Cultural Exchange: 'Cur That Kill' shows the slow pace of acceptance gays Cha are experiencg.
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GAY CISG MODI’S INDIA
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“They get some betiful men to walk around naked bi you, or make you watch gay porn, ” says Zhang Beichuan, one of Cha’s leadg experts on homosexualy, scribg a practice he don’t advote.
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”To addrs this issue, the Che gay rights anizatn Queer Comras terviewed Zhang and others for a documentary about two men stgglg wh their homosexualy, and the hospals dotted around Cha advertisg a solutn. Tled “Cur That Kill” and released last week, tells the story of A Wen, a Sichuane photographer, and Sanr Chan, an ethnic Che polician om Holland who spent years tryg to e his belief Christiany to exorcise his homosexualy: “I would often fast for one or two days after havg a sexual fantasy, jt as a remr of what my goal is, ” he stoilly tells the mera. A Wen’s malaise was ed by a problem mon wh the Che generatn growg up the 1980s and earlier: an almost plete lack of awarens of homosexualy.
DO JAPAN’S CONSERVATIVE SHTO RELIGN SUPPORT GAY MARRIAGE?
”Treatment of homosexuals has improved greatly over the last half century om the benighted nfn of the Mao years. In 2001, the health mistry removed homosexualy om s list of mental disorrs.
In the that followed, the expansn of civil society, the growth of the Inter and the velopment of psychologil unselg have enabled homosexuals to feel more fortable a society that still fails to fully embrace them.
Though there are probably more than a hundred gay bars throughout Cha and more than a dozen gay support anizatns Beijg, other people “are jt not aware of , ” Hui said, partially bee Che media and popular culture lack openly gay Chunjian, 32, is a fay therapist who specializ gay youth; the documentary he speaks of the need for gays to accept themselv.