Two Spirits: Sexuality, Gender, and the Murder of Fred Martinez

Tonight over at FDL, Lisa Derrick hosts Lydia Nibley, the Director & Executive Producer of Two Spirits: Sexuality, Gender, and the Murder of Fred Martinez, join in tonight at 8pm ET.

Two Spirits interweaves the tragic story of a mother’s loss of her son with a revealing look at the largely unknown history of a time when the world wasn’t simply divided into male and female and many Native American cultures held places of honor for people of integrated genders.

Fred Martinez was nádleehí, a male-bodied person with a feminine nature, a special gift according to his ancient Navajo culture. He was one of the youngest hate-crime victims in modern history when he was brutally murdered at sixteen by a young man who bragged to friends that he had “bug-smashed a fag.”

Two Spirits explores the life and death of a boy who was also a girl and the essentially spiritual nature of gender and sexuality. The film makes the case that in the twenty-first century we need to return to traditional values.Two Spirits offers a unique perspective on gender and sexuality, one that is anchored in traditions that were once widespread among the indigenous cultures of North America. The film explores the history of Native two-spirit people—who combine the traits of both men and women with qualities that are also unique to individuals who express multiple genders.

The Navajo believe that to maintain harmony, there must be a balanced interrelationship between the feminine and the masculine within the individual, in families, in the culture, and in the natural world. Two Spirits reveals how these beliefs were historically expressed in a natural range of sexual and gender diversity. For the first time on film, it examines the Navajo concept of nádleehí, “one who constantly transforms.”

In Navajo culture, there are four genders; some indigenous cultures recognize more. Although two-spirit people were celebrated in many tribes, as Europeans began to arrive on this continent Native views that the range of human sexuality is not a sin but a gift were met with genocide, the forced imposition of Christianity, and other kinds of subjugation that have resulted in many tribal communities losing touch with their two-spirit traditions.

Lydia Nibley is the executive producer, director, and co-writer of Two Spirits and a principal of Say Yes Quickly Productions with her husband and production partner Russell Martin. Lydia has worked in film, television, radio, and stage production and is the co-creator of the original television pilot Rise. In Two Spirits she uses a montage approach that incorporates intimate interviews, scenic Southwest landscapes, and an eclectic palette of found footage to approach the subjects of the film artistically, rather than only journalistically, combining stories of the historic past with contemporary characters and the challenges they face. (http://www.twospirits.org/)

This is a preview.