When then-Print Mahmoud Ahmadejad clared 2007 that there were no gay people Iran, he was rrect one sense. Bee homosexualy
Contents:
- Y, THERE ARE GAY PEOPLE IRAN
- AHMADEJAD: NO GAYS, NO OPPRSN OF WOMEN IRAN
- WHAT 'S LIKE TO BE GAY IRAN
- PRINT MISQUOTED OVER GAYS IRAN: AI
- GAYS IRAN? DISPUTG AHMANIJAD
- 'WE DON'T HAVE ANY GAYS IRAN,' IRANIAN PRINT TELLS IVY LEAGUE DIENCE
- A RARE GLIMPSE INTO IRAN’S UNRGROUND GAY COMMUNY
Y, THERE ARE GAY PEOPLE IRAN
Iran is among the few untri the world where gays still risk executn for their sexual orientatn. But Iran's gay muni ... * there are no gays in iran *
MYTH: Beliefs graed Iranian culture manift an ultranservative and aggrsive ernment approach to homosexualy and non-bary genr inty.
Government polici persecute both homosexuals and transgenr dividuals alike for their sexualy and genr intifitn, crimalizg same-sex relatns and genr reassignment Iran has mataed and pursued polici which nmn and harshly punish homosexualy, a practice wily, and appropriately, cricized as a human rights vlatn.
AHMADEJAD: NO GAYS, NO OPPRSN OF WOMEN IRAN
It is possible to be gay and live unr a reprsive regime that is always threateng to out you, or worse. But 's a lot like walkg a tightrope: sry and ght wh risks. * there are no gays in iran *
Iranian Treatment of HomosexualsDpe cricism om other natns and human rights anizatns, the Islamic Republic of Iran has mataed s practice of nmng same-sex relatns as illegal and morally rpt.
The Iranian Penal Co prohibs all sexual activy outsi of the stutn of marriage, same-sex relatns, and LGBT-related media, wh the ath penalty beg one form of punishment for homosexualy. Zarif argued that the moral prcipl that gui Iranian ernance nmn homosexual behavr jt as they nmn other personal actns and life choic; therefore punishment for such choic, cludg punishment by executn, is lawful and substantiated.
WHAT 'S LIKE TO BE GAY IRAN
Iran's print was misreprented by Wtern media when he was quoted sayg there were no gays Iran, and actually meant there were not so many as the Uned Stat, a printial ai said on Wednday. * there are no gays in iran *
Michael Roth, Germany’s Mister of State the Feral Foreign Office at the time, claimed, “No relig, cultural or ethnic tradn jtifi state persecutn, let alone the executn of homosexuals. Ambassador to Germany at the time of Zarif’s remarks, joed Roth his opposn to the treatment and argued that the executns go agast the UN Universal Declaratn of Human Rights, which clearly tails crimalizatn of homosexualy as a vlatn. Grenell’s sentiments were a ntuatn of the Tmp admistratn’s mpaign which lnched Febary of 2019 to crimnalize homosexualy var natns cludg Iran and lled on global anizatns like the UN and EU ntribute to the rights have been opposn to the Iranian Penal Co sce the 1930s when Parliament passed legislatn crimalizg such relatnships, and disapproval of this discrimatn has tensified over time.
Psychologil profsnals Iran unsel homosexual dividuals to treat their “sexual viancy, ” and even former print Mahmoud Ahmadejad famoly nied the existence of sexual mori Iran 2007. All of this culmat to make Iran one of the most discrimatory untri toward homosexuals the world, wh Iran havg executed an timated 4, 000 to 6, 000 homosexual dividuals sce the 1979 Islamic Revolutn. Moreover, enforcement of this law is ongog, and occurs perdilly wh very publicized exampl, as January 2019, when a 31-year-old man was publicly hanged after beg nvicted guilty of homosexual relatns.
PRINT MISQUOTED OVER GAYS IRAN: AI
Speakg at Columbia Universy on September 24, 2007, Iranian print at the time Mahmoud Ahmadejad proclaimed: “In Iran, we do not have homosexuals like your untry.” While most Wtern natns now officially accept homosexualy and some even same-sex marriage, homosexualy is still punishable by ath Iran. Homosexuals are not allowed to live out their sexualy there. Their only optns are eher to choose transsexualy, which is tolerated by law but nsired pathologil, or to flee. In Denizli, a town Turkey, hundreds of gay Iranians are stuck a trans zone, their liv on hold, hopg agast hope to be weled to a host untry someday where they n start ah and e out of the closet. Set this state of limbo, where anonymy is the bt protectn, my photographs explore the sensive ncepts of inty and genr and seek to rtore to each of the men the face their untry stole om them. My object is not to portray them as victims of polil opprsn and harrowg memori, but to foc on their current prediment and their hop for a better, eer life which to exprs their love and sexualy openly, beyond the reach of narrow sexual and genr dictat. The photographs paradoxilly juxtapose light, simple, sometim even ftive elements wh the gravy of the subject-matter and the prerns of her subjects’ plight. Alternatg between vered and unvered fac, the seri pots up the difficulti the men face reappropriatg the inty space they’ve been prived of. (Lrence Rasti, Carouge 2016) * there are no gays in iran *
Sce nsensual homosexual relatnships are punishable by public executns, the measur also serve a sendary purpose for the Iranian ernment, which is to timidate cizens to not g out.
Genr Assignment IranGiven the severe and dranian ernment polici towards homosexualy Iran, is perhaps suprisg that genr reassignment and the existence of of transgenr dividuals Iran is legally supported. Though personal and societal judgement agast transgenr people Iran is - as many untri - persistant and pervasive, the broar ia of beg transgenr is not nsired a vlatn of Iranian theocratic prcipl, and the ernment do not view such dividuals as they do homosexuals. Most relig lears only accept those non-bary dividuals who fully plete the transn operatn, while those who do not are perceived as “sick” and n still be arrted for cross-drsg and other stereotypilly homosexual practic.
GAYS IRAN? DISPUTG AHMANIJAD
Dpe formal support of transgenr people by the ernment, dividuals are still faced wh discrimatn and persecutn by private cizens and dividuals their personal liv, an experience siar to that of homosexuals Iran.
It is clear that the support iated by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomei s ago and the advantage of the clivy of the Persian language provi foundatnal stutnal acceptance of trans cizens Iran, but there are still steps that mt be taken to promote social approval and cultural rporatn of the non-bary Intersectn of Authorized Genr Surgery and Iran’s Homosexual TreatmentWh the approach to both homosexualy and transgenr cizens Iran tablished, a rrelatn between the two to light.
'WE DON'T HAVE ANY GAYS IRAN,' IRANIAN PRINT TELLS IVY LEAGUE DIENCE
Wh an tense foc on the necsy of sex-reassignment surgery, the applitn of this operatn as a solutn is often over-extend, and the ncept of genr dysphoria is prumed te of homosexual dividuals.
Both homosexuals and transgenr people are viewed as havg a mental illns, a diagnosis which advot applitn of the genr reassignment operatn, even when do not rrelate wh the dividual’s intifitn. Homosexuals phed towards this as a treatment are left wh few optns due to the legal support of hormone treatments, psychotherapy, and full transnal operatns; th, many are faced wh eher endurg the promoted medil approach or fleeg the untry to seek polil asylum a natn wh different legal thorizatn of genr reassignment reprents signifint progrs and support for the transgenr populatn, n also unfortunately be ed agast the already persecuted mographic of homosexuals Iran.
Through onle activism, publishg poetry, lerature and artwork onle, and engagg wh global gay culture through televisn and the ter, gay Iranians are g of age, spe the myriad of rtrictns they still face Iranian society and at the hands of the state. Mehdi Hamzad is young gay man his early thirti who has recently fished higher tn; he liv Tehran, and has braved g out to his iends, though not to his fay. We spoke to him about what life is like the days for gay, lbian, bisexual and transgenred Iranians, and whether is even possible to live a fulfilled, secure life as a gay person a untry such as Iran:.
A RARE GLIMPSE INTO IRAN’S UNRGROUND GAY COMMUNY
Unr the current circumstanc, Iranian youth, whether gay or straight, face many different obstacl, some of which have to do wh the regime (social rtrictns and iologil and polil prsure or the enomic suatn), and some to do wh public culture (a lack of acceptance of different liftyl and closed, tradnal thkg).