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C. D. Kirven

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Chastity D. Kirven, known as C. D. Kirven is a community organizer, human rights activist, writer, artist, filmmaker, comic book creator, feminist and outspoken LGBT rights activist. Kirven spoke at the Supreme Court during the oral arguments for the Defense of Marriage Act and Proposition 8 on March 27, 2013, which was attended by over 10,000 people.

Contents

Early life and education

Kirven was born in Waco and raised in Dallas, Texas. She wrote an article about corporal punishment at the age of 16. The article reached the Associate Press wire, raising awareness and generating sufficient interest to help restrict the use of corporal punishment in Texas public schools. Kirven graduated from Texas Woman's University with a bachelor's degree in communications and was voted LGBT rights activist of the year by the Dallas Voice in 2012.

Career

Kirven was a founding member of several LGBT non-profit organizations, including the Get Equal Now and DFW Pride Movement. Kirven was a Get Equal Now board member. She was one of the ENDA Four who were arrested in Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office in March 2010. Kirven produced and directed the first LGBT cell phone documentary short called, The Dark Side of the Rainbow: The Price of Inequality. about same-sex domestic violence. The film debuted at the Connecticut Film Festival and was a finalist for the Texas award at the USA Film Festival. The Dark Side of the Rainbow is used in abuse prevention programs at Chicago’s Center on Halsted. The film was also screened at the San Diego Black Film Festival and the Reno Film Festival.

Kirven has spoken at LGBT political rallies across the country and was a community organizer for the Legacy of Success Foundation, where she chaired several non-profit events. One such event was "One Man’s Trash is Another Man’s Dinner", which raised money for a food pantry program that fed over 3,000 low-income people living with HIV-AIDS. Kirven was a contributing writer for several news organizations, including the Dallas Morning News, the Huffington Post, Bilerico, the Dallas Voice, Cherrygrrl, and Telemundo. Kirven wrote her first novel called What Goes Around Comes Back Around in 2008.

In October 2012 Kirven, working with John Dean Domingue, facilitated LGBT rights training at the Regional Project for Europe, which included 17 LGBT leaders. The project was coordinated by the Dallas World Affairs Council's International Visitor Program and the U.S. State Department’s professional exchange program. The International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP) works with an extensive team of local volunteers, businesses and community leaders. The program plays a key role in building public diplomacy and international connections for the region.

Kirven and other members of Get Equal Now protested Exxon for its anti-LGBT stance. Kirven continued protesting until Exxon changed its health benefits to include LGBT families in 2015. Kirven has held protests for the inclusion of LGBT families in both the City of Dallas and Dallas County health benefit packages. Kirven held several rallies protesting California’s Proposition 8 ruling and Defense of Marriage Act, in the DFW area. Kirven is a member of the Dallas LGBT Taskforce which is overseen by Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings. As a member of the taskforce chaired by Dallas City Councilman Adam Merdrano, Kirven created the first LGBT family day at the Dallas Zoo and LGBT families received free admission. Kirven is also a member of Mayor Rawlings Domestic Violence Taskforce for the City of Dallas.

Kirven created the first black lesbian superhero comic book series called The Tao Diaries. Kirven has traveled to several comic book conventions across the country and was featured at 'Stan Lee’s ComiKase' convention in Los Angeles, in 2012. Kirven is an artist and has been featured in several art shows, across the country to include 'Art as a Weapon' at the Smoke & Mirrors Art Gallery in Dallas, Texas. Kirven organized 'Ribbons and Roses' rally and candlelight vigil in front of Dallas City Hall to show solidarity with female employees of Dallas Fire Rescue who say they have faced harassment and discrimination on the job. Kirven also in support of Dallas female firefighters organized “King for A Night” drag king show in October 2010. Kirven is a musician who plays both the trumpet and guitar.

Kirven has spoken and organized several pro-choice rallies across Texas in protest of Texas Senate Bill 5. Kirven is also active in the Texas Civil Rights community, Kirven has spoken at several Black Lives Matter rallies across the country. Kirven is featured in the documentary From Selma to Stonewall, directed by lesbian filmmaker Marilyn Bennett. From Selma to Stonewall is a documentary that begins at the Civil Rights Movement in Selma and the Gay Rights Movement that started at Stonewall, and lands right in the crossroads of today's most explosive issues: racial injustice, police brutality, trans antagonism, and queer homelessness.

Kirven created the first Indiegogo campaign that raised money for Crime Stoppers rewards. Kirven worked with 'Youth First Texas' raising over $2,000 in reward money to help find the killer of Molly Olgin and the man who brutally assaulted Kristene Chapa in Portland, Texas in 2012. Kirven created her second Indiegogo fundraiser to raise reward money for information regarding the murders of the Houston lesbian couple Britney Cosby, and her girlfriend, Crystal Jackson. Kirven's efforts increased public awareness and assisted with arrests in both cases.

Struggle

Kirven has fought against racism in the LGBT community. Kirven with Derrick Spillman and several others created Dallas Black Gay Pride celebration ('DFW Pride Movement') in response to the lack of Black culture in the main gay pride celebration. There hasn’t been a Black grand marshal in Dallas Gay Pride’s 40-year history. Kirven has also fought against homophobia in the Black community. Kirven has written articles and organized several rallies to educate the Black community regarding LGBT rights. In 2012, Kirven and Daniel Cates were voted among the DFW area most influential people and named “The Equalizers”.

References

C. D. Kirven Wikipedia