For Ulukhaktok transgender teen, community acceptance 'means a lot' - Action News
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For Ulukhaktok transgender teen, community acceptance 'means a lot'

Community acceptance made coming out as transgender easier for one teen in this isolated Northern community.

17-year-old Matt Kanayok came out to his family and community as transgender this past summer

17-year-old Matt Kanayok says he's been supported and accepted after coming out as transgender in the small community of Ulukhaktok, N.W.T. (Mackenzie Scott/CBC)

For 17-year-old Matt Kanayok, it's been a monumental year.

Not only is he in his final year of high school, but he's just came out as transgender.

"I would say the last year is the first time I've felt most comfortable with myself," he said.

"The whole process of me becoming me started when I was around 12. That's when I realized what LGBTQ identities are, and it really appealed to me."

The teen from Ulukhaktok, N.W.T., an isolated Northern community of fewer than 500 people, says that before he became Matt he was Chloe.

"I would respond to people when they called me [Chloe] but it never really clicked," he said.

Kanayoksays he initially identified as being a homosexualwomanbefore moving towards using amasculine pronoun when with his friends.

A turning point

Kanayoktook a big stepwhen heattended the Rainbow Conference last spring in Yellowknife with a teacher from his school. It was the first time he introduced himself to a large group of people as Matt.

"It was the first time where a whole building of people who I was surrounded with for a week called me by the name that I wanted to be called by," he said.

"And it made it more real and made me come to terms with I'm not cis-gender. I'm trans[gender]."

Kanayok says he came out fully in different phases, starting with school. He said it was easiest to start there, where he trusted his friends and teachers.

"But then I came out to my family and they were just super accepting," he said.

"I think with everyLGBTQperson, there is always this fear of rejection. It was hard for me to do that but once I did ... I realized I already have the people I care most about. They still accept me, so at this point, I don't care what anybody else thinks."

A remote community on a cold winter day.
Ulukhaktok is an isolated community of fewer than 500 people in the Northwest Territories. (Mackenzie Scott/CBC)

Still 'the same person'

Janet Kanyok, Matt's mom, says she remembers thedayhe came out to her.

"It was a hard thing to try to grasp for a second, but really in the end, he's just the same person. Just a boy. Just my son," she said.

Both mom and son say they were pleasantly surprised by the wider reaction in the close-knit community.

"Which makes it so much easier," said Janet.

"I don't have to worry about people bullying him or outcasting him, so it's been great that the community, the school especially, has been very open and welcoming."

No resources

Kanayok said growing up in a small community in the North influenced how long it took for him to come out. He says he's now the only person in Ulukhaktok openly out as transgender.

To make it easier for youth who may be in the same situation he found himself in, Matt has helped start a gay-straight alliance club at the beginning of the school year.

The group has about seven students who are planning social events and organizing LGBTQ educational material.

Kanayok is set to head to Nanaimo, B.C., for university in the fall. He'll be leaving the place he calls home, but he's excited for the adventure and is happy about the journey he's made in Ulukhuktuk this year.

"It was a nice surprise to see that a lot of people in the community are very accepting," he said.

"They are trying and it really matters a lot to me."