In a vigil organized by author and activist Veronica Vera, sex workers and their allies gathered to honor the deceased at the Judson Church for the 20th year on December 17th
Photo by Bob Krasner
Twenty years ago, author/activist Veronica Vera organized the first D17 vigil in New York at the Judson Memorial Church in Greenwich Village to remember the sex workers who were victims of fatal violence in an attempt to change the way the world looks at them.
While itโs true that the stigma of sex work is slowly lifting, itโs also true that this vigil remains necessary to both remember those lost, and further shatter negative stereotypes.
Sex workers and their advocates gathered again at Judson on Dec. 17, holding candles inscribed with the names of people who we have lost this year. In a change from previous ceremonies, the names also included some who passed from natural causes as well as violence.
Miss Vera, as she is known, considers โsex workersโ rights and the decriminalization of sex work to be of utmost importance.โ She notes that the groups that have sprung up to further the cause โare more savvyโ now and that the โpublic is starting to see sex work as work.โ
Everyone who held a candle read the written name out loud, a presentation that Vera calls โa holy, sacred taskโ, adding that โitโs a privilege to be able to do it. This year I saw more than ever that the vigil unites the community.โ
Speakers included co-organizer Kaytlin Bailey, founder of OldProsonline.org; Gerard Damiano Jr., son of the late director Gerard Damiano of โDeep Throatโ fame; and Leah Moon, who read a Jewish prayer of the dead โfor movement leader Priscilla Alexander and all the deceased.โ
Vera noted that the Judson Church has always been supportive of sex-positive initiatives and has a fund specifically for sex work projects. โItโs a church which has always been a bastion for social justice and the arts,โ Vera says.
Juline Koken, a…
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