the best reason to buy UnHerd.
Right on the nail KS’s writings are the best reason to subscribe to Unherd.
“The loss of connections with our past”
The theft of our heritage by woke Maoists and managerial philistines.
It’s all deliberate too. If you can’t overcome through armed insurrection, and if you can’t through winning at the ballot box, then…
Rituals bring people together, physically and emotionally. They come in all shapes and sizes, some religious, others not. Take the King’s coronation, for example. Was Charles III any less a king the day before, than he was the day after? Of course not, but it brought us all together.
Still, look on the bright side. The trans remembrance ceremonies were nonsense of course, but they were a step up from public hangings, abolished only in the 1860s, not to mention the public floggings that happen in many counties around the world today.
Not sure about the Charles III comment.
Is someone who merely passed their exams any less of a graduate than someone who passed their exams and then undertook the graduation ceremony?
I would say they are.
The graduation ceremony marks the university’s acceptance of you as the bearer of the degree they confer on you. Passing the exam confers on you the right to present yourself for graduation. It does not confer upon you the degree.
Interesting point of view. But does it matter once you’re out there looking for a job? Does it make you feel more confident? However I agree with the ceremonial aspect and what it confers on you. But as an older adult it meant nothing to me.
Agreed. Because aome ceremonies (marriage, funerals,…) are important, hardly means that they all are.
I must say, I don’t see it these days, but the time mourners wore black, the solemnity, the presence of death, has always made a deep impression on me.
How about those who’re unable to attend the graduation ceremony, due to illness for instance? Is their degree nullified?
Your point doesn’t stand up to scrutiny.
Their degree isn’t nullified, because they still receive their graduation certificate through the post.
Yes, of course it isn’t… i was simply pointing up the fallacy in NR’s comment.
That is sheer garbage. There are thousands of graduates who don’t go to the ceremonies for many different reasons. The main one is money.
I have two degrees and didn’t go to either ceremony and all of my friends refused to go to theirs’ as well. Reason: middle class dressing up and hairdos were a waste of time for working class lads. We had better things to do, like start new jobs or tour Europe by hitch-hiking. The ceremonies today are for the parents to show off.
By the way, we didn’t dress up for our wedding either and we are still married after 45 years. Reason: we wanted to spend money on living our lives, not showing off to other people. After the ceremony we went to Tesco to do the weekly shop. We tell everybody this because we (in our silly way) are proud of it.
Blimey, Prof, you almost sound like a conservative. Bravo.
Some Unherd commenters will possibly mistakenly think that KS is converting to religion. Probably more a recognition that some things from the past are worth keeping.
Yes, i was expecting that “take” too. We saw it in Comments the other day regarding Giles Fraser and Catholicism.
Here’s the bit that people like to leave out of their marriage vows: ‘forsaking all others’.
I won’t be taking marriage vows (not in English anyway) but the part that always made me go “nope!” was the “love, honour and obey” bit.
Loving and honouring is quite sufficient, thanks.
Rituals – especially ones involving circles – sustain moral communities. So, at least, Jonathan Haidt tells me and this piece suggests the same. It is not anything to do with moralising gods, though. It predates them.
This whole quasi-religious moment has been very weird indeed and distressing to ol’ school homosexuals like me who saw our names being taken as cover for the largely straight fetishists of ‘LGBTQ+WTF??+LOL!!+++’. It’s good to see it may be receding at last.
That said, I did enjoy learning that Queen’s ‘Another One Bites the Dust’ is a feature at some funerals. I was considering The Trammps ‘Disco Inferno (Burn, Baby, Burn!) for my own cremation but, as a longstanding KISS fan, am now veering towards their mid-70s hit, ‘Hotter then Hell – you know she’s gonna leave you well done. Hot, Hot, Hotter than Hell, burn ya like the midday sun – OOWW!!’.
Speaking of how the sacral bumps up against the aridity of our times, a colleague who’s begun lay preaching at his church revealed to me yesterday that he relies on ChatGPT to complete his missives to the faithful. Even as a cynical non-believer, I could only raise an eyebrow, Spock-like, at that revelation.
I’ve always found the term “lay preaching” rather amusing…
“Since organised religion has been the main means of inserting ritual into our lives for centuries, it is not surprising that both are simultaneously in retreat.”
There is a genuine problem here. How to find meaningful ceremonies, to mark the significant moments in our lives now that established religion no longer suits the needs of many of us? Rituals and ceremonies bring settlement and inclusion. They can be beautiful and moving.
A couple of years ago, after living together for over 30 years, my partner and I had a civil partnership ceremony, which ends with the words ” you are now partners in law”. I strongly felt that the church ceremony was inappropriate, as it reeks of patriarchy. Why should my father hand me over to my chosen spouse? That felt demeaning to me. I wanted to acknowledge him as my partner, not to be given away by one ostensible male protector to another.
Having made our declarations to each other long before, my partner and I cut the official ceremony to the bare minimum. And yet, the whole process was poignant and powerful in unexpected ways.
Yes of course there is a lot of silliness and online advice for ceremonies. There is also the opportunity to find the ones that work for us. I welcome that.
Kathleen, this kind of writing is why I sub to UnHerd. May not agree with everything you wrote, but the ideas are insightful.
Mircea Eliade is well worth reading about how recapitulation of rituals involves something in between repeating a pattern (perhaps the common take about preserving a tradition) and embodying that pattern (perhaps akin to the literal meaning of transubstantiation rituals). The former without the latter is a superficial lip service to a barely understood origin, whereas the latter is re-instantiating the ritual anew each time.
Religions have histories that contain archetypes of all socially meaningful rituals, such that a present-day wedding is not just an homage to, e.g. biblical weddings, but it is a literal reenactment. One simply preserves in aspic, the other is a living tradition. Contrast the static ruin of Venice to the palimpsest of London.
To many of us these nutty ceremonies are not comforting but evidence of the rising tide of chaos. The ceremonies perhaps devised by cynical herders of the cult.
Stock is very kind to these people and I salute her for it.
On reflection I realise that my excommunication from the alphabet people began when I opined that TDOR is a load of old b0ll0(k5. It comes as no surprise to me that Stonewall are quietly trying to forget it. Some people have been pointing this out for years, including the directors of the Lesbian project.
I suspect Stonewall will continue to forget most of the alphabet and refocus on the L and the G, assuming any L&G people have any faith left in them.
Much love, a tranny xx
Another brilliant piece of writing from the sanest woman in Britain today.
Dear Kathleen Stock, please keep these articles coming. They should be required reading in schools. This is brilliant, incisive and wickedly amusing.
David Eades
As well as the observations about ritual and ceremony Author first para registered. The sense ‘peak’ LGBTQ+ has passed. And whether one supports the lying narcissistic sexual creep that is Trump it would be difficult to argue his election, (and esp the margin in the popular vote) doesn’t force more reflection. The extreme woke Loons will just double down, but they were always a tiny number. One senses the kind, live and let live majority is gently just separating itself a bit more definitively from this. That of course doesn’t mean it’s jumped across to the alternative extreme but there were limits.
Returning to ritual and ceremony, we still crave it. Maybe not often and we don’t welcome compulsion. But at important moments it can be what ties us to community and belonging. Is it not the social basis for how homo sapiens came to conquer the World? One for Yuval Noah-Harari et al to elaborate.
I am not convinced that everyone seeks meaning so much as they adopt a narrative that helps them make sense of their world. And if the ‘lying narcissistic sexual creep that is Trump’ provided an alternative to the machine politics of the ‘extreme woke Loons’, then democracy has worked. For now.
they adopt a narrative that helps them make sense of their world.
I think you’re absolutely right. And that’s the case from the very beginning.
“The sense ‘peak’ LGBTQ+ has passed.”
Perhaps because the connection of T and Q+ with L G and some of B was always tenuous at best?