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Gay Egypt
2004-08: Gay Life (sort of) in Modern Egypt
A month in Egypt--up
the Nile, north to Alexandria and west across to the oasis of Siwa--is
almost enough to see this ancient culture in all its beauty and despair.
Gay
and lesbian life shares little of the beauty and much of the despair.
Also see: 
Gay
Egypt 2001
Egypt
News and Reports 2001 to present
Egypt Photo Galleries
Note: the
photographs in this story make no inference about the sexual orientation
of the people shown. The images were taken randomly and
anonymously.
Story and photos by Richard Ammon
March 2004
Updated March 2008
From the start, writing about the 'gay scene' in Egypt did not look
promising:
"
I am quite sure you will have difficulty trying to uncover
much at all,” said
a friend of a friend who lived in Egypt for three years.
He continued, “I have one close friend who is now living in London
(in exile). He fled the country shortly after I left and declared himself
a political refugee because the Egyptian government sees homosexuality
as an illegal practice and imprisons any known offenders!"
Queen
Boat Disco by Marriott Hotel |
As if
this were not enough discouragement, he went on to say, "I
have another friend currently in prison in Cairo for the
same 'offence'. He was arrested shortly before I left for just being
in
a disco on
the "Queen Boat' where homosexuals frequently hung out."
Daunting as his advice was, his message was no surprise to me since
I had read about the police raid on the Queen Boat in May 2002, as
had most of the world. The resulting scandal, trail and human rights
outcry caused Egyptian President Murbarak to invalidate the 23 guilty
verdicts (out of 52 arrested) and order a new trial, which resulted
in more acquittals and a few 'leaders' being re-sentenced.
Nevertheless, I inquired further for gay contacts and connected with two Egyptians in Cairo and Alexandria who agreed to meet
me when
I arrived. Their stories are in contrast and reveal two very different
facets of homosexuality in Egypt. And, as always, serendipity provided
some further insights into a cloaked world.
Madi and Hani
My first contact was named Madi (he suggested this pseudonym) who was
pleasantly handsome, about 50 years old and conservatively dressed
in western clothes. He spoke perfect English. His profession
was a medical consultant and had worked in Egypt and abroad for universities
and hospitals. Although he was married with three kids he came to dinner
not with his wife (which I hardly expected) but with his 24 year-old
boyfriend.
Conversation flowed easily in the stylish dining room of candlelight
and high Moorish arches. It was an unusual meeting for Madi in that he
could safely tell his story without censure.
Indeed he seemed eager
to let out his secret second life with me, to give it a moment of light.
He felt he had been gay since he was 13. Early feelings of attraction
and the frightening thrill of adolescent sexual encounters excited
and confused him. “I was very religious then and went to mosque
often to purify myself from these feelings. But a month later I wanted
sex again.” It didn’t take long for his ambivalence to
clear up (after college) when he returned again and again to the same
man for a couple of years. “It was my first relationship; he
was very nice to me and the sex was very good.”
Young
Egyptian (not Hani) |
As Madi described his coming out and subsequent duplicitous life, his
current non-English-speaking paramour, Hani, a
sweet-faced youth with a thick shock of shiny black hair and cobalt
eyes sat
quietly across from Madi. Hani was polite and very patient as Madi
and I jabbered
through our French meal of entrecote and legumes. Madi described Hani
as very devout and was known as an exceptionally kind person. He was
also somewhat of a local heart throb among the girls, some
of whom he had for occasional sex partners. He smiled
with embarrassment when Madi asked him, in Arabic, about his other ‘conquests’.
Hani was a restaurant waiter loyal to his mother and siblings with
whom he lived. He made about $50 a month and was not much interested
in further education beyond his high school diploma. He
wanted to work to help his family. He lacked ambition for anything
beyond his present
circumstance. When Madi occasionally addressed him in Arabic it
elicited a beautiful smile on his unwrinkled face. He seemed content
just to
look at Madi. "You see how much he loves me. Look at his eyes," said
Madi as we both looked at the charming boy (the archetype of puer eternis),
which elicited another, bashful, smile. Hani replied with awkward sincerity
and gazing into Madi’s eyes, that his love was for Madi not his
girlfriends.
I
could say Madi was bisexual but he was not about to declare a singular
identity around his sexuality. He was first of all an Egyptian
Muslim man: husband, father, son, brother and cousin. This
has always meant devotion to Allah, family and the social requirements
of citizenship:
in short, obedience. Declaring his sexuality openly, taking a visible
male lover and living with him was out of the question. So Madi
did what he and most gay middle class Egyptians do, he served in
the military
for a short time, finished his university degrees, got married
and provided three children for his wife, parents and in-laws.
He has done
his duty well.
Over the past 20 years (his oldest child is now 17) he has had several
amorous relationships with younger men who have provided
him with more passion and romance than his marriage. But
he said he would never leave his wife for Hani. So the second rule
of
survival
(the first is obedience) for homosexuals in Egypt is that genuine
passion must remain a secret. Duty is visible, love is
not.
For Madi such a dual life has not been a problem.
His professional career has supported and educated his family and has
given him
the freedom (working abroad) to pursue his own interests.
As well, it's customary for Egyptian men and women to socialize
primarily with their own gender. Countless cafes all over the country
are filled with men smoking water pipes, drinking coffee and playing
cards or backgammon (towla), or watching soccer games on TV. Women
stay home and talk in discreet circles.
Over the years Madi has never had a single incident of exposure
or harassment regarding his sexuality. He was betrayed
by one lover (and suffered in silence) but recovered and went on
to meet other sexy and
loving guys, two of whom initially cruised or touched him in the
Cairo subway. Another boyfriend broke off to marry
while another
lives on his own and has other boyfriends (with separate homes).
(In
Cairo and Alexandria, cities with millions of people, a gay person
can more easily escape the confines and demands of family
and engage furtively in a sort of gay social scene that
includes certain clubs and discos (like the Queen Boat) on certain
nights. But such folks are rare and brave and /or
have enough money to have their own private apartment. A wider
gay 'community' can be found on the Internet but this still
represents only a small fraction of homosexuals in Egypt since
the vast majority cannot afford such luxuries.)
Meanwhile,
Along the Nile
All this seemed so distant and devious as I traveled south on the
Cairo-Aswan train one sunny afternoon a few days later. The railroad travels
through the underbelly of Egypt, passing countless gritty
urban back alleys and green Nile River farms dense with fields of
wheat, alfalfa, sugar cane and mud brick houses.
While tourists whisk by in speedy trains or air-conditioned
buses, most rural local travel is by donkeys who are clearly ‘beasts
of burden’,
laden with bales of crops or carrying farmers (felaheen, who make
up the majority of the population) to or from their fields. Water
buffalo
are tractors. Farmers dress in galabiyyas (robes) and headdresses
as they wield hoes or sickles. Barefoot kids play with sticks and
old
tires. Goat herds wander close to their herds. Polluted irrigation
canals parallel the rail tracks from which gas-powered pumps toss
water into
the fields. Date palms spawn everywhere. Not a few hundred yards
pass without another donkey blinking in the afternoon sun as farmers
bend
or squat to cut or plant.
In great contrast to the sublime pyramids of yesteryear, the
vast majority of urban housing today is in large ugly unimaginative
apartment
blocks constructed of cement columns filled in with walls of brick. Rural
farmhouses (no bigger than two or three rooms) are of mud adobe bricks
in villages that sprawl across the parched brown land, many far from
the Nile valley.
Second
only to the great sands dunes here are the dunes of trash
piled along countless alleys and canals and vacant
fields that back onto the railroad routes. It appears
there is no national
system of disposal or recycling, a western luxury that Egypt can
ill afford. So plastic bags snag on trees and bushes and become
a sort of national flag as they flutter in the wind. Some plastic
containers, aluminum cans and cardboard are scavenged by peasants
on bicycles or lugging hand-drawn
carts.
Mosque
minarets are never far from view. Islam is
more than a religion here; it’s a lifestyle, a
constant presence, a form of government and a personal conscience.
Even if one does not practice
or pray
or give alms according to scripture there is no
escape from the faith. And clearly no gay man
or woman in this country is free
from
the homophobia of Islam (or Coptic Christianity, which
is equally as stringent). Being gay is publicly and personally
felt as shameful, and queer people
live in fear of exposure, humiliation, rejection and scorn. Physical
gay bashing, however, is virtually unheard of--except when in
police custody.
Virtually
all citizens agree that homosexuality is an offense against
Allah and his prophet. There is no sympathy or support. You’re
on your own to ferret out secret contacts in stolen moments of
passion. Never mind the larger violation of impoverished
millions,
the dilapidated infrastructure of the electric grid, polluted
canals or lack of running
water or trash disposal. The impetus for improving working class
life (after 5000 years of civilization here) is mute compared
to the
fervent
passion
of persecution
that dwells against citizens (many very devout) who happen to
be gay or lesbian.
Ari
in Alexandria
And what better example of that cruel displaced self-righteousness
is found in the trauma of young Aristotle’s life. Ari is 20,
a student of international law who is lucky to come from an upper
middle class family in Alexandria. Shy and polite he suffers from
mood swings
and nightmares
and has
seen more than one therapist to help pull his mind back from the
shattering two months that ripped him from innocent childhood to
rude adulthood.
Sitting in a quiet Alexandria coffee shop Ari told me his story. “On
the Internet, I had chatted with this guy for a couple of weeks and
we decided to meet at Mac Donald's in Cairo. So I went there at the
right time; a man approached me and asked if I was Ari. As
soon as I said yes seven policemen in casual clothes arrested me
and took me
out and pushed me into a truck.”
Mogamma
Government Building |
They took
him to the top floor of the Mogamma
government building ("a Kafkaesque monument
to bureaucracy"--says Lonely Planet guidebook) in Cairo’s
Midan Tahrir (Liberation Square!) where police investigations are
done.
That was the day that changed Ari’s life,
from a naïve carefree
student to a jailed criminal at the
age of 17. His crime: 'habitual
debauchery, attempting to seduce another, and practicing homosexuality'.
Said Ari, "I
was still a minor of 17 and that's why after investigations, which
lasted for 7 hours, I was sent to
Azbakiyah Police station after midnight to stay overnight, before
heading to the D. A's. office the next morning."
As a young teen Ari’s only crime was stealing glances
at older guys when he went to the fitness club. "I used to love
to watch them when they laid in the sun or
in the changing room when they bend over to changing their pants." At
first his attraction
was unintentional, a vague liking. But as he aged and became more
self aware of this willful desire toward men he also realized
that to express it would offend social boundaries. Yes, friends held
hands
in public in Egypt; boys and men put their arms around each other;
they lightly kissed on meeting up with best buddies.
At 17 he was a gay person without ever having embraced another
boy or felt the visceral charge of a passionate kiss. At 17 he was
sent to college. It was in the university library that he discovered
the Internet and homosexually oriented web sites. He was
thrilled, aroused and frightened at what he saw. He was also terrified
of being
seen watching these sites.
As with all Egyptian youth, social behavior is carefully prescribed
by local family traditions that are in turn prescribed by a society
infused with religious beliefs, dogma and prohibitions against any
premarital sexuality--especially homosexuality. For endless
generations, sex has been shrouded in fear, shame, repression. Having
some ice cream in a café with boys and girls in modern Cairo
is not unusual. (It is unusual further away in smaller
towns like Luxor). But chatting up a girl and making suggestive comments
offends public morality in Egyptian culture. Even among
the many Christian families (Coptic Christians) there is strong prohibition
against such prodigal behavior. For gays and lesbians the prohibition
is thus doubled.
A Boy's
Nightmare
Ari's family is Muslim but this clearly had no softening impact
on the dismay at receiving that phone call from the police. Their
son had been arrested as a common criminal. Discovering
Ari’s
secret in such a public jolting way was devastating and humiliating
for his conforming and complacent family. For Ari
it was as close to death as he ever wanted to feel.
Here is his story as told to me in person and by e-mail:
"Well, to start with. I was studying medicine in the Alexandria
University. I am also studied for a diploma in
computer science privately. I also studied German language. I wished
to get accepted in a foreign university
for a further degree.
"I was arrested for being a gay in February 2002 and was jailed for
about 2 months. I remember during the investigation with
me when I was first caught, I denied every thing and wouldn't confess
the real
truth. I was so frightened and confused. I was caught alone with
my trolley bag containing medical books. (I didn't look like a flirt
or
a date). As I told you before, I came to Cairo in the same day I
got a call from this guy I had chatted with. We decided to meet at
Mac Donald's
and then happened everything.
"I was threatened by the police that the person
whom I was going to meet was related to a political group and was
a devil worshipper. For any Egyptian, this is the hell on earth
if just to be accused, even if maybe not found guilty later.
"I was
not allowed to call my family the first day and I thought automatically
I will not be allowed the following day. What happened is that a
social worker in the juvenile court (D.A. office) asked me for numbers
of
my relatives, my memory was blocked, and then I remembered an uncle's
number and he came after investigations at the D.A.'s office. Something
else worth mentioning is that my mobile phone was confiscated as
evidence that I made phone calls through it, and my wallet
was taken away to the safety deposit.
"It is well-known in all Arab countries (democratic countries and non-democratic
countries) that you can be taken into custody by state security
police with no trial at all and maybe get a life imprisonment in
the middle of nowhere at the end of the world. So that is why I was
forced to
say every thing.
"I tolerated beating in jail, abuses, insults and mocking from
everybody.
I had to sleep on the floor without a blanket. But those words and
actions were not the most humiliating things. Part of the investigation
was with a forensic doctor from the court who examined me.
He was ordered from the D.A. We were
in a room with no door and people passing outside and he told me that he
will perform
a rectal examination and
other incidents happened which I find it hard to tell. This was
the most
humiliating and disgracing moment in my life and full of dishonor
for any human.
"After two months of terrible life I luckily got released.
I got a three years sentence but I managed to avoid because of my
family
influence. The police have neglected my presence since then
as I am not an active gay leader or group member and so I'm useless
to
them.
"They
have more recently started to ignore the gay issues, unofficially,
in public and they seem to have finished their attacks and left a
'lesson' for the leftovers (gay people in general). But they are still
active on the Internet and surf the chat rooms for Egyptians to lure
into
their trap. So, please watch out as you might also be followed,
although no trouble will happen to you as a foreigner but it might
happen to
us after you leave. Please be very careful to the greatest extent.
"But, the main problem I got now is the complication happening afterward
regarding constant fear of being re-jailed, my post-traumatic
stress (so
I'm told). My feelings are very moody, anxious I think. I went to
several psychiatrists. I used the gay issue as the
main problem and did not mention my imprisonment, although I know
that my main problem came from my being jailed. From the time I was
jailed in February ('02) till September my memory
was
very washed (unclear) and I wasn't conscious of myself. Although
I was released
in April, I had a total collapse and breakdown that started. Thanks
to Allah I am starting the construction of my self-being again.
"I didn't mention the detective work and intelligence personnel
who were placed in my university dorm to watch my movements after my
release. They even were monitoring my mobile line and I used to hear buzzing
while talking; all of this to catch a new victim as if they were
thinking that I was knowing other gays.
"Also there are problems regarding my parents and our surroundings.
Some relatives discovered I am gay because of this big problem so my parents
feel
embarrassed and not sure what to say. It is hard for them and
I feel bad what I have done to them, but after some time passing it is a little
better
as
my
life goes into the
future…"
This sad and harrowing story is one of many that have come out of Egypt in
recent years. For another account of police corruption and brutality
toward captured gays read the report from Human Rights Watch posted at: http://hrw.org/reports/2004/egypt0304/ as
well as posted on this web site News and Reports page: http://www.globalgayz.com/egypt-news03-04.html
A summer 2005 message from Ari said his life has continued to settle
down and he is now busy with school exams. Recently he ventured back
to the
Internet--much more carefully--and has made the acquaintance of someone
older whom he likes and who "adores" Ari. As he
said, "my
type is a 'bulky' person and being a man in his attitude.
I enjoy also lean guys. I think always
I am more mature than my age and need someone older in result."
In
early 2008 he sent the following more upbeat note: The gay
and lesbian life is again active in Cairo and Alexandria but with differences.
My boyfriend
works in Cairo and some of his colleagues are gay and lesbian too—about
a dozen.
"I was invited with him to a dinner once in Maadi (a quiet neighborhood
and a luxurious place) where gay parties
and birthdays are done on weekends for a simple reason: they are low-key
and private and not open to just anyone.You do find queens
invited with full make-up on their faces and this implies what is happening.
"There is still harassment going on but at a very low scale for now and
in a different way. An arrested person or couple is taken to the police
station
and are beaten a bit and stay there overnight or for 3 days then released
but no charges are issued. I haven't heard of a new case since November.
There have been no recent cases of entrapment, although gay issues and gay
dating web sites are being surveiled by police to keep a check on this society
and to solve other related
cases,
e.g. a murder case of a gay which lately took place.
"In Alexandria it is different; everyone knows everyone (I mean gays).
They meet in many occasions. I went once with three friends celebrating
a feast
and went to a mall. Suddenly we turned to a cafe to greet some friends
and there were over 25 guys sitting together in a circle and occupying
a quarter
of the Cafe.
"I shook hands with a few then escaped away; I couldn't handle such a thing
and felt as if I was fainting but again everyone was friendly. They are
always curious to know who is the new face.
"I think if you come once more to Egypt, you will have a totally different
view. However, we gays are benefiting of this relative freeness because
it is in a low key, even when we are sitting in a cafe and discussing issues
we are loud and the people around hear us and mostly never bother us. Each
one is in his own world.
"A bad thing here is that many gay, tops and bottoms are
called female nicknames and call by the feminine pronoun, she
or her .I do not like that at all
and I am fortunate that I was nicknamed "the Doctor".
"By the way, the Issue of homosexuality is mentioned in some Egyptian
movies now and does show it in different ways, e.g. in a
film called 'Mercedes' there
are two guys living a loud and bohemian life. One of them has a father
who deprived him from his inheritance and he is the cousin of the libro
(main)
actor. In another film the scene starts with an old man having a phone
call with his boyfriend who apologizes for not coming. This depresses
the old man who prepared an exquisite banquet for them both. Then
the meter man (the libro actor) rings the doorbell to check the readings.
The old man tries to seduce him but very politely and with dignity.
The
meter man leaves in peace. The translated name of the film is 'A
Meter Man's Tale' (It is called "Dheel Elsamakah", it
means Fish Bone but the deeper meaning is that everything has a influence
which helps to guide you to the right way.
"Another thing to mention, my older sister, 19, knows about my gay life
and about my boyfriend. She tolerates that but still does
not accept him totally. The rest of my family are still
negative and feel insulted. I still live with my mother and sister.
But, I think
even if I stayed here next year,
I will live alone or with my boyfriend if things are going fine.
My brother will be coming and he will be the man of the house and
I will be released
from this burden and gladly give up that "oriental tradition".
"I really hope to live abroad in graduate school but the current world-wide
situation is not promising whether in Europe or USA against Arabs
and Muslim. I am hoping for a long term study visa abroad which includes
some work that helps me keep my identity which I am proud of and be independent.
Being away will also save
a big burden from my parents by ending the everyday quarrels and sorrow they
suffer--and allow me to live as a gay man away from Egypt, and be in peace."
(End of Ari's 2008 message)
Constantine
P. Cavafy
The next afternoon I went to Alexandria’s most famous
café/pastry
shop Trianon in the main square famous for its history as well
as it desserts. High wood-lined walls rose up to the carved ceilings
that dangled crystal
chandeliers. Tall windows invited channels of sunlight through sheer curtains
onto the red carnations on each table.
Sitting
at one of these tables was a solitary man in his sixties absorbed in
his own thoughts. His postured silhouette cast in a glow of
gossamer light awakened in my imagination that he could have been Constantine
Cavafy, Alexandria's most
illustrious poet (1863-1933) deep in reverie. I thought
about the pieces of his life as a Greek-born Alexandria-based poet, government
clerk, traveler, classicist and gay aesthete. He was in love with human
beauty, gods and heroes, ancient and modern who peopled his poems like
lovers.
In
1924, at the age
of sixty, his
thrill of sentient splendor had not diminished. He wrote:
He Came to Read
He came to read. Two or three books
are open; historians and poets.
But he only read for ten minutes,
and gave them up. He is dozing
on the sofa. He is fully devoted to books --
but he is twenty-three years old, and he's very handsome;
and this afternoon love passed
through his ideal flesh, his lips.
Through his flesh which is full of beauty
the heat of love passed;
without any silly shame for the form of the enjoyment…
Clearly
the poet's passions were still keen and undeterred
by the poverty, corruption and religious banality around him. Aesthetic
delight and erotic energy of puer eternis--eternal youth--re-awakened
his muses daily.
Hakim
My private reverie with Cavafy finished when the man left. He passed two
other men sitting at a table speaking American English. I
found an excuse to open conversation with them and found they were
a couple
from New York State. Hakim, a 55 year-old native-born Egyptian, and
his American partner Glen were on their annual trip to visit Hakim's
relatives, as they had for the past 25 years.
Over some very black Egyptian coffee Hakim related that he
knew he was gay at twelve when he was in anguished muted love
with his school teacher. It didn’t get easier as he aged and
realized what these feelings meant and how they could never be
spoken in Egypt.
Surrounded
by his Muslim family, friends and school peers who held hands and hung
on each other, Hakim said he always felt he wanted to
kiss these guys, "you know, like a girl, on the lips! But of
course that never happened but I imagined it." he said with a
laugh. He had a
crush on one classmate but this was their final year after
which Hakim went off to the American University in Cairo and he never
saw the boy after
that.
In
college Hakim found an occasional willing classmate
or local for a furtive sex. But Hakim was looking for more: “I
made suggestions to some of my sex partners about love but they ran
away. They couldn’t think that way. I thought maybe there was
something wrong with me that I wanted such feelings from others. My
years at college were very frustrating. There was sex once in a while
but no passion.”
Hakim
graduated with a degree in chemical engineering. He chose it partly
because it was
an unusual and desirable specialty that allowed him to make
application for further study abroad in Europe or America. He
was accepted at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in upstate New York. “And
the rest is happy history. I met Glen there and we’ve been
together since then. I tell my family here my work here is very
important. We
go back and visit them almost every year and I think by now they
realize Glen is not my roommate. They will never ask and I will
never tell.
But my mother makes up one bedroom for us now that my father has
died.”
This unusually fortunate gay Egyptian lives the life he once
vaguely dreamed about as a mystified youth in love with other
boys. It’s
a reality for Hakim, but it's still only a dream for most other
LGB Egyptians. ("How can I get to America," I was
asked several times by gay and straight young people as I traveled
around
Egypt.)
Along
the Nile: Felucca Boys
Egypt is a complex culture, not unlike other cultures, in that there
is contradiction, paradox and conflicting forces at
work that influence behavior and habits. Media headlines
may describe homosexuality as highly suspect and
under attack in Egypt but walking the streets of small villages
or along a Nile River promenade reveals a different story.

One cool morning before the heat arose I left my Aswan hotel and
headed for the river where the famous Felucca sailing boats are crowded
along
the embankment in between huge five-story passenger ships. It’s
impossible to get near the ‘corniche’, as the river promenade
is called, without being approached by Felucca
middlemen offering their boats for hire, “very cheap my friend.
Come...”
I wanted to get to the west bank to visit the ruins of the ancient
St Simeon monastery just near the mausoleum of the Aga Khan family.
I let myself be led by one insistently persuasive salesman (they are
like buzzards-- unavoidable and rapacious) to one of his ‘fleet’,
which was operated by a ‘captain’ who ferried tourists
back and forth or up and down the chilly Nile.
To cross the river in a Felucca is not a straight shot (pun
intended), like the motor ferry, because the wind varies; rather, the
boat tacks
back and forth eventually reaching its destination. It’s not
good transport if you're in a hurry but it is quiet, calm and gentle.
It is also an opportunity for some Felucca drivers to slowly
work their way into conversation about where you’re from, if
you are alone, if you want to hire them tomorrow…or if there
is anything that you are looking for.
My swarthy little Nubian (the ethnic group in the Aswan area) named ‘Ziggy’ was
20 years old and his fellow helmsman was 24 with a name that sounded
something like ‘Sitchy’. As our boat caught a soft breeze
Ziggy sat closer as we chatted about the boat, his impending marriage
and
would I like to see the ‘room’ under
the bow. He pointed to a little door about 30 inches square
with the words ‘Magic Room’ painted on it.
“ You like?”
' Like what?' I replied feigning ignorance of his overtures.
“ Maybe you like Egyptian banana. Is very good.”
I looked at him with mock surprise. 'But you are getting married
in six months; you like sex with boys and girls?' It felt bizarre
saying ‘boys’ since I was old enough to be his grandfather.
“ Sure, why not? You like?”
He
now knew that I knew what he was talking about; that I was not put
off and that I was at least playful if not curious. He pressed himself against me and put his head on my shoulder with one
hand behind me stroking my back pocket.
“
Come on I show you. Come,” as he started toward the door.
But I said with a laugh, 'no, not so fast. What do you do in
there?'
“You like banana. You like fuckee. Is very good.”
Talk about cruising down the Nile!
Set against the backdrop of police persecution and the notorious drama of the
public trials, convictions and international protests this skinny dark Nubian sported a boner under his galabayya (robe) and insisted I feel
it to convince me he was ready for this foreign ‘money-man’.
He was certainly primed for action.
And he was not the only ready one. His fellow pilot was also available. “You
like him too?” offered Ziggy looking at his pal who was following Ziggy’s
Don Juan act with no small interest.
I laughed at the absurdity of the moment. I doubt Ziggy or Sitchy had a clue
about the serious events in the Cairo courts.
Nor should they. Who was going to bust a couple of kids on a boat in
the middle of the Nile putting the make on a tourist. I doubt they
cared what my sexual leaning was. For a few fleeting moments I was vainly
flattered that age had
no effect in the matter.
I was of course always aware this was a sales pitch.
Ziggy was actually quite smooth and confident and unabashed in using his sexual
prowess as a commodity.
Was he gay? I doubt it. But neither could he be called completely straight.
Labels simply didn't apply. He was another of the countless impoverished
guys around the world who are gay for pay. And if it feels good, so
much the better. Poverty and sex have always been twined from ancient times,
from Buenos Aires
to Vladivostok. Genuinely gay or not the Felucca scene was a side show in queer
Egypt today--and probably for centuries before.
In Paul Theroux’s 2002 book ‘Dark Star Safari’, he
describes the same seduction scenario with straight women as they hire, knowingly
or unknowingly, a Felucca and it’s spicy crew for a cruise across the
river—or
down into the hidden riverside foliage.
Aggressive Sexuality
And Ziggy was not the last. Over the course of several days progressing along
the Nile valley from the huge Aswan dam and the stunning Abu Simbel temple
(the one they moved up hill in the 1960's) past the very ancient tombs of the
pharaohs, a varied assortment of sweetly smiling guys let their gaze rest on
my eyes in clear and silent gaydar language. Backward looks and knowing
smiles were exchanged every day between this traveler and numerous swarthy
men. No doubt most of
the glances were mercenary but more than a few were silent calls from
encapsulated lives.
And if
such a glance suggested more a room in a hotel
was needed, but it’s not likely the man of the
moment would be allowed upstairs. The ever-watchful staff are on alert even
in two star hotels to ‘protect’ guests
from ‘suspicious’ locals.
Such as the waif who approached me one afternoon as I was waiting
to board the cross-Nile ferry (no Felucca, thank you) and in a falsely
modest voice asked if I would like to “enjoy” him. Dressed
in a grubby galabayya he appeared little more than thirteen as he plied me
to visit the tall sugar cane bushes across the road to "make
pleasure".
“
You will like to feel good; Egyptian men very good. Good banana.” I asked
him how old he was to which he surprised me with “16.”
'No, that’s not possible. You're only 13,' I countered.
“ No, really 16.”
The
moment was a somewhat incredulous for me that this boy
was so young and so sexually street-smart.
He talked as if he were ten years older with more years of experience.
Picking up on his boldness and slightly as a dare, I said ,’you have
a big dick?’ to which he brightened and replied without skipping a beat, “oh
yes, you like for sure. Come we go over there.”
Fortunately my ferry arrived in time to end the hollow and demeaning banter
with this too-worldly impoverished child. Money was a rare commodity; for
perhaps three dollars he, like many river boys, was fearless, pushy and willing
to undress and use his puerile body as merchandise--and doubtless without the slightest concern for HIV.
Sex as a Bargain
Such encounters with underemployed, unskilled and barely educated
young men happen everywhere, only their styles
vary according to
their personal and social manners. But the 'make' is the same. Here in
Egypt the prized art of bargaining is added to the pitch. Persuading
a buyer to pay
more than he is willing to offer is a skilled honed over generations
and the training starts early. Haggling for sex is no different.
In both situations the boys were insistent and persistent
with a
driving sense of immediacy that disregarded my response. I really
was not willing to
engage in sex with either one of them and I said so.
But as in bargaining for a carpet or a teapot, my opinion didn’t
matter. My refusal only whetted their appetite for
further persuasion, pleading, urging, lambasting or arguing against any excuse
I offered for not buying. One souk shop owner (not a sex boy) in
Luxor put his hand on my shoulder and would not let me pass, insisting I
look at
this
or
that
souvenir
in this
or that color or this or that material.
So it
was with these sexy persuaders who ignored my declinations. Their
forceful words seemed to me acts
of defiance that bordered on contempt. How could I possibly
not want sex
with them, especially since they were offering enjoyment for not much
money? “You
rich, you like banana. Very cheap.”
I found the best
solvent for the tension created by these encounters was a playful laugh
that (firmly) shrugged
off the swarm of words and urgings of these poor guys. It was,
after all, business.
Days later in Cairo I was taking a photo of a grubby back alley
arrayed with hanging laundry peeling painted walls, trashy gutters
and a greasy
car under
repair. A young boy perhaps 15 on a bicycle came peddling toward me and
yelled “hallo” as
most youngsters do to pale-faced tourists. Just as I called ‘hello’ back he
tossed out “I fuck with you,” and wheeled away as I shot
him a surprised and indignant look. Looking back at me he laughed and disappeared
in the street traffic.
It was another swipe of adolescent verbal sexual aggression that
circulates in this culture. I doubt they would ever say such things to
an adult Egyptian man, especially one over 50. It’s puzzling, homoerotic,
offensive and naïve; it felt demeaning to be on the receiving end
of such crude behavior. Such insults seem a resentful slap by
a down-trodden victim at the arrogance of western wealth—resentment
embedded with envy for what I have and he never will. And
sex is the great leveler. Curiously it's only from teenagers
that I heard such
verbal sexual aggression.
In contrast, countless other men and women in their twenties
and beyond responded to me with friendliness and cheer when I smiled
or waved—including truckloads
of police shipped into central Cairo each day to secure the central square
against possible demonstrations. (The most recent protest was the March
'04 assassination of the Hamas leader Sheik Yassin in Gaza by an Israeli
rocket
attack. Thousands protested in the plaza under the close scrutiny of thousands
of police.)
In the
Hilton
Nile
Hilton Hotel |
Another
face of ‘gay Egypt’ appeared in the Nile Hilton as
I approached the restaurant for lunch. Walking past the courtyard
café I saw three
guys sitting at one of the dozen or so tables. I had read that this
was one of Cairo’s classier cruising places so I wasn’t
surprised to see one of the guys with definite ‘signs’: dressed
in firm-fitted pants and a body-hugging black pullover studded with
what appeared
to be tiny sequins. The shirt was intended to show off his buffed
body. He was fresh,
scrubbed and looked available—and not bad looking although
not CQ material.
He and another friend were chatting on their cell phones making busy
as I passed. I sat down at a table in the restaurant not far from
the café area and
ordered soup and salad—and watched. Halfway through my meal, Mr.
Buff with his shiny coif of thick black hair made the rounds of
the hotel lobby, atrium
restaurant and courtyard café. His friend sat at
a table near me and ordered a round of tobacco and a gurgling water
pipe as he studied
his cell
phone as if it was about to speak to him.
A
few more minutes passed and again Mr.
Buff came by again this time accompanied by an older ‘serious’ man
in his early fifties.
Mr. Buff was obviously with him although he followed behind by two
steps. (Did they want to appear
not to be together?) They turned the corner and headed toward the
lobby where the elevators were. From there on I can only guess but
I’d
probably come close with suggestions about a mercenary tryst on the
8th floor. And I would
very likely be right if I guessed the older man was married
with kids.
A few minutes later his friend also disappeared leaving his coffee
cup empty and the water pipe on the table. It was all rather smooth,
quiet,
discreet
and well understood. This was the opposite of the Felucca style
but both were very Egyptian in their
seething urgency, their
commercial enterprise, their furtive manner and endless pursuit and
sale of forbidden male eros.
El Gouna
near Hurghada
A portion of this story was written on a balcony overlooking
the Red Sea just north of the resort city of Hurghada, in a gated community
called El Gouna.
The place was developed by an Egyptian tycoon for the middle and
upscale
European market, with a small airport, golf course, hotels including
a
Sheraton and
a Movenpick among numerous other smaller smart boutique hotels and
shops.
There are also hundreds of holiday homes, flats and sites for purchase
ranging from US$30,000 to $200,000. Omar Sharif is reported to own
a place here and
a top soccer star has a small palace, for 2 million Euros, on one
of the many water inlets that weave like tentacles among the houses
and
out to
the sea. It’s all quite tidy, pretty with pastel exteriors and
clean beaches for the Germans, French and Italians and their ilk
(including a few elite Egyptians)
who come for the endless sun (and wind).
It’s
anything but Egyptian and overwhelmingly straight. I was
there only because it was on my group's itinerary (a good way to
go for a first visit to Egypt. I joined the group only for the Nile
portion of my trip). There is beach lounging, snorkeling on threatened
reefs, manicured blocks of domed
houses and western style apartment complexes, noisy late night western
disco music and Euro menus. It’s a quiet and safe stop
for a while but it’s
essentially a fantasy, a deception, far from the soul of ancient
or modern Egypt, and certainly little to do with gay life
as it really is in that country.
A pair of gay Egyptian lovers could possibly come here and
blend in quietly since there is a broad mix of international
visitors, but they would
be among
the very few who could afford even the two-star Hotel Elkhan at $40
a night. It’s very unlikely they would have the courage
to appear as being together since
all the staff in the hotels, shops, taxis and boats are native and
would easily pick up that they were more than the usual
back-slapping and cheek-kissing
pals. But as usual nothing would be said.
Conforming
to the Code
Virtually every unmarried guy lives with his family as a matter
of money and tradition. Young men are expected to save
money for their
wedding
so they can
afford the marriage party, a flat with furniture and a display
of financial respectability. Privacy is very difficult
for any Egyptian with fervent
desire for genuine same-sex affection. Even someone as
independent as Madi must
arrange his liaisons with Hani at the home of a friend who makes
a room available to
them.
In Luxor one of the best multilingual bookstores is the
Aboudi bookshop. It’s
a reliable place for international newspapers such as Le Monde,
Der Stern and the International Herald Tribune. Tending store one
day was Ahmed,
the owner’s
son, a university graduate, 23 years old. A handsome young
man with a wry smile and rimless glasses, his English sounded well
enough to suggest he might add
some further insight for my gay Egypt story.
I doubted he was gay and it turned out he wasn’t but I sought some comments
from a middle-class person about homosex in this country. I
wondered if during his school and college years he knew of anyone
who was homosexual. He smiled
with only a slight hint of embarrassment but answered he did not. “It
is not normal behavior, I think. I don’t know anyone that way,” he
said pleasantly.
I was a bit surprised but I had to keep in mind this was rural
Egypt, Luxor is as far culturally from Cairo as Canton,
Ohio is from New
York. Marriages
here are sometimes arranged by parents for their
marriage-age children. Ahmed told me about a recent such match
made for a friend
of his older
brother in the area. Often the arrangement works out and duty is
done by producing
children. Ahmed did say that if it doesn’t work out that
divorce is allowed.
What about the sexual feelings that young men have? If there are
no girls for boys to date or have intimate contact with, what
does a man
do with
those urges,
I asked Ahmed. “In the Koran the prophet says that a person should fast
and not take food. Then he will be hungry and his mind will change to his hunger
instead,” replied Ahmed. Horny and hungry at the same time? How long
can that last, I wondered. It’s the first time I ever heard of someone
possibly dying from sexual desire.
Ahmed did not know any male friends who had sexual contact with
one another. The stereotype of single Muslim guys humping each
other
before marriage
obviously does not apply to all. Of course I can never know if
Ahmed was glossing over
some furtive randy occasions when his hunger for food just didn't
cut the other craving.
Women
I can’t speak, of course, for the knowing looks exchanged among
with women but I’m sure they were just as present. But even in
Muslim-moderate Cairo where a portion of the women dress in western
attire (as opposed to Muslim-style
head scarves and long dresses in smaller cities), women
are much more constrained than men in expressing sexuality.
There is a very strong social ethic that demands women be much
more chaste and modest and honorable.
 A rigid, almost brittle, set of rules prescribe
a ‘good’ woman’s
life. The most powerful requisite is that she marry young, under
25, to maintain family tradition and honor. Cruising for sex
is unthinkable. So lesbian affections
are deeply hidden behind closed doors and mouths. To their possible
advantage, women (wives) are often left among themselves when
the men go off to the cafes
in the afternoon or evenings.
(One of
the most offensive and humiliating experiences for a man is to have
his wife raped or
sexually assaulted. It's a favorite
threat used by the government’s secret police
to extract confessions from suspected militants or, more often,
innocent victims accused of plotting against
the long-serving Mubarak administration.)
Mohamed in
Siwa
Free from
my tourist group and a tight itinerary I rented a car in
Alexandria and drove six hours (with stops) across the
parched Western Desert to the remote
ancient oasis of Siwa not far from Libya. I wanted
to visit the Temple of Ammon, my namesake
temple (also spelled Amun) where Alexander had come in 331 BC to
consult with the oracle. He wanted to know if
he was of divine origin (son of the god Ammon-Ra or Amun-Ra).
After the consult
he never revealed what was
said but it must have been inspiring because Alexander
went
off
to conquer most of the known world all the way to India.
A
much more humble and modern day man, Mohamed, greeted
me on my arrival at the charming Shali Lodge Hotel in Siwa
village.
He and
half a
dozen other
workers managed the hotel for the rich Egyptian doctor-owner
who lives part-time in
America. Mohamed traveled each day to work on his bicycle,
with brightly painted handle bars and mirrors, from the
mud brick
adobe-style house
of four rooms
where he has lived with his family all of his 26 years.
He earned about $40 a month as a bell boy, waiter, housekeeper
and other
general worker
for the
hotel.
As a lone male traveler, I was the recipient of his attention
and suggestions for local sites; he brought extra
towels, drinking water and a husk
of local ‘fruit’ whose
inner fiber (tuffa) is used as a body scrubber in the bath.
(He suggestively brought two.) It was easy to see that
he was gauging me.
He eyes lingered slightly on mine and wandered
up and down my length.
After he left the room, with one last downward glance, I imagined
how things must be for him (as
a gay or bi person)
here in
this remote
place living with his family and knowing nearly everyone
in town. There is no place to hide his desire
in this faraway village
except in his
own heart.
Perhaps occasionally he was lucky and able to steal some
moments
of pleasure with strangers but rarely an
encore. Visitors
stay in Siwa only a few days. Most likely, at the end
of each day he peddled his bike
home alone in silence.
Digression:
Siwa's Gay History
(Quoted from http://www.gayegypt.com/gayguidtosiw.html)
"Until the Second World War marriages between men were common. During
the last century only women, children and men over the age of forty
could remain within the city walls which meant that homosexuality
was very common amongst the entirely male population outside.
"The duty of these young men was to work the fields and to guard them
from attacks by hostile bedouin. They had a fearsome reputation and
were known as "Zaggalah" or "Club bearers". They
also earned a shocking reputation for drunkenness and "unashamed" homoerotic
relationships. As late as 1938 one horrified British army officer spoke
with evident distaste of the oasis' "degenerate inhabitants" [
Major C. S. Jarvis OBE (1947 edition) Desert and Delta p182 ].
"During the Second World War the oasis, which was close to Egypt's
border with Axis controlled Libya, served as a base for British special
operations
against Rommel's Panzer Army Africa. It may have been this inflow of
outsiders which led to negative reports being sent back to Cairo which
in turn seems to have resulted in the outlawing of gay marriages in
the oasis soon after the war's end. However such relationships, though
now illicit, still continue to flourish today--discreetly.
"The oasis has also served as a strategic base for much earlier "world
powers". Centuries ago Alexander the Great made a special detour
across the desert to find the Oasis in 331BC. His journey was inspired
by the reputation of a famous oracle to the god Amun (Ammon) sited
in the oasis. The oracle promised him great conquests and he probably
also
enjoyed
the company of some of the handsome Siwan men. Alexander's bisexuality
is well-known and some of the young priests may have earned a living
as male prostitutes. <The ruins of the Temple
of Ammon still exist in Siwa.>
"For whatever reason Alexander was so happy here he declared he would
be buried in Siwa. Today some historians are hopeful they can find
his tomb. These include Greek archaeologist Liana Sovaltzi who in 1995
discovered evidence indicating that the great conqueror was indeed
buried somewhere near the Oasis. But despite much searching the tomb
of Alexander remains to be discovered." (End of quote)
Final Words
My journey into ancient and modern Egypt did not disappoint
me but it did make me feel somewhat choked. I
think there is a heaviness
in the
gay Egyptian
heart
that cannot wholly be resolved even by a lover, by romance,
passion or
sex. It’s
the sadness of being born gay in Egypt, born with a clutched
fist around one’s
heart--a heart in a desert of fear.
I spoke to three gay men in ‘liberal’ Cairo
and Alexandria; I observed others in silence. They were all
afraid of their sexual love for other men as much as
they hungered for
it. Never would they, at 20 or 50, be free from
the heavy mantel of Islamic social strictures.
The constant refrain was 'how can I get out of
here?'
It
is one of the greatest human torments to be forbidden
love--forbidden a desiring heart, a caress on
the face, the press of soft lips. Across the transcontinental
arc of Islamic countries countless millions of gays and lesbians lay their
heads into solitary
pillows each night
wondering if they will ever have freedom
to love.
But many of these
isolated hearts learn early in life to forge a defensive
shell against too
much dreaming
or desiring.
Young Ari in Alexandria has closed the book on his
yearnings for now. His life has returned to previous dimensions--family
and school,
obedience
and study.
After his traumatic brush with the law, he is glad to
return to a confined life until he can study abroad.
Hani was very much in love even though Madi is married
with kids and will never come out or leave his family.
Against
that hard
reality Hani has
built a form
of love composed of passion and denial, the
only form available with Madi. When Madi recently told
Hani
he had accepted
a job abroad
it was a
unilateral decision on Madi's part and Hani had no
vote in the matter. All he could
do was sulk in obedient silence.
Gay love in Egypt has little choice but that does not diminish the
truth of that love.
The
author in Arab drag |
|