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’Underground Railway’ Helps Iranian Gays to
Freedom; Back Home, Iranians Enjoy Homo-Sex, Study Shows
By
Kilian Melloy
EDGE Contributor
(Friday
Jan 23, 2009)
http://www.edgeboston.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=&sc2=news&sc3=&id=86294
Even as
the situation in Iran has become so desperate for openly gay men that they
must rely on an "underground railroad" to ferry them out of their country
and out of harm’s way, a new study indicates that many straight men in
that country have had same-gender sexual experiences.
The UK gay Web site
Pink News reported on the study in a Jan. 22 article.
The study, authored by an Iranian sociologist, shows
that despite that country’s Sharia [Muslim religious] law, which
prescribes severe penalties for a range of sexual behavior--including
masturbation, adultery, and consensual same-sex intimacy--nearly a quarter
(24%) of the country’s woman and around one-sixth (16%) of men had had
sexual experiences with at least one person of the same gender.
The report, by university researcher Parvenah Abdul
Maleki, also found that nearly three-quarters of men (73%) and over one
quarter of women (26%) had admitted to masturbation.
The survey also looked more specifically at Iranians
hailing from conservative religious backgrounds. From this demographic
sample, about 4% admitted to sexual experiences with someone of the same
gender, while 86% copped to adultery with an opposite-gender sexual
partner.
Three-quarters (75%) admitted to having viewed
pornographic material.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
denied the existence of gays and lesbians in Iran during a 2007 trip
to the United States, saying, "In Iran we don’t have homosexuals like in
your country."
"In Iran we do not have this phenomenon," added
Ahmadinejad.
The remark, made during an appearance at Colombia
University in New York, drew jeers and invited speculation that it may
have carried a darker undertone: because homosexuality is punishable by
execution in Iran, the remark was interpreted in some quarters as a
not-so-veiled reference to killing gays.
Indeed, the Pink News item pointed out that human
rights watchdogs have accused Iran of killing 3,000-4,000 gays and
lesbians since the country was taken over by Islamic theocrats in 1979.
A year after his claim that no homosexuals existed in
his country, Ahmadinejad changed his claim, saying that gays, though
"few," did indeed live in Iran, the Pink News article reported.
Ahmadinejad went on to say that the "few" gays in Iran
were corrosive to society as a whole.
The Iranian president also slammed America for what he
saw as acceptance of gays, saying, "It should be of no pride to American
society to say they defend something like this."
Added Ahmadinejad, "Just because some people want to
get votes, they are willing to overlook every morality."
Meantime, openly gay men and women often find they must
flee Iran in order to survive.
As they make it to safety in Islamic countries with
less lethal stances on homosexuality, or even find their way to
non-Islamic countries, Iranian gays remember their compatriots back home,
still liable to persecution and execution.
One means of helping those who remain trapped is to
support efforts to get them out of Iran.
A Jan. 20 article in the
Toronto Star profiled the efforts of Arsham Parsi, who as recently as
2006 was living in Turkey, a refugee from the anti-gay persecution that is
common in Iran.
Parsi now lives in Toronto, where he works as the
executive director for a group seeking to aid Iranian GLBTs to freedom.
Said Parsi, who heads Iranian Queer Railroad, "Every
day, people escape, people come here."
Parsi says it’s not enough to get gay Iranians to
neighboring Islamic countries, where the law of the land may not persecute
gays but society at large is liable to inflict suffering and harm.
Said Parsi, "People in Turkey say they’re not
homophobic and I say, ’You’ve living in Istanbul.
"’When you leave Istanbul, it’s different.’
"Gays have been beaten on the streets in Turkey and the
police do nothing," Parsi added.
For that reason, Parsi seeks to help gay refugees to
Australia and to North America, working with the U.N. and with immigration
officials.
Parsi himself had to flee, not only for being gay, but
for resisting the government’s religiously based laws and operating an
online resource where gays could meet and talk.
That online resource led to a real-world group for
Iranian gays. When the authorities got wind of his organizing, Parsi was
obliged to stay one step ahead of them all the way out of the country and
to freedom.
Even now, however, the young man--who has appeared as a
speaker before the UN Human Rights Council and been recognized with awards
from Pride Toronto and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights
Commission--has to tread carefully.
Living in a free
country has not entirely freed him from the death threats that religious
extremists send his way, the Toronto Star article noted.
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