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Jakarta Post

LINE stickers offer '€˜waria'€™ new hope

Transcend: Transgender model and Miss Waria Indonesia Wayan Lucky Diah Pithaloka (center) poses with LINE sticker models Cika Pracillia Nasution (left) and Reza in Jakarta on Wednesday

Corry Elyda (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Thu, January 7, 2016 Published on Jan. 7, 2016 Published on 2016-01-07T18:10:31+07:00

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Transcend: Transgender model and Miss Waria Indonesia Wayan Lucky Diah Pithaloka (center) poses with LINE sticker models Cika Pracillia Nasution (left) and Reza in Jakarta on Wednesday. LINE, an instant messaging app, will donate all the revenue from its new edition of stickers to a nursing home for the elderly transgender people.(JP/DON) Transcend: Transgender model and Miss Waria Indonesia Wayan Lucky Diah Pithaloka (center) poses with LINE sticker models Cika Pracillia Nasution (left) and Reza in Jakarta on Wednesday. LINE, an instant messaging app, will donate all the revenue from its new edition of stickers to a nursing home for the elderly transgender people.(JP/DON) (center) poses with LINE sticker models Cika Pracillia Nasution (left) and Reza in Jakarta on Wednesday. LINE, an instant messaging app, will donate all the revenue from its new edition of stickers to a nursing home for the elderly transgender people.(JP/DON)

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span class="caption">Transcend: Transgender model and Miss Waria Indonesia Wayan Lucky Diah Pithaloka (center) poses with LINE sticker models Cika Pracillia Nasution (left) and Reza in Jakarta on Wednesday. LINE, an instant messaging app, will donate all the revenue from its new edition of stickers to a nursing home for the elderly transgender people.(JP/DON)

Wayan Lucky Diah Pithaloka, Cika Pracillia Nasution and Reza had the same answer when asked about their hopes after being chosen as models for stickers to be sold in the sticker market of Japan-based mobile chat application LINE, edition Say Cyin, which features the colloquialisms of the Indonesian transgender community.

'€œWe want to prove to society that we can also achieve great things. We are better than the transgender stereotypes used to stigmatize us,'€ Lucky said during a press conference held to launch the stickers in South Jakarta on Wednesday.

Lucky, a 32-year-old beauty salon owner who was chosen as a Miss Law and Human Rights by the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM), said she was able to show to the world that transgender people could also achieve things and contribute to society.

She expressed regret that many jobs suited to transgender people were given to cisgender people. '€œLots of actors act like us. Why not just hire us? Lots of transgender people are talented comedians and actors, for example,'€ she said.

Lucky said that the creative industry, the sector most suited to hiring transgender people, still discriminated against them. '€œThere'€™s an [...] idea that we'€™re not capable of being professional,'€ she said.

The sentiment was shared by Lucky'€™s colleague Cika, a model. '€œI hope that society can recognize us as regular human beings. We also can have talents and be professional,'€ she said.

Cika said she had been taken aback at the offer to be a sticker model, but was glad that the revenue from the stickers would go to a transgender nursing home owned by Yulianus Rettoblaut, better known as Mami Yuli, a transgender rights activist.

'€œI hope this can be a stepping stone for other transgender people to become faces of the creative industry,'€ she said.

Joza Bayu, a senior executive at creative agency Dentsu Indonesia, which designed the stickers, said words like rempong (bothersome), cyin (love), cucok (well-matched) and ember (indeed) were colloquial words used by Indonesians.

'€œSuch terms enliven our conversation, but not many people know and acknowledge that they were created by the transgender community,'€ he said.

The terms, Joza said, were initially used as a form of bonding and recognition among the transgender community. '€œNow the terms represent the contribution of transgender people to popular culture,'€ he said.

Joza said his company wanted to give the recognition that the community deserved by creating the stickers. '€œWe have 40 expressions featuring four transgender models,'€ he said.

The revenue from the stickers, he added, would also be used for the welfare of the transgender community.

Mami Yuli, head of the Indonesian Transgender Communication Forum (FKWI), said that she appreciated the efforts of Dentsu to recognize the language.

She added that despite the terms'€™ popularity, the transgender community earned no advantage. '€œThat'€™s why we want the revenue of the stickers to be dedicated to transgender people,'€ she said.

Yuli said that the transgender nursing home, funded by FKWI members and donors, was overcapacity. '€œWe have around 831 transgender aged 60 or above. We can only accommodate 20 people,'€ she said.

Yuli said the nursing home were essential for transgender people as many of them were cut off from their families. '€œWe train them in skills like cooking pastries, so they can be independent,'€ she said.

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