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Saturday, October 27, 2018
why the middle east is anti-gay and homophobic ?
During the 1800s and 1900s, British colonialism effectively turned one-fourth of the world anti-gay, installing anti-gay laws in Egypt, Iraq, Cyprus and eight other Middle Eastern countries. France did the same in Syria.
But when Britain left, only the countries of Jordan and Bahrain repealed those British anti-gay laws. Later, conservative Sharia laws (based largely on ahadith, sayings controversially attributed to the Prophet Muhammad and his companions) continued the colonial period’s anti-gay legacy.
While America and Europe were busy fighting for gay rights amid the HIV epidemic of the 1980s, conservative Islamic politicians were busy associating homosexuality with “Western moral decay” being exported into the Middle East.
By combining anti-gay sentiment with resentment against the West for its Middle East war-mongering, this helped stoke social tensions and bring anti-gay Muslim leaders to power.
After the overthrow of Iran’s pro-Western monarchy in the late ‘70s, the newly established theocracy made homosexuality a capital offense. Following the U.S.-led Iraq Invasion of 2003, Islamist militias have hunted down and killed gay men via stoning, throwing them from buildings and torture.
And though the 2010 Arab Spring created a short-lived era of peace for gay Egyptians, The Economist says, “Since President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s regime came to power in Egypt in 2014, arrests of gay, lesbian and transgender people have risen fivefold in an apparent bid to stave off conservative critics.”
In short, the power vacuums made it easy for violent anti-gay forces to come in and do their bidding. Even in countries like Egypt where homosexuality isn’t illegal, vague laws against sexual “deviance,” “immorality” and “indecency” allow anti-gay police to abuse LGBTQ people with impunity.
Local activists, like Khalid Abdel-Hadi, founder of a Jordanian gay and lesbian online magazine called My.Kali, says Middle Eastern LGBTQ people are not campaigning for Western-style Pride parades and same-sex marriages. Those often backfire in such conservative communities, he says.
Rather, they’re looking to empower online communities where LGBTQ people can safely find each other and strategize as the Middle Eastern queer community finds its way.
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