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'Beyond
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Queer Theory' by Dr. Amalia Ziv, Department of Literature
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Yosef,
Raz, 'The National Closet: Gay
Israel in Yossi and Jagger'--GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and
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Worldwide Gay Life,
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Israel: More
Stories from the Land of Milk and Agony:
Three poignant stories from online magazines about gay living and loving in a land torn by tribal warfare.
(1) After
nuns kissing rabbis and wolves necking with sheep, Ezra and Selim could
feature in Benetton's next advertisement campaign. Ezra, an Israeli
Jew, and Selim, a Palestinian Muslim, live, sleep--and hide together. (2) The Gully (http://www.thegully.com/essays/gaymundo/020220_gay_israel_history.html) February 21, 2002 (3) April
5, 2003 http://www.planetout.com/pno/splash.html Ahmar Mustikhan, Gay.com / PlanetOut.com Network As Israel continues with deportations of gay Palestinians to danger and possible death in the West Bank and Gaza, a key Israeli gay rights body has noted some progress in at least one such case. "Tarek, a gay Palestinian whose full name has been withheld for his personal security reasons, went on trial on March 16 for being in Israel without a permit," Lior Mencher, the head of Aguda - the Association of Gays, Lesbians, Bisexuals and Transgendered in Israel - told this correspondent from Tel Aviv. Mencher expressed the apprehension that Tarek might eventually be deported to the Gaza Strip, where he faces imminent death. He quoted Tarek as saying, "I escaped from Gaza and came to Israel to live - not to be returned to be killed. Where is someone to help me?" Israel's Minister of Interior, Avraham Poraz, had initially declined to intervene in Tarek's case, despite being a leader of the liberal Shenui Party that advocates justice for all sections of society, including gays. According to Mencher, Poraz was well aware that Tarek had passed all of the Israeli security checks and posed no danger to the state of Israel. "The Aguda, working closely with international human rights organizations such as Amnesty International, International Lesbian and Gay Association in Brussels and New York, and Washington-based Muslim group Al Fatiha, among others, pleaded with Poraz to stop Tarek's deportation," Shaul Genon, director of Aguda's Rescue Project, said on the phone from Tel Aviv Friday. Mencher said Aguda was also filing a petition to the District Court in order to stop the process of Tarek's deportation. He said Tarek's recent release on bail "is good news in a way, especially as the presiding judge specifically indicated that his life is at risk if deported to the Gaza. The sympathetic approach of the judge in the criminal trial maybe helpful, but we'll (have to) see." Mencher also revealed that initial low-level talks have already started between Israel's Ministry of the Interior and the Aguda in the search for a humane solution for gays of Palestinian and Arab origin. Mencher urged, "This pressure (on the Ministry of Interior) must continue in order to impress upon it the seriousness of the situation." As in many Muslim countries, being gay in the Palestinian territories is treated as a crime against Islam. In most cases non-state actors, like the family, become the judge, jury and juror to decide a gay person's fate. Reports of Nazi-style treatment of openly gay Palestinians are common. Rescue Project Director Shaul Genon said the Aguda had identified at least 100 Palestinian gays in Israel. "Only 25 of them want us to help them," Genon said. "The others avoid coming forward, fearful of their family's wrath more than that of the Palestinian Authority." Genon said though his Rescue Project had been helping Palestinian and Arab gays for the last four years and prevented three women and eight men from being deported so far, the situation for Palestinian gays worsened since the 9/11 attacks in the United States. "All the doors had been closed since then. Nobody wants to help them, and most of these young people have no money. The situation is just too bad," Genon said. Without mentioning the Iraq War, Genon said the Rescue Project's work gained urgency with an increased stringency in Israel policy in the last three months. Aguda, meanwhile, deplored that despite the protests by the Israeli and international GLBT community, two more Palestinian gays were deported to the West Bank on March 6. The organization did not make the duo's name public, and said their fate was unknown as the Aguda had not been able to contact them through any means. |