logo
Jewish Americans feel echoes of history in transgender passport restrictions

Jewish Americans feel echoes of history in transgender passport restrictions

Yahoo09-04-2025

Camins Bretts, who is 61 and lives in Seattle, has crossed the Canada-United States border many times for work, family and romantic partners. But because he's a transgender man, at least half a dozen of those trips ended in him being detained by U.S. border officials.
At various points Bretts has been pulled aside and questioned for traveling with identity documents that list him as male, as well as papers that identified him as female. Because of his gender expression, he has frequently been accused of lying about who he is. To find a solution, Bretts applied for a passport with an 'X' gender marker on January 22.
He was denied. By that time, the Trump administration had begun blocking new passports for trans Americans.
All of this feels familiar to Bretts. It reminds him of how Jewish people were kept from accessing legitimate travel documents when Nazi Germany was in power — leaving Jews across multiple countries unable to flee rising violence. It reminds him of what happened to his family.
He's not alone. As the Trump administration targets marginalized groups, including migrants and trans people, LGBTQ+ Jewish people told The 19th that they increasingly feel that history is in danger of repeating itself.
As the Nazis invaded the Baltic states in the 1940s, scores of Bretts' relatives died in Lithuania. Their travel documents identified them as Jews, so they were barred from leaving the country to escape violence. Their rights were curtailed. The people who would have been Bretts' great-aunts and great-uncles disappeared, with no records of their death or last known locations. He assumes they were killed in anti-Jewish raids, or pogroms, carried out by locals.
Bretts sees his new passport as an invitation for abuse. Just as his family was forced to use documentation that exposed them to violence, he and other trans Americans are carrying documentation that exposes them to abuse when they travel, he said. Preventing trans Americans from accessing accurate passports is just one more way to make life intolerable — and it's intentional, Bretts said. The confusion that trans people now face when they travel, and the decisions they have to make, are designed to frighten and destabilize them, he said.
'It's the same story, in miniature, of what happened to my family. They had the wrong thing stamped on their identity documents,' he said. 'I'm not expecting what's going on in the U.S. to get to the point of, you know, impromptu death squads … but nonetheless, I, like many other people with non-matching identity documents, am now stuck.'
For over 30 years, Bretts has lived publicly as a man. Now he has been given a passport that says he's a woman. Although it's a valid American passport, Bretts knows from experience that U.S. border officials often poorly handle inconsistencies between someone's gender and their paperwork. He's already canceled three trips and sought legal advice on whether he should leave the state, let alone the country. The answer he's gotten so far is to stay put.
Due to the Trump administration's new policies, transgender Americans across the country now hold passports that out them as being trans and leave them at risk of being harassed if they use these for travel. Their passports are labeled with a gender marker that is at odds with how these travelers look and, in many cases, how they are classified on their other identity documents.
Federal agencies are carrying out executive orders from President Donald Trump that all share a common goal: removing transgender and nonbinary people from public life wherever possible. That includes restricting access to accurate federal identity documents. The State Department is no longer issuing U.S. passports with 'X' gender markers, and applications from Americans seeking to update their passports with a new gender marker are being denied. In some cases, trans people have tried to renew expired passports that were already aligned with their gender identity only to receive passports that list their birth sex.
Kris Haas and Jordan Gregor have also been feeling on edge, though it's not just because of how the Trump administration has targeted transgender Americans. As a lesbian, Jewish couple, they feel their religion is being used as an excuse to target vulnerable people, like the foreign college students who are being detained and deported by the federal government for their pro-Palestinian advocacy or sympathy while living legally in the United States. Trump has accused these students of engaging in 'pro-terrorist, antisemitic, anti-American activity.'
Haas, who is nonbinary, said they are frightened of what they see as parallels between Adolf Hitler's actions and rhetoric in the 1920s and 1930s and those of the current U.S. president. They listed examples: In his rise to power, Hitler contested election results, railed against the failings of representational democracy and relied on emotion rather than logic when giving speeches.
Then, there's Elon Musk, the billionaire who has spearheaded an effort to purge the federal government through the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). At President Trump's inauguration celebration in Washington, D.C., Musk made a gesture that many people, including neo-Nazis, interpreted as a Nazi salute. He has denied that it was his intention.
'We know where this train continues to,' Haas said. 'We need to stop it now.'
Robbie Medwed isn't trans, but he has watched the Trump administration's escalating attacks on transgender Americans with growing fear of what comes next. He sees many similarities between this administration and the authoritarian playbook that Hitler used to come into power — especially in the focus on trans people, a sliver of the country's population.
For Medwed, a gay and cisgender Jewish man, the parallels between political conservative calls to 'eradicate transgenderism' and the rhetoric that fueled laws outlawing Judaism are clear.
'I think there's a very obvious effort right now to target, other and remove trans people — at the very least, from public life, and at the very worst, prohibiting trans existence,' he said. And although transgender people are an easy target, since many people still have no idea what being transgender means, Medwed doubts they'll be the last target. And that feeling, too, comes from family experience.
Medwed's grandparents were Holocaust survivors. As he grew up, his parents and grandparents shared a common refrain, a frequent reminder for their family: 'Every good Jew has a passport. Every great Jew has two.'
Growing up, Medwed thought this was a joke. Now, that often-repeated saying from his childhood has started echoing in his ears again. As he watches trans Americans being denied passports that accurately reflect who they are, he has gotten nervous about the possibility of his own documentation being taken away. He renewed his passport in February.
'I absolutely think that Trump has been using what I call Hitler's playbook,' he said. 'I don't think we're at 1939 or 1940. I think we're at 1933, at the very beginning of all the laws coming to place that were set into motion to start to other and outlaw Jews and Judaism. We're not there yet, but I absolutely think we are on the way.'
These parallels have been on Rabbi Micah Buck-Yael's mind for years. In 2023, when states faced a significant onslaught of anti-trans bills, they watched as access to gender-affirming care and discrimination protections for trans people in Missouri came under attack. As a transgender rabbi, they were shaken; they considered moving their family out of the state.
In an op-ed written in 2023, the rabbi detailed how they struggled with the decision:
'It's deeply frightening and personal. Every trans person I know is asking themselves the same questions that I am: Should I leave now? If not now, when? And how will I know?'
He continued: 'I keep thinking about my mother and her parents who, as persecuted Jews, fled Egypt in the 1950s. I remember my grandmother Juliette telling me about the nights they spent by the radio, listening to the news and deciding when or whether to flee.'
Ultimately, they decided to stay in Missouri. That's where their community is. Now, as more trans Americans wonder if they should leave the country, he is reflecting once again on how Jewish transgender people are grappling with deep-seated, intergenerational trauma as they weigh the same questions that their ancestors did.
'Not having access to a passport, not being able to renew a passport, lands as particularly terrifying for people who carry that story,' he told The 19th.
Although Medwed sees the United States moving in a dangerous direction, he doesn't think it's too late to change that trajectory. Other cisgender people, and anyone else with the safety and privilege to be loud in opposition to hateful policies, need to step up, he said.
'I think it's our responsibility to step in front sometimes and do the loud yelling because we're not going to be in danger in the same way. Don't talk over people, but have those conversations where others aren't able to,' he said.
The post Jewish Americans feel echoes of history in transgender passport restrictions appeared first on The 19th.
News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday. Subscribe to our free, daily newsletter.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nezza says her Spanish rendition of U.S. anthem at Dodger Stadium was against team's wishes
Nezza says her Spanish rendition of U.S. anthem at Dodger Stadium was against team's wishes

New York Times

time19 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Nezza says her Spanish rendition of U.S. anthem at Dodger Stadium was against team's wishes

LOS ANGELES — As protests were in full force in downtown Los Angeles on Saturday night, a Spanish rendition of the United States national anthem was sung at Dodger Stadium. Vanessa Hernández, more commonly known as Nezza, sang 'El Pendón Estrellado' — the official Spanish version commissioned by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945. Advertisement Except, according to Nezza, the Los Angeles Dodgers told her not to, citing the club's usual standard practice of having anthem singers perform in English. 'We are going to do the song in English today,' an unidentified Dodgers employee told Nezza in a video she posted on TikTok. 'I'm not sure if that wasn't relayed.' She sang the song anyway, donning a Dominican Republic shirt, explaining in a later video that she chose to sing the Spanish version in response to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement crackdown in Los Angeles that has spurred protests for more than a week and dovetailed with the nationwide 'No Kings' protests against a military parade in Washington. i love you guys stay safe out there ♬ original sound – nezz The parade coincided with President Donald J. Trump's birthday celebration in Washington, D.C., as well as the 250th birthday celebration for the United States Army. While Trump was running for his second term, he promised to 'carry out the largest domestic deportation operation in American history.' 'I didn't think I'd be met with any sort of no,' Nezza said in the later video. 'Especially because we're in L.A., and with everything happening. I've sang the national anthem many times in my life, but today, out of all days, I could not. 'I just felt like I needed to do it. Para mi gente.' Nezza was not punished or kicked out of the ballpark after her unexpected rendition of the anthem and is not expected to be banned from Dodger Stadium going forward. The Dodgers did not have any comment when asked by The Athletic about the video, which she herself posted after the fact. The Dodgers themselves have not made any public statements over the past week of protests, unlike fellow Los Angeles-based franchises such as Angel City F.C., which handed out t-shirts that read 'Immigrant City Football Club'. Players also wore the shirts as a show of support for the protests. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was asked about the protests on Friday, saying, 'Honestly, I don't know enough, to be quite honest with you. I know that when you're having to bring people in and deport people, all the unrest, it's certainly unsettling for everyone. But I haven't dug enough and can't speak intelligently on it.' Advertisement The lone player to speak on the issue has been utility man Kiké Hernández, who posted on Instagram on Saturday night, shortly before Nezza's anthem rendition, writing: 'I may not be Born & Raised, but this city adopted me as one of their own. I am saddened and infuriated by what's happening in our country and our city. Los Angeles and Dodger fans have welcomed me, supported me and shown me nothing but kindness and love. This is my second home. And I cannot stand to see our community being violated, profiled, abused and ripped apart. ALL people deserve to be treated with respect, dignity and human rights. #CityOfImmigrants.'

Sen. John Fetterman supports Trump's military parades, calls on Americans to celebrate regardless of politics
Sen. John Fetterman supports Trump's military parades, calls on Americans to celebrate regardless of politics

Fox News

time24 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Sen. John Fetterman supports Trump's military parades, calls on Americans to celebrate regardless of politics

Senator John Fetterman, D-Pa., has voiced support for President Donald Trump's military parade, saying Americans should support it regardless of politics. "This parade is comprised of our sons, daughters, mothers and fathers — the very best of us. Regardless of your politics, it's appropriate to celebrate the 250 years of sacrifice, dedication and service," Fetterman posted on X, Saturday. Trump presided over a parade celebrating the 250th anniversary of the US Army in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, in which thousands of Americans flocked to the nation's capital. The festivities included a display from the Army's Golden Knights Parachute team, which conducted a jump above the crowd, multiple flyovers, WWII Jeeps on display and members of the military waving to the crowds while riding in tanks down Constitution Ave. "Every other country celebrates their victories. It's about time America did, too — that's what we're doing tonight," he said. "As we celebrate tonight, we also think of the hundreds of thousands of Army soldiers who have made the supreme sacrifice for our nation and selflessly laid down their lives in every war, from the revolution to the war on terror, to the Gold Star families with us today," Trump told the D.C. crowd. In Alexandria, Virginia, a "No Kings" anti-Trump protest took place. The protests were a nationwide demonstration against the president, and were also supported by Walmart heiress Christy Walton. Alexandria's branch was attended by estimates of 1,000 to 5,000 people. Fetterman was booed by attendees at the "No Kings" rally in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Fetterman, who was elected to the Senate after surviving a debilitating stroke, was once a progressive darling but has since drawn the ire of his party for his views on Israel and immigration. "Now, this is not a rally for one party, we've got Democrats here today. We've got Republicans and Independents here today. We are looking to the leaders who will fight for us because, even today, there are folks among the Democratic Party who think we should roll over and play dead. Anyone seen John Fetterman here today?" Leah Greenberg, the co-founder of the progressive nonprofit Indivisible, asked the crowd at the Pennsylvania rally. The crowd roundly booed the senator in response. The Pennsylvania senator was recently the victim of a scathing New York Magazine profile, in which former staffers accused him of missing votes and being mentally unwell and erratic. Fetterman dismissed the report as "a hit piece from a very left publication," and told Bill Maher on Saturday that his staff cynically exploited his health issues and turned on him because of his views on Israel and immigration. "What happened after Israel, and the border, and some of the times I have to disagree with my party, that's what brought us to that place where kind of a cancelling. It was a little bit of a different thing. Now we've all moved on from that… I've made 90% of the votes, none of them were determinative, people in the Senate have missed more votes than I did, but they weren't breaking the kind of rules that I did, so they weaponized that in a very cynical way," Fetterman told Maher.

G7 leaders gather for summit overshadowed by Israel-Iran crisis and trade wars

time27 minutes ago

G7 leaders gather for summit overshadowed by Israel-Iran crisis and trade wars

BANFF, Alberta -- Leaders of some of the world's biggest economic powers arrive in the Canadian Rockies on Sunday for a Group of Seven summit, overshadowed by an escalating conflict between Israel and Iran and U.S. President Donald Trump's unresolved trade war with allies and rivals alike. Israel's strikes on Iran and Tehran's retaliation, which appeared to catch many world leaders unawares, is the latest sign of a more volatile world as Trump seeks to withdraw the U.S. from its role as world policeman. Speaking on a flight to Canada to attend the summit, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he had discussed efforts to de-escalate the crisis with Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as well as other world leaders. Britain is sending fighter jets and other military reinforcements to the Middle East. 'We do have longstanding concerns about the nuclear program Iran has. We do recognize Israel's right to self-defense, but I'm absolutely clear that this needs to de-escalate. There is a huge risk of escalation for the region and more widely," Starmer said, adding he expected 'intense discussions' would continue at the summit. As summit host, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has decided to abandon the annual practice of issuing a joint statement, or communique, at the end of the meeting. With other leaders wanting to talk to Trump in an effort to talk him out of imposing tariffs, the summit risks being a series of bilateral conversations rather than a show of unity. Trump is the summit wild card. Looming over the meeting are his inflammatory threats to make Canada the 51st state and take over Greenland. French President Emmanuel Macron arrived in Greenland on Sunday for a highly symbolic stop on his way to Canada, meeting the Arctic territory's leader and Denmark's prime minister aboard a Danish helicopter carrier. Macron's office said the trip to Greenland is a reminder that Paris supports principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity and the inviolability of borders as enshrined in the U.N. charter. Macron, who is one of the very few leaders to have known Trump during his first term, was the first European leader to visit the White House after Trump took office, emerging unscathed from the Oval Office encounter. But despite the two leaders' sporadic bromance, Macron's approach to Trump has failed to bear major results, with France caught up in the president's planned tariffs on the European Union. Nor did it bring any U.S. security guarantees for Ukraine despite Macron's efforts, together with Starmer, to build a coalition of nations that could deploy forces after any ceasefire with Russia, with the hope it would convince the Trump administration to provide backup. Trump is scheduled to arrive late Sunday in Kananaskis, Alberta. Bilateral meetings between other leaders are possible Sunday, but the summit program does not get underway until Monday. Peter Boehm, Canada's sherpa of the 2018 G7 summit in Quebec and veteran of six G7 summits, expects the heads of state to pivot discussion to devote more time to the war. 'Leaders can accommodate a discussion, perhaps even a statement,' Boehm said. 'The foreign policy agenda has become much larger with this.' Leaders who are not part of the G7 but have been invited to the summit by Carney include the heads of state of India, Ukraine, Brazil, South Africa, South Korea, Australia, Mexico and the UAE. Avoiding tariffs will continue to be top of mind. 'Leaders, and there are some new ones coming, will want to meet Donald Trump,' Boehm said. 'Trump doesn't like the big round table as much he likes the one-on-one.' Bilateral meetings with the American president can be fraught as Trump has used them to try to intimidate the leaders of Ukraine and South Africa. Former Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien told a panel this week that if Trump does act out, leaders should ignore him and remain calm like Carney did in his recent Oval Office meeting. 'He tends to be a bully,' Chrétien said. 'If Trump has decided to make a show to be in the news, he will do something crazy. Let him do it and keep talking normally.' Starmer had a warm Oval Office meeting with the president in February, wooing Trump with an invitation for a state visit from King Charles III. Trump has praised the British prime minister, despite their political differences. Last month Britain and the U.S. announced they had struck a trade deal that will slash American tariffs on U.K. autos, steel and aluminum. It has yet to take effect, however, though British officials say they are not concerned the Trump administration might go back on its word. Starmer's attempts to woo Trump have left him in an awkward position with Canada, the U.K.'s former colony, close ally and fellow Commonwealth member. Starmer has also drawn criticism — especially from Canadians — for failing to address Trump's stated desire to make Canada the 51st state. Asked if he has told Trump to stop the 51st state threats, Starmer told The Associated Press: 'I'm not going to get into the precise conversations I've had, but let me be absolutely clear: Canada is an independent, sovereign country and a much-valued member of the Commonwealth.' The war in Ukraine will be on the agenda. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is due to attend the summit and is expected to meet with Trump, a reunion coming just months after their bruising Oval Office encounter which laid bare the risks of having a meeting with the U.S. president. Starmer met with Carney in Ottawa before the summit for talks focused on security and trade, in the first visit to Canada by a British prime minister for eight years. German officials were keen to counter the suggestion that the summit would be a 'six against one' event, noting that the G7 countries have plenty of differences of emphasis among themselves on various issues. Chrétien.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store