In South Ai, televisn shows have often been at the foreont of makg gays and lbians a ltle more visible the hom of lns of viewers.
Contents:
- THE FIRST GAY MARRIAGE SOUTH AI
- THE FIRST GAY PRI MARCH IS HELD SOUTH AI
- LGBT RIGHTS AI: WILL KENYA BE THE LATT TO PASS ANTI-GAY LAW?
- KENYA'S FIRST GAY POLIL NDIDATE REVEALS WHY HE QU RACE
THE FIRST GAY MARRIAGE SOUTH AI
A ernment that implemented and quantified s missn of separatens wh a radil fervor did not target homosexual dividuals until 1968, nearly twenty years after the apartheid's ceptn. A foc will be on the LGBT dividuals whose liv were affected by anti-homosexual legislatn durg the apartheid and their ntug fight to w equal treatment. This study will exame the legalistic history of Lbian Gay Bisexual Transsexual life South Ai by explorg relevant legislatn and their effects on the liv of LGBT people.
THE FIRST GAY PRI MARCH IS HELD SOUTH AI
Most nomatns of Christiany rejected homosexualy sce was emed the Bible to be unnatural and a s: "Levic 18:22 do not lie wh a man as one li wh a woman; that is ttable. Therefore, is safe to assume that the natnalist ernment would have taken an anti-homosexualy stance, which would have fluenced policy. In keepg wh the grandse rhetoric of Aikaner natnalism, the apartheid ernment believed that if South Ai wanted to avoid the fat of ancient Rome, and Greece, mt mata s Christian pury and avoid homosexual bchery, sce sexual viance would lead to the downfall of South Ai (Retief, 1995).
LGBT RIGHTS AI: WILL KENYA BE THE LATT TO PASS ANTI-GAY LAW?
Homosexualy was a mon occurrence the gold m of South Ai durg the 1950s and 1960s (and even now) (Dunbar Moodie, Vivienne Ndatshe and Brish Sibuyi, 1988). Although the men argued that they turned to homosexualy as a last rort, some chose to extend their stay at m rather than return home orr to be wh their "me wiv". The argument n be ma that the men chose to return to their heterosexual liftyle bee they did not want to be ostracized by a disapprovg society, and had ltle opportuny to engage homosexual activi outsi of the m.
KENYA'S FIRST GAY POLIL NDIDATE REVEALS WHY HE QU RACE
Simon Nkoli (November 26, 1957- November 30, 1998), a proment gay rights activist reunted his experience of g out: “Ten years later I me out of my own closet when I met a man, fell love wh him, and told my parents. Nkoli's acunt is reprentative for most homosexual people; however, there are fai that are acceptg: “My mother unrstood; her uncle was also gay.