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   » » Wiki: Raquel Willis
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Raquel Willis (born 1990/1991) is an African American writer, editor, and transgender rights activist. She is a former national organizer for the Transgender Law Center and the former executive editor of Out magazine. Her memoir, The Risk It Takes To Bloom, was published in November 2023.

In 2020, Willis won the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Article. In 2025, TIME Magazine named Willis as a Woman of the Year, and as one of the 100 most influential people of the year.


Early life and education
Willis was born and raised in Augusta, Georgia. She grew up in a family that encouraged , , and giving back to the community. Her parents were both Sunday school teachers, and she attended church every weekend.

As a child, Willis "was very conflicted" over her gender and sexuality. She was bullied at school and by kids in the neighborhood. As a teenager, she as gay, and eventually found acceptance from her peers and parents.

Willis attended college at the University of Georgia, where she encountered more harassment for being gender non-conforming. She came to realize that she was a , and decided to transition. She worked with other students to counter discrimination based on . Willis graduated in 2013 with a bachelor's degree in journalism.


Activism and career
Following graduation from UGA, Willis moved to and began getting involved in activism with fellow and gender non-conforming people of color. She later came to live in Oakland and work as a communications associate, then national organizer, for the Transgender Law Center.

Willis was one of the speakers at the 2017 Women's March in Washington, D.C. She later stated that though she was glad to be there, she felt that trans women were an "afterthought in the initial planning", and she was cut off by organizers when she tried to say this at the demonstration itself.

(2026). 9781250155504, Picador. .

Willis has spoken out strongly on behalf of trans women. For example, she has criticized comments by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, when Adichie differentiated transgender women from women. Willis called for a boycott of The Breakfast Club radio show after comedian 's appearance on the show, during which he joked about killing trans women after discussing the show's previous interviewee, writer , a transgender woman.

In December 2018, Willis was appointed as executive editor of Out magazine, becoming the first trans woman to lead the publication. Willis, along with Neal Broverman, endorsed in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries. Later that year in June 2020, Willis was announced as the new Director of Communications for the Ms. Foundation for Women. She held that role until January 2021.

Willis co-founded the collective Gender Liberation Movement (GLM) in early 2023. GLM organized the Gender Liberation March in Washington D.C. in support of reproductive and transgender rights amidst anti-LGBTQ legislation and the recent overturning of the constitutional right to have an abortion afforded by Roe v. Wade.

During the , Willis attended an anti-war protest and told AP in 2024 that "everyone is thinking about the genocide that is happening in Gaza and Palestine". In 2024, Willis was a grand marshal for the NYC Pride March. Willis and other GLM activists, among others, stood outside the Supreme Court during the for United States v. Skrmetti, focused on gender-affirming care for minors under 18 years old. Later that week, she was one of 15 activists arrested at a bathroom at the U.S. Capitol that protested the anti-transgender bathroom bill in the U.S. House of Representatives.


Writing
Willis' writings have appeared in publications including The Huffington Post, , and . She also hosted The BGD Podcast with Raquel Willis.

Willis' memoir, The Risk It Takes To Bloom, was published in November 2023 by St. Martin's.


Work
  • 2017 – Sojourner Truth Transformational Leadership Fellow
  • 2018 – Jack Jones Literary Arts Sylvia Rivera Fellow
  • 2018 – Open Society Foundations Soros Equality Fellow
  • 2019 – The Trans Obituaries Project


Awards and recognition
  • 2017 – Essence Woke 100 Women
  • 2017 – The Root 100 Most Influential African Americans
  • 2018 – San Francisco Transgender Day of Visibility Emerging Leader Award
  • 2018 – Frederick Douglass 200 awardee
  • 2020 – GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Magazine Article
  • 2021 — Queer 50
  • 2025 — TIME Woman of the Year
  • 2025 — TIME 100 Most Influential People of 2025


External links

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