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Gay Spain
News & Reports 2005
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1
Spain Tells Pope To Stay Out Of Gay Marriage Debate 1/05
2
Analysis: Battle over gay law in Spain 1/05
3
Fighting for equality justice in Spain 2/05
4
Marginalised Muslims cause concern 3/05
5
Vatican condemns Spain gay bill 4/05
6
Spain paves way for gay marriage 4/05
7
Spain gets tough on mayors who veto gay weddings 4/05
8
Barcelona--Celebrating the Art of Living (Travel
Story) 4/05
9 Spain Approves Gay Marriage, Adoption
4/05
10
Spain's PM Tells Catholic Church To Keep Out Of Gay Marriage
Debate 5/05
11 Madrid takes pride in its `gaybourhood'--Spaniards
have much to celebrate these days 7/05
12 Spanish Marriage Law to Go Into Effect--Gay
Couples Will Be Able to Wed, Adopt
7/3/05
13
Spanish Premier Zapatero's Remarkable Gay Marriage Speech
7/05
14 First Gay Couples Apply for Marriage Under New Spanish Law 7/05
15 Spain's
gay marriage law hits first snag--foreigners exempt 7/05
16 Two
men first to wed under new Spain law 7/05
17 A Long Road From Fascist
Era to Gay Marriage 7/05
18 Spain
sees first lesbian marriage 7/05
19 Spain
allows gays to wed foreigners 8/05
20 Lesbian
activists marry in Madrid 12/05
http://www.365gay.com/newscon05/01/012505spain.htm
January
25, 2005 1
Spain
Tells Pope To Stay Out Of Gay Marriage Debate
by 365Gay.com
Newscenter Staff
Madrid - Spain's
Socialist
government Tuesday told the Vatican to stop butting in
on affairs of state. The warning came from Defense Minister Jose Bono. The
Vatican has publicly rebuked the government for bring in legislation
on same-sex
marriage and for streamlining laws on abortion and divorce. "Faith
is not something a government can impose. It is not something that
it is up to the state, but rather to people," Defense Bono told
Spanish radio.
That the
criticism came from Bono was particularly noteworthy. He
is the only practicing Catholic in the government.
In the radio
interview Bono said some of the church's positions, such as its
opposition to homosexuality and the use of condoms, go against the
message of
Jesus Christ.
"Today,
Christ would be more worried about the 25,000 children who die
each day of hunger or in wars. I think Christ
would
side with those who are peaceful," Bono said. The criticism
of the Church's stand came a day after the Pope, in a meeting with
visiting
Spanish bishops, said secular trends in Spain were leading youth
to become indifferent to religion.
The remarks
were seen in the Spanish press as a stiff rebuke of the government
of Prime Minister Jose
Luis
Rodriguez Zapatero. Last June, shortly after Zapatero announced
the gay marriage bill, he was summoned to the Vatican for a severe
tongue
lashing from Pope John Paul.
On the
weekend, the Pope attacked the use of condoms, after a leading
Spanish
prelate said
that bishops support the use of contraceptives to fight
AIDS. The prelate
quickly backtracked after the Vatican intervened. © 365Gay.com
2005
UPI
http://www.washtimes.com/upi-breaking/20050127-042654-7034r.htm
January
27, 2005
2
Analysis:
Battle over gay law in Spain
By Roland
Flamini, Chief International Correspondent Washington, DC
Had Spain's Popular Party been re-elected last March this was to
have been the year
of Queen Isabella. To honor King Ferdinand's wife, who died in
November 1504 and was known as Isabella the Catholic because of her
part
in
driving the Muslims out of Spain, the outgoing conservative government
had already planned major exhibitions, lectures, and concerts
of ancient music.
In an
unexpected upset, the Popular Party was ousted by the
socialists led by Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
The new government had other priorities and cut back the Isabella
centenary
celebrations. If the conservatives had planned to use the occasion
to affirm Spain's Catholic roots, Zapatero's critics believe
that
he is taking the country in the opposite direction.
He
is moving toward
a more secular society and challenging the traditional influence
of the Spanish church. His plan to legalize gay marriages
and the adoption
of children by gay couples, to streamline divorce procedures,
make abortion more accessible, advance stem cell research, and
-- most
recently -- to make contraceptives available to teenagers as protection against
AIDS have brought him into direct conflict with the Spanish
hierarchy and the Vatican.
On Monday,
Pope John Paul II denounced what
he called the new secular course of Spanish politics and warned
that, "Spain
is gradually moving toward a restriction of religious freedom
that promotes a disdain and an ignorance of religion." The pope's
public admonition, delivered to the Spanish bishops who were
visiting him
in Rome, was the latest in the Vatican's surprisingly public
offensive against what the Spanish government sees as social reforms.
The
pope's remarks brought an irritated comment from Zapatero, "never
before has Spain enjoyed as much religious, ideological and political
freedom
as it does now." The Vatican representative in Madrid was
summoned to the Spanish Foreign Ministry and asked to explain
the pope's speech,
which is diplomatic speak for an official protest.
Critics
feel that Zapatero's new legislation, which is expected to take effect
later
this year, is altering the nature of Spanish society
and turning
Spain into what is being called "the Netherlands of the
south," a
reference to Holland's ultraliberal social laws. The Vatican
concern, according to observers, goes further.
The worry
in Rome is that other
left-wing governments will come under pressure to
follow the Spanish "reforms," perhaps
even on the pope's own doorstep, should the
Italian left win the next election. Zapatero said in a recent interview that he
is simply
fulfilling
his party's campaign promises -- just as he was doing when he
withdrew Spain's forces from Iraq, causing a rift with Washington. "The
citizens voted for this, it was in (the socialist party's) election
program," he said. "All the polls show a 60 percent
support for these laws. The government has no interest in a conflict
with
the Catholic Church and respects its opinions. The
church doesn't approve
of these laws? This doesn't slow down the government's
program, or the extension of rights to citizens that
don't have them."
The
more cynical view, expressed by one seasoned political
observer in Madrid was that Zapatero's controversial legislation
is an
attempt
to establish his socialist credentials. "He wasn't exactly
a household name when he was elected, and, wanted or not, the
fight
with the church
has brought him a lot of attention," the observer said.
The
Spanish hierarchy has put up a strong opposition to the legislation. One
prelate
accused the government of planning to kill the
Catholic Church. The
Conference of Spanish Bishops has said the government
is planting "a
virus" in Spanish society, and argued that a gay marriage
is a contradiction since the union cannot procreate. The church
will
not
even discuss a government proposal that
it should assume responsibility for the salaries
of the 30,000 teachers of religious doctrine
in state schools that are presently paid by the government --
to say
nothing
of Zapatero's request to renegotiate Spain's agreement with the
Vatican (known as a concordat) which requires the
state to pay salaries to
the 20,000 members of the Spanish clergy.
But though
90 percent of Spaniards are baptized in the Catholic Church, 81 percent
describe
themselves as Catholics, and most marry in
church, observers
point out that there has been no groundswell
of support for the church's
position. This is partly because religion
does not seem to rate very highly in current
Spanish priorities.
A recent
poll showed
that only
5 percent of self-described young
Catholics obey the church's rules of morality, and some commentators lament
that a great
many Spaniards
practice "lite" Catholicism. But Catholic sociologist
Rafael Diaz Salazar says the dispute has opened a rift between
Spanish Catholics
and many priests on one side and the senior hierarchy on the
other. Salazar was recently quoted as saying that there is grassroots "irritation" and "anger" over
the hierarchy's opposition to the government because (the bishops)
are generally chosen by Rome anyway.
" Besides the bishops,
opposition is coming mostly from the more conservative section
of the Popular
Party. But even some non-socialists argue that with 12
out of 100 children being born to immigrants
from Islamic North Africa
and to
a lesser
extent from Latin America, Spanish identity
is changing and it
is not necessarily synonymous with Catholicism. "The government
intends to abolish the Catholic Church's undeniable of advantage," says
Luis Guerra, undersecretary of the Ministry of Justice. "No
religion can be more official than any other."
San Francisco Chronicle
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/02/20/ING31BD96E1.DTL
February 20, 2005 3
Fighting for poetic justice in Spain
by Geoff Pingree
Pedro Zerolo believes in poetry and constitutions
-- "humankind's
two greatest creations," he says with a luminous smile. Zerolo,
44, has the bright eyes, playful passion and disarming vulnerability
of a child. His hip appearance -- low-rise jeans, mustard jersey
with zippered black sweater, beaded leather bracelet, and long unruly
curls
-- makes one wonder if he could look less like a politician.
Yet Zerolo, who earlier this year became the first openly gay
member of the ruling Socialist party's executive committee, has rapidly
become one of Spain's most influential leaders. His turn at the podium
at
July's Socialist Party Congress drew more applause than did the arrival
of Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero. And
perhaps more than any other person in government, Zerolo is responsible
for
Spain's recent legalization of gay marriage and adoption.
Born in Venezuela after his parents fled Francisco Franco's dictatorship
in Spain, Zerolo grew up in the Canary Islands when his family returned
after the dictator's death. He earned his law degree -- and had his
first homosexual experience -- the same year the Socialists first took
power in Spain. But those were different times, and the Socialists
were a different party.
"
We have to remember," Zerolo says, "that until 1978,
gays were put in prisons like criminals, sent to psychiatric hospitals as
mentally ill patients, and condemned to hell as sinners." When
the country established its first constitution that year, he adds, "We
finally escaped the prisons and got out of the psychiatric hospitals,
but we still haven't been freed from hell."
In the two decades since, Zerolo has been an iconoclastic crusader
for human justice. In 1993 he helped forge and then lead
Madrid's Gay Collective, and in 1997 he headed the National Federation
of
Lesbians
and Gays. He is also a compassionate and popular champion of the
underdog (for his proper education, breadth of knowledge, and polite
manners,
he has been called the "gay son no mother would mind having")
and a charismatic leader of what amounts to a new civil rights
movement. Zerolo has given new life to the Socialist party, and
he stands prominently
on the nation's rapidly evolving social landscape.
But Zerolo is not a man who stands still. "From my father I learned
about ideas," he says, "and from my mother, the importance
of putting ideas into practice."
An unapologetic romantic, utopian, and leftist who cites poets
as often as philosophers, who listens carefully and speaks precisely
yet holds
forth with the fire of a preacher, Zerolo is bent on changing the
world. Convinced that just societies are held together
by generosity and rational
dialogue -- "reason is the only goddess we should worship" together,
he says -- Zerolo notes that the gay rights movement in Spain has moved
forward through determination and persuasion, "because we
kept fighting for 25 years, put our dreams into action, took to
the streets,
made ourselves visible, and worked together every day, dreaming
of a better society."
Spain, long one of Europe's most conservative, Catholic nations,
surprised many around the world when it became only the
third country to legalize
gay marriage, and just the second to allow gay
couples to adopt children (Holland was the first to permit marriage between persons
of the same
sex, in 2000, and Belgium followed last year, with the provision
that the couples cannot adopt children).
Recent polls show that 68 percent of Spaniards believe that
homosexuals deserve equal treatment under the law and that 66 percent
support
same-sex marriage. Zerolo says those statistics reflect years of
dedication
to the "revolutionary republican principles of liberty, equality,
and fraternity" and confirm that "in the end, reason
prevails."
Zapatero and members of his administration claim that the gay marriage
and adoption initiative -- and with their recent legislation against
domestic violence and their unprecedented commitment to gender
parity in the government -- are not intended to remake Spain's
constitution.
Rather, they say, the initiatives put into practice the
civil rights that the constitution originally promised, and thus meet the public's
demand for fair treatment of all Spanish citizens.
The opposition Popular Party, which has declared support for legal
changes that would permit gay marriages but opposes allowing gay
couples to adopt children, characterizes the Socialists' initiative
as a precipitous
and self-serving political gesture that exceeds good judgment as
well as popular opinion. The Catholic Church has made clear its
opposition to the Socialists' plan, suggesting that legalizing
gay marriage
is
akin to "introducing a virus" into society.
The gay marriage and adoption initiative marks a radical
cultural shift in this traditionally patriarchal and machista society, but
as Zerolo
sees it, Spain is finally accepting its diversity and liberating
itself from singular notions of what it should be. "Each person has his
or her own truth," he says, "but reason is the
consciousness that citizens must share" to create a fair and inclusive society. "Gays
got liberty and equality with the constitution in 1978," he adds, "but
we continue to seek full fraternity."
Convinced that "personal and social happiness cannot be separated," Zerolo
says he is in search of acceptance and inclusion for all Spaniards.
"
There is still an ultraconservative element that does not include us
in its worldview," he says, "but ultimately,
this fight is not about gay marriage. As with the suffragist and
civil rights movements
in the United States, this is about recognition of our dignity.
It's the story of the struggle of all oppressed peoples -- first liberty,
then equality, and finally, fraternity." To build genuine community,
he adds, "we must be brothers -- you and me," repeating "you
and me" over and over as he gestures enthusiastically with
his finger.
Although he acknowledges he is a prominent voice for gay rights,
Zerolo insists that he is but one among many who are fighting
for equality. "I'm
proud to be a part of this project called Spain,'' he says. "We've
been with the last in accepting so many things, but in this we
are among the first. This is Spain's moment for true equality."
Geoff Pingree is a professor at Oberlin College who writes frequently
about Spain.
BBC
March
11, 2005
4
Marginalised
Muslims cause concern
A year on from the Madrid bombings, fears are growing that the
ideological struggle to stop the next generation of militants
in Europe is being
lost, reports the BBC's security correspondent Gordon Corera.
Muslims communities across Spain stand against terrorismAt Madrid's
vast mosque, Mohammed al-Affifi remembers the chilling impact of
the 11 March 2004 bombing on community relations.
"The confidence between the Muslim community and the Spanish people is damaged.
It's not so easy now for a Muslim person to find a flat. People say how do
I know this person isn't a terrorist?"
Spain is not the only country where the atmospherics have changed in the years
since 11 September 2001 and especially since the attacks on Madrid.
A report this week found that discrimination and intolerance against Muslims
had increased in the last few years and identified growing distrust and hostility
with a concern over polarisation in Europe and the growth of the far-right.
In the Netherlands, the impact of the killing of film-maker Theo Van Gogh
accelerated growing tensions.
"As the fight against terrorism has been stepped up and the perceived threat
of religious extremism has become a major focus of public debate, Muslims have
increasingly felt that they are stigmatised because of their beliefs," Aaron
Rhodes, executive director of the International Helsinki Federation for human
rights, said in a statement.
Beyond Bin Laden
What worries policymakers is that this dynamic is merely fuelling a problem
that could lead to the radicalisation of a new generation.
Madrid revealed how the threat from international terrorism had evolved.
Those who carried out the attack were not sent out by Osama Bin Laden, but
instead
came from self-starting, largely autonomous local groups.
British ministers recently said that there had been a shift from seeing the
danger coming externally from foreign nationals to seeing a growing involvement
of UK
citizens in terrorism - and across Europe, there is a concern about a threat
which is more dispersed, but also perhaps more dangerous.
Tributes to remember the victims of the Madrid bombings one year ago"The
Madrid attack moved the goal posts beyond Osama Bin Laden and al-Qaeda as a structured
organisation," says Magnus Ranstorp from the Swedish National Defence
College.
"We have a hard time keeping up with the terrorist individuals and groups
who are radicalising a new generation.
"What people are concerned with here in Europe particularly is understanding
the recruitment and radicalisation processes, the broader issues of the failure
of social integration within many European states (and) preventing the next
generation from heading the call that Osama Bin Laden and al-Qaeda have made."
Senior British officials openly say that in many places, the ideological appeal
of al-Qaeda remains undiminished.
And both the EU as a whole and member states like the UK have conducted their
own studies of what leads to the radicalisation of a small number of young
Muslims and their recruitment into violent activity.
The Iraq factor
Foreign policy is a major driver, acknowledges Gijs De Vries, the EU's counter-terrorist
co-ordinator.
"There's no question the war in Iraq and lack of process in the Middle East
peace process has been exploited by radical propagandists to try and recruit
for terrorism. These conflicts therefore are important as tools in efforts
to radicalise Muslims."
Intelligence officials believe the conflict in Iraq may be temporarily absorbing
volunteers and energy from Europe. But there are also concerns that it is
playing a major role in radicalisation, with signs of a new generation of young
Europeans
going to Iraq to fight.
After the bombings, many Muslims felt alienatedFrench counter-terrorism expert
Claude Moniquet says the evidence so far of Europeans fighting in Iraq points
to a worrying trend.
"We know from the people captured and killed in Fallujah that they were
very young - 18, 19 or 20 - which means on 11 September, they were between
14 and 16.
"It's a new generation of jihadists which is just coming out. Before Iraq,
usually the average age of the jihadists was between 25 and 30. Now it's 20."
The numbers are not huge, but one concern is that in previous cases like
Afghanistan, Chechnya and Bosnia, the fighters who came back to their home
countries became
key figures in setting up new militant cells.
Gijs de Vries and others believe that a peaceful resolution of international
conflicts will be critical to winning the ideological battle.
"An Iraq which is at peace, which is stable and which respects its neighbours
can be a powerful force for good in that part of the world. That's why the
EU is putting a lot of money towards democratic reform.
"Peace between Israel and the Palestinians would deal a major blow to radical
propagandists for terrorist activities, even if by itself it won't eradicate
terrorism."
'Ideological battle'
For Mohammed al-Afifi in Madrid, the concern is that the issue of fighting
terrorism is being dealt with in a one-sided manner and the ideological battle
is being
lost, partly because of government policies - whether over Iraq or domestic
counter-terrorism
He argues that the current approach is too simplistic and fails
to understand that the issues of injustice and discrimination
will only make the fight
against al-Qaeda's ideology harder.
"When we are talking now about how to fight terrorism together, it will
not only be by police co-operation and international treaties.
"We have to pay attention to what the terrorists say to the people - the
injustice - because people can say, 'Why are they treating us this way?'"
Across Europe, tensions remains over how different states balance the aggressive
short-term pursuit of terrorists with the longer-term strategy of preventing
radicalisation and long term recruitment. A year after Madrid, that task
looks harder rather than easier.
BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/europe/4473001.stm
April 22, 2005
5
Vatican condemns Spain gay bill
The Vatican, under the new leadership of Pope Benedict XVI, has condemned
a Spanish government bill allowing marriage between homosexuals.
The bill, passed by parliament's Socialist-dominated lower house, also allows
gay couples to adopt. A senior Vatican official described the bill - which is likely to become law
within a few months - as iniquitous. He said Roman Catholic officials should be prepared to lose their jobs rather
than co-operate with the law. The bill would make Spain the first European country to allow homosexual people
to marry and adopt children. Only Belgium and the Netherlands allow same-sex marriages. It is also a dramatic
step in the rapid secularisation of what was once one of the most devoutly
Roman Catholic countries in Europe.
The head of the Vatican's Pontifical Council on the
Family, Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, denounced the legislation
as profoundly
iniquitous.
Interviewed in the Italian newspaper, Corriere de la Sera, Cardinal
Lopez Trujillo said the Church was making an urgent call for freedom
of conscience
for Roman
Catholics and appealing to them to resist the law. He said every profession linked with implementing homosexual marriages
should oppose it, even if it meant losing their jobs. The cardinal insisted that just because something was made law it did not
make it right.
Socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero took office a year
ago making it clear he intended to remove what he called the church's undeniable
advantages and make Spain a secular state. There are likely to be further tensions with Pope Benedict XVI. Mr Zapatero
has made it clear that he intends to streamline divorce law and even to
relax the conditions placed on abortion.
Associated Press
April 21, 2005
6
Spain paves way for gay marriage
Spain's lower house of parliament has approved the right of homosexual
couples to marry and adopt children.
The government-backed bill now passes to the Senate, where it is expected
to get final approval in the coming weeks.
The opposition centre-right Popular Party voted against, saying that gay
relationships fall outside the traditional institution of marriage. Religious groups, including Roman Catholic bishops, Jews
and protestant bodies also expressed their opposition.
Correspondents say the law will worsen relations between the Socialist government
and the Roman Catholic Church.
Socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero took office in April
2004, intending to remove what he called the Church's undeniable advantages
and create a secular state with streamlined divorce and relaxations in abortion
law.
Under the proposed bill, Spanish Civil Law would include the phrase: "Matrimony
shall have the same requisites and effects regardless of whether the persons
involved are of the same or different sex."
Justice Minister Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar argued that the bill overcomes "the
barriers of discrimination, many of them with deep historical or primitive
roots, which affect rights and freedoms and, in a specific way, the extension
of free choice in the search for happiness, an unwritten basic right".
If the new Pope wants to say something about it, I'm prepared to respect
whatever he says, he can count on my respect for him
The vote in parliament was passed by 183 votes, with 136 against and six
abstentions.
Members of gay and lesbian groups in the public gallery cheered and clapped
when the result was read out.
If the bill is approved by the Senate as expected, it will make Spain the
third EU country to authorise gay marriages after Belgium and the Netherlands.
The Spanish
Bishops Conference, which has opposed the bill from its conception,
says it goes "against the common good" and
that it was "unfair
that real marriage should be treated the same as the union of persons of
the same sex".
Mr Zapatero, before the vote, was asked how he felt the newly elected Pope
Benedict XVI might greet the news.
"If the new Pope wants to say something about it, I'm prepared to respect
whatever he says, he can count on my respect for him," he said, according
to the Associated Press news agency.
"One of the guarantees of democracy is the freedom of religion, freedom
of opinion and freedom to carry out a political project with the citizens'
vote."
News.Telegraph/BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/europe/4469653.stm
April 21,2005
7
Spain gets tough on mayors who veto gay weddings
by Isambard Wilkinson in Madrid
Spanish socialists faced a new showdown with the Vatican yesterday
after they pledged to crack down on rebel mayors who refuse to allow
homosexuals to marry. Emboldened by support from a senior cardinal,
centre-Right mayors have threatened to defy a law sponsored by the socialist
government
allowing
civil marriage between gays.
But a senior government figure yesterday insisted that public officials "must
apply the laws that government proposes and parliament approves". Cardinal
Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, the head of the Pontifical Council on the
Family, denounced the legislation last week as "iniquitous" and
called on civil servants not to perform homosexual wedding ceremonies
even if it meant losing their jobs.
The law, which also allows homosexuals to adopt children, was forced
through parliament by the government of José Luis Rodríguez
Zapatero and has presented Pope Benedict XVI with the first major
challenge of his papacy.
The Vatican's stand, and the hardline reputation of the new Pope,
has encouraged opponents of gay marriage to stand firm against the
measure.
The Bishop of Castellon, Juan Antonio Reig Pla, has even called for "civil
disobedience" adding that "one has to obey God before man otherwise
it will lead to a totalitarian state" "
If obeying the law comes before conscience, this leads to Auschwitz," said
the Archbishop of Barcelona, Ricard Maria Carles.
Mayors from the centre-Right People's Party (PP) have already announced their
decision to refuse to carry out homosexual marriages and they have been joined
in their defiance by some local socialist leaders.
Some mayors have, however, put themselves beyond the pale with their extreme
rhetoric.
The PP is to expel Lluis Fernando Caldentey, the mayor of Pontons in Catalonia,
after he called gay marriage immoral and homosexuals "defective".
He said: "I have never seen two male dogs trying to make love, it is
not natural."
Earlier this year the late Pope John Paul II criticised such government initiatives
as making divorce and abortion easier, permitting stem cell research and
reforming state funding of the Catholic Church.
Attempting to calm the row, the head of the PP, Mariano Rajoy, called his
party members to order and listed 16 of his most influential mayors who will
comply
with the law on homosexual marriage.
But Mr Rajoy added: "There was no reason and nobody understands why
Spain had to put itself at the vanguard in these matters. I don't think that
anybody,
and I am talking about the adoption of children by homosexuals, has stopped
to think about the children's interests." Although 80 per cent
of Spaniards describe themselves as Catholic opinion polls show that most
support homosexual marriage.
Passport Magazine
April 2005
8
BARCELONA--Celebrating the Art of Living (Travel Story)
by Rich Rubin
I could tell you over and over that Spain's second-biggest
city is
fabulous, but you'll still be surprised and delighted when you get
there as this first-rate European destination rivals any must-do city
on the continent. Walk down lovely, tree-lined Passeig de Gracia past
elegant shops housed in serene, nineteenth century buildings. You'll
suddenly come across Casa BatIlo, one of the phantasmagoric works by
Antoni Gaudi. Walk into an unassuming little restaurant and before
long you'll be experiencing course after course of some of Europe's
best food.
Spain,
and Barcelona in particular, are currently at the apex of the foodie
firmament. Stroll down La Rambla, the famous mile-long
street that runs down the edge of the Barri Gotic (old town). That
somber roadside mime statue will suddenly spring to life as a tourist
drops a few coins in a tin; a lucky passerby might catch the "statue" winking
at him before sidling back into immobility. This is just a part of Barcelona:
playful, sexy, surprising, and guaranteed to please, in
a setting that stretches from the Mediterranean to the hills of Cataluna.
The people here are more Catalan than Spanish. Even the signs are
in Catalan. From the winding cobblestone streets of the Barri Gotic
to
the neatly laid-out avenues of the Eixample (locally dubbed the "Gayxample"),
the city packs in enough sights to keep you busy for days.
"
Every year gay life gets better," says proprietor Connie of Complices
Bookstore, the city's original gay/lesbian bookstore, "People
can live here with no problem." I remark that many young people
seem almost unaware that there was a time of severe repression. "Let's
hope," notes Connie wryly, "they don't have to learn about
it from experience." Her store is a wonderful and welcoming spot
and there's an amazing amount of gay literature packed onto two floors
(with a good English section downstairs). You can pick up anything
you need here: gay maps, information, and free local magazines.
Before
you head there, however, take the most important step toward
enjoying gay Barcelona: check into Hotel Axel, a gay hotel at the
heart of the
Eixample. Minimalist with a high comfort factor, the walls of the guestrooms
are adorned by illuminated close-ups of sexy torsos, and close-ups
of muscled bodies are even found on the in-room safes. They call themselves
a three-star hotel but the rooms have a high-design, four-star appeal,
and the staff is a five-star wonder. Niall and Victor at the front
desk make dinner reservations, advise on the nightlife scene, and offer
inside tips about Barcelona sights. Service is the reason the
Axel has been so phenomenally successful and why they're in the process
of adding a new wing of rooms. Being perfectly located in the city's
gay section, guests here have easy access to at least a dozen bars
and many wonderful restaurants, but the best place to begin your evening
is in the Axel's lounge. Order a vodka martini and start up a conversation
with the boy/girl next to you, or simply watch the eclectic array of
people as they make their entrance into the hotel down the marble stairs
into the lobby. It's as close as you're likely to get to a gay "mini-grand
hotel" anywhere in the world.
After
cocktails, enjoy dinner at Castro, the city's gay restaurant.
Okay,
it looks a little like an
S/M dream (or nightmare) when you walk in: pillars encircled by
chains; photos of silverware in bondage or plates holding nuts and
bolts; gray
walls; low-hanging, industrial light fixtures, but, surprise, the
food is actually good. On the Saturday night I dine there, there's
a great
mix of gay men, lesbians, and friendly straights of all ages. When
I arrived at 9 P.M. (opening time), the place was empty, of course,
but by 10:30 it's packed. Please note that Barcelona is a late night
city. Many people don't
eat dinner
until after 10 P.M. and most of the bars don't even begin to see
a crowd until midnight.
One exception:
longtime favorite Punto BCN, a
popular "first drink" spot, jam-packed even at the unthinkably
early hour of 9:30. It's an open, bright, and airy place with a
long wood bar and an amiable, thirty-plus crowd. It's run by the
Arena folks
who also have several discos in the city, including the popular
women's club Sala Diana/Aire. When I visit, there's a wide variety
of guests:
a man with shaved head and three earrings strokes the leg of a
young, bearded guy; a woman with shockingly blond hair sits with
a shockingly
handsome young man; two pleasant fifty-somethings open the door
with a big smile for me on my way out. It seems more friendly than
cruisy,
a spot to meet a couple of pals before heading out on a nightlife
prowl, and its bright vibrancy is refreshing.
Nearby,
check out Fenix, a small
comfy place with marble floors, a long bar, and a row of tables
set against a wall illuminated by a row of tea lights. Cozy,
low-key, and
unpretentious, Sweet Cafe, as its name indicates, is a stylish
cafe/bar with couches for people to lounge on, a long bar,
bright red walls,
and--true to eccentric Barcelona stylea display of armchairs
overlooking the scene from a platform high above. Its spaciousness
is typical
of what I like about many of Barcelona's bars, the wide-open
and unconfined
feel.
Next
stop is Dietrich, with its gilt pillars, potted palms, red
candIes on black tables, and (naturally) an oil painting
of
the great
Marlene herself. Nearby is the fashionable Ambar, with orange/gray
walls, draped fabric, comfortable chairs and couches, and
a hip young crowd. For lesbian visitors to the Eixample, Mi Madre
is
a cozy neighborhood
bar popular with women. Everything I've just mentioned, by
the
way, lies within a radius of about three blocks.
The dance
scene, however,
is a little less centralized, with the popular spots Metro
and Salvation, as well as the various Arena-run clubs being scattered
throughout the
city. Need more choices? There are at least two dozen other
spots
to choose from, including the stylish lesbian bar D-Mer
and a host of
gay-friendly places. If there's one thing they know how
to do here, it's party.
This thrillingly exhausting metropolis is like many cities
in one, and walking around is like an excursion through
centuries of history,
conveniently delineated by fairly distinct borders. I begin
my
explorations in Barri Gotic with its cobblestone streets
and mazelike alleyways
leading through low-slung arches, I could be back in the
thirteenth century. I walk by the Cathedral with its flourishing
gardens
and Gothic spires.
I twine
through the winding streets of the old Jewish
quarter.
I walk down La Rambla, which is really many streets in
one, changing character constantly as it makes its way from
city center to
sea. On Rambla de les Flors, I marvel at the vibrant
floral displays that give
this section its name; a few steps beyond, I'm assaulted
by the chirps of a thousand caged birds and realize I've arrived
at
the
Rambla
dels Estudis, nicknamed Rambla dels Ocells ("of the birds").
Human
statues line the boulevard, from a gorgeous young man
with a curly mop of hair to a female angel in white. Arriving at
Playa Boqueria,
I stand under an amazing building,. an 1883 wonder
with Chinese-themed murals and a huge dragon hanging off the side.
I'm so taken by it I
hardly notice that right below me the pavement stones
are swirls of white and black with geometric shapes of red, blue,
and yellow. This
astonishing work of art was created by Barcelona native
Joan Mira.
The eccentricity and excitement of this city is gloriously
represented by the three most famous artists
connected to Barcelona: Miro,
Picasso, and Dali. Each has a major museum
in or near the city devoted to
his work. At the Picasso Museum, in E1 Born district
(more on that area
later), a vast collection of the artist's works, dating
to his time in Barcelona, goes far beyond the familiar
cubism.
Admiring
a moving
portrait of a girl taking her first communion, or a
charming landscape of the countryside near Barcelona,
you might
not even realize,
if you weren't in his eponymous museum, that you were
looking at a Picasso.
If Mira
is more your style, take a ride up to Montjuic, the hillside park
that's reachable by funicular, to
the Catalonian
National
Museum of Art and the Fundaci6 Joan Mir6 which possess
probably the best
collection
in the world of this quirky and joyful artist's work.
Dali fans head to nearby Figueres for his museum.
It's well
worth the day
trip to
see the Teatre Museu Dali (built by the artist) and
to spend the afternoon experiencing not only the
paintings but the
building itself, with its
surrealistic holograms, curving lenses, wild furniture,
and mirror effects.
If these
three are the big-name artists
to
whom the
city
lays claim, its soul lies in the works of Antoni
Gaudi, the city's patron
saint of architectural eccentricity. If there's
anyone way to understand Barcelona (and any singular reason
to visit),
it's to look
at the work of this
early twentieth century artist whose buildings
are decades ahead of their time. Resting comfortably
right beside "normal" buildings,
these psychedelic visions in stone have an implacable
outlandishness that attract millions of visitors
each year.
I remember my first encounter with Gaud!: stumbling
across Casa Mila (or La Pedrera as it's better-known)
on an
Eixample boulevard,
I
said to myself, "Now this
is my type of building!" Undulating like the sea down the block, its waves
of stone capped by a cornucopia of flourishes, it does more than enliven the
street-it transforms it. Down Passeig de Gracia from La Pedrera lies the equally-stunning
Casa BatU6 with an evanescent dragon perched on its roof, next to odd, bone-like
balconies. I wander up twisting stairways, past lizard-texture walls, looking
out windows outlined in squares and circles, to the roof, a fantasia of mosaic
towers crowned by little rosettes.
This cornucopia
of artistic expression is only a prelude to my favorite spot in Barcelona:
Park Giiell, a spectacularly
outlandish park Gaud! designed for an otherwise fairly
nondescript part of town. Approaching the checkerboard blue and white
spire of one of the two entrance
towers, I climb the grand double staircase, bordered by
mosaic-covered square "fingers," past
the famous dragon fountain, in swirls of navy, azure, orange, yellow, and green.
Up the stairs and through a "cave" of pillars rising from white cracked
tile bases I enter the central "plaza," a wide-open area surrounded
by undulating stone benches decorated with yet more mosaics while providing visitors
one of the best views in all of Barcelona. Surrounded by blue, pink, lime, taupe,
and orange squiggles, flowers, dots, and stars, I look past the two crazy entrance
towers and there's the city, with the Mediterranean in the distance.
Near the Rambla, you can walk by Palau Giiell, topped by
a carefree row of whimsical cones (currently closed for
renovation), but
the piece de
resistance
of Barcelona
is Gaudi's great unfinished masterpiece, the Sagrada Familia.
This elaborately-carved church with coiled and bulbous
spires capped
by flower-like symbols is
the eighth wonder of the world. Presently, there's major
construction
going on
as they add
an entire section-four original towers are in the process
of becoming eighteen. While it's annoying to tourists (construction
is likely
to last for many
years), it's fascinating to watch as the vision of the
great artist slowly comes to
life. Gaudi, who saw the Sagrada Familia as an ongoing
process rather than a finished
work, spent over forty years working on it himself. As
Gaudi said: "The
Temple grows slowly, but this has always been the case with everything destined
to have a long life."
You wouldn't want the city to remain static; I know Gaudi
wouldn't. In keeping with that spirit, I head to EI Born,
an area that
was kind of
seedy just
five years ago but has become one of the hippest parts
of town. Located next door
to the Barri Gotic, this area has a charm and coherence
that the Barri Gotic lacks. I love wandering down the beautiful
little streets
(Barcelona's
narrowest
street, Carrer des Mosques, is here); Passeig del Born
is
also a lovely one, with its tree-lined pedestrian median
and arcing
sculpture
in
tribute to
those who fought for Catalonia's freedom in the 1713-14
siege of Barcelona. The memorial
is in a beautiful little plaza, surrounded by houses with
greenery spilling off their terraces and the occasional
balcony birdcage
full of chirpers.
Many of
the nearby streets have a similarly evocative quality:
often named after occupations, they show that this was
once a center
of commerce,
a fact
underlined by the
gorgeous Born Market, currently being restored. The district
has also undergone a commercial
renaissance: it's now the home to some of the most interesting
shops and boutiques of Barcelona, and I find everything
from galleries and designer
clothing to
ceramics, chocolates, and fab skin care products from
Greece. The Picasso Museum is here,
as is the wonderful Textile Museum (though I've heard
it's moving) where I admire centuries of fabric and a stunning collection
of gowns from humongously-bustled Victorian frocks to sleek 1920's
nightgowns. There's
also the fabulously
quirky Chocolate
Museum
with its
collection of fantastically-wrought chocolate sculptures
(a Barcelona Easter tradition). You'll see Ben Hur in
a horse-drawn chariot,
a white chocolate
gorilla, and several of Gaudi's buildings recreated in
all their hallucinatory detail.
Everything is so intricately-done that at first you don't
realize
you're looking at a sculpture made of chocolate.
Speaking of food art: the area's also home to some amazing
restaurants. In Santa Maria, chef Paco Guzman dishes
up a tapas-only array
that spans the
globe from
Catalunya to Asia and back. I do the degustation menu,
twelve little courses that give you an idea of the breadth
of his
talents. Sushi
has a surprising,
crunchy center of deep-fried langoustine; a Catalan stew
of garbanzo beans is transformed by scallops, carrots,
and miso/curry
sauce.
The croquette
that oozes
with cheese is something you'll find all over town, but
the greens covered in a sweet tomato jam are Paco's own
addition.
Of course,
you can just
share a few
tapas and a glass of cava (Spain's version of champagne)
in this comfy spot; as the amiable Guzman stresses, "We're here to do anything you want."
More
wonders await down the street at the phenomenal Comer~
24. Chef Carles Abelian gives new life to the concept of the tapa,
from al dente asparagus with parmesan
and Mandarin mousse to little squares of salmon tartare
topped with salmon roe and presented with a thin rectangle of yogurt
scented with vanilla. I order the "festival" and
sit back as ten little dishes, and then five desserts, come my way, each with
a detailed description by the sweet and helpful staff: wild mushrooms with an
egg foam; lemon/perch ceviche with daikon and pomegranate seeds; truffles and
cepes in filo. Inventive, diverse, and beautifully presented, it's among the
great meals I've had in all my travels.
Espai Sucre ("sugar space") has its own tasting menus--of desserts!
There are now a few main dishes available, but basically it's a dessert restaurant,
and you can do a three or five-course sample. Even a non-dessert person like
myself is astounded at the originality: lychee soup with grated apples and celery,
a mound of cider ice cream and a thin eucalyptus-scented caramel; sweet/tart
yogurt cake, with puckeringly wonderful rhubarb ice cream atop a sweet rhubarb
confiture and a razor-thin crust of white chocolate; thick, bittersweet chocolate
pudding with thin chocolate wafers, sweeter chocolate swirled in, and spice ice
cream completing the tableau. Vow to do an extra hundred hours at the gym if
you must, but don't miss this place. Remarkably, these three beauties are within
a block of each other, but you'll find delights all over town. In the Eixample,
I love the friendIy people and excellent food at Porquesi (don't miss their wonderful
salmon korma).
Also in
this area is Casa Calvet, notable because it's inside a Gaudi-designed
building. While most places like this would tend to be just
tourist traps, this is actually one of Barcelona's
most highly-regarded restaurants (the chef, no doubt, gets a lot
of inspiration from Gaudi's creativity). In Barri
Gotic, I'm a big fan of Taxidermista (the name refers
to this imaginative restaurant's former use), right on pretty little
Pla9a Reial; if you want a prime view with
your (pricey but wonderful) dinner, Torre d' Alta
Mar in the St. Sebastian Tower overlooking the water can't be beat.
Itry to work off some of my gluttony by taking a
long stroll from harbor to waterfront promenade.
Here in
the area known
as Barceloneta,
the
harbor bobs
with boats,
the houses are closely-packed on the back streets,
and the beach is lined with little seafood restaurants
(Agua
is the
trendiest).
As I gaze out at the Mediterranean past a stretch
of beach, I think: am I still in the same city? Which
is my challenge
in
writing about
Barcelona: I could
describe it for you, but first I'd have to decide
which
Barcelona I'm going
to describe.
Do I want to tell you about the neatly laid-out streets
and wild Modernist architecture ofthe Eixample? The
twisty little
lanes
ofBarri Gotic
and EI
Born? The grand
waterside promenade? The otherworldly realms of Parc
Giiell, rising like a hallucinatory vision?
Barcelona is all of these, and much more. It's a
big, sprawling, unwieldy city (a good public transit
system
helps you see
it all) and if you
ride the subway,
which I do a lot, you'll emerge from the underground
to find you're in a place that feels utterly different
from
the one
you just left.
There
are
the famous
streets-La Rambla, Passeig de Gracia-and then there
are the lesser-known but equally-evocative ones,
such as
Passeig del Born. There are
famous museums, and then there are a dozen quirky
little spots devoted to
such themes as
perfume,
shoes, and funeral carriages. Barcelona takes time
and energy,
but the vigorous and the intrepid will become instant
devotees and lifelong
partisans.
What's
interesting is that each visitor seems to fall
in love with a different aspect of Barcelona. Some are
enraptured
with
the glorious
creations
of Gaudi, or
seduced
by the works of art of Dali and Miro. Other people
are devoted to the Catalan people and their culture,
while
the never-ending
nightlife
is a siren call
for many more individuals. My advice: pack a spirit
of adventurousness and a capacity
for surprise as Barcelona is guaranteed to astonish
you. It's just that kind of city. .
Barcelona resources
RESOURCES
When calling from the U.S., Dial 011-34-93 before
all numbers.
HOTELS
=
Hotel Axel, Aribau 33. Tel: 323-9393. Doubles
$167-$338. Our choice for gay atmosphere, a helpful
staff, and excellent
location. www.hotelaxel.com
=Balmes, Mallorca 216. Tel: 451-1914. Doubles $100-$174.
The Claris' less regal sister, with duplex rooms,
great art,
and lovely gardens
that make
you forget
you're in the heart of the city. www.derbyhotels.es
=Hotel Claris, Pau Claris 150. Tel: 487-6262. Doubles
$213-$468. A great Eixample location, and stylishly
modern, luxurious
rooms (some
duplex
suites cover
two stories) in a converted nineteenth-century
palace. www.derbyhotels.es
=Omm, Rosell6n 265. Tel: 445-4000. Doubles $261$468.
A trendy favorite, the first hotel of the T ragaluz
restaurant
group
has 59 well-appointed
rooms
(and a terrace
overlooking La Pedrera). Its restaurant, Moo, is
a hot spot. www.hotelomm.es
DINING EIXAMPLE
=Arribau 137. Tel: 439-6414.
=Casa Calvet, Casp 48. Tel: 412-4012.
=Castro, Casanova 85. Tel: 323-6784.
=Porquesi, Comte Borrell 122. Tel: 454-8245.
EL BORN
Bani Gotic, Taxidermista, PlaQa Reial8.
Tel: 412-4536.
=Comerc;: 24, Comerc;: 24. Tel: 319-2102.
=Espai Sucre, Princesa 53. Tel: 268-1630.
=Santa Maria, Comerc;: 17. Tel: 315-1227.
WATERFRONT
=Agua, Passeig Maritim 30. Tel: 225-1272.
=Torre d'Alta Mar, Passeig Joan de Borb6 88. Tel:
221-0007
NIGHTLIFE
=Ambar, Casanova 71. Tel: 451-5994.
=Arena Clubs (various locations) www.arenadisco.com
=D-Mer, Plat613. Tel: 201-6207.
=Dietrich, Consell de Cent 255. Tel: 451-7707.
=Fenix, Casanova 64. Tel: 323-6607.
=Metro, Sepulveda 185. Tel: 323-5227.
=Mi Madre, Consell de Cent 223.
=Punto BCN, Muntaner 63. Tel: 453-6123.
=Sala Diana/Aire, Valencia 236. Tel: 451-8462.
=Salvation, Ronda Sant Pierre 19-21. Tel: 318-0686.
=Sweet Cafe, Casanova 75.
SIGHTSEEING
=Casa Batile, Passeig de Gracia 43. Tel: 488-0666.
=Cathedral, Plac;:a de la Seu. Tel: 315-1554.
=Chocolate Museum, Comerc;: 36. Tel: 268-7878.
=Fundacie Joan Mire, Montjurc. Tel: 329-1908.
www.bcn.fjmiro.es
=La Pedrera (Casa Mila ), Provenc;:a 261-265.
Tel: 484-5995.
=Park Guell, Olot. Tel: 213-0488.
=Picasso Museum, Montcada 19. Tel: 319-6310.
www.museupicasso.bcn.es
=Teatre Museu Dali, Plac;:a Gala-Salvador Dal[,
Figueres. Tel: 011-34-97-677-500. www.salvador-dali.org/eng
=Textile Museum, Montcada 12-14. Tel: 319-7603.
INFORMATION
=Lambda, the main gay organization is Casal
Verdaguer I Callis 10. Tel: 319-5550. www.lambdaweb.org
=For a listing of gay accommodations, bars, restaurants,
saunas, etc. and links to their websites visit
www.gaybarcelona.com
=A good spot for information, gay maps, and helpful
advice is Cemplices Bookstore, Cervantes 2. Tel:
412-7283. http://personaI1.iddeo.es/complices
=Also worth a visit is the gay bookstore/cafe
Antinous, Josep Anselm Clave 6. Tel: 301-9070.
www.antinouslibros.com
=For general information on Barcelona, contact
Turisme de Barcelona, Plac;:a de Catalunya 17.
Tel: 285-3834.
www.barcelonaturisme.com.
=
You can get
a Barcelona Card there, which gives you unlimited
travel on
buses and subways
as well
as free or discounted admission to many attractions.
=For tourist info visit the Tourist Board of
Spain's website at www.tourspain.es
Toronto
Star
April 22,2005
9
Spain Approves Gay Marriage, Adoption
Days after the election of a staunchly conservative new pope, predominantly
Roman Catholic Spain is set to allow homosexuals to marry and adopt
children.
Spanish deputies on Thursday approved a government bill allowing homosexuals
to marry and adopt children, which if endorsed by the Senate will make
it the second European country to do so.
A total of 183 deputies in the Socialist-dominated lower house of parliament
voted in favor of the government bill allowing homosexuals to marry
and adopt children. 136 were against and six abstained.
The draft legislation, which is expected to take effect in a few months'
time pending widely anticipated endorsement by the Senate, gives the
same rights and conditions to all legally married couples "be
the parties of the same sex or of different sex."
Spain would then become the second European country to allow both gay
marriages and adoption of children by gay couples. The Netherlands
was the first. Belgium allow same-sex marriages but not adoption.
" Another world is possible"
"
Spain is showing that another world is possible," said Socialist
party (PSOE) deputy Pedro Zerolo, who has often expressed the wish
to become the first gay person to inaugurate the right to marriage
in Spain. "The country doesn't just export hams but also ideas
and models for society."
The draft legislation amends the Spanish Civil Code to insert the following
sentence: "Marriage will meet the same conditions and will have
the same effects be the parties of the same sex or of different sex."
Prior to the vote, Socialist Justice Minister Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar
defended the government bill, arguing that it "breaks down the
barriers of discrimination which affect the rights and freedoms and
notably free choice in the quest for happiness, a fundamental, unwritten
right."
The vote was greeted with applause and howls of joy by gay rights activists
inside the chamber. They included a gay male couple who brandished
a placard saying "Habemus Matrimonium" ('We have a marriage,'
in Latin), a reference to "Habemus papam," the words used
by the Catholic Church to announce the election of a new pope.
Vote slammed by Catholics, other faiths
However the vote was immediately condemned by Spain's powerful Roman
Catholic bishops, who called the bill "radically unjust and harmful
to the common good." The bill has infuriated the Catholic Church,
which in December branded homosexual behavior "intrinsically bad."
"
The higher interest of children requires that they not be fabricated
in laboratories nor adopted by marriages of same-sex people," the
bishops said in their statement Thursday.
On the eve of the vote, representatives of Spain's major religious
faiths, except Islam, had unveiled a joint statement signaling their
strong opposition to gay marriage.
Addressed to the Spanish parliament, it was signed by the Spanish (Catholic)
Episcopal conference, the federation of Jewish communities, the federation
of evangelical religious groups and a senior Orthodox Church representative.
"
Monogamous heterosexual marriage is part of Judeo-Christian tradition
and other religious faiths, and in its basic structure was and remains
a fundamental institution in the history of societies of our cultural
environment," it said.
"
Any change of the institution of marriage requires deep reflection
and a vast dialogue and social consensus," it added. Signatories
of the statement demanded that the structure of marriage be left unchanged.
" People sleep with who they want"
The Socialist-dominated parliament voted last November to legalize
gay marriages from 2005 and give gay couples the right to adopt children.
The Spanish deputies also adopted Thursday a reform of divorce laws
which regulates the shared custody of children and accelerates the
divorce process, allowing it to be completed in three months in cases
of mutual consent.
The late Pope John Paul II in January had condemned as a "permissive
morality" initiatives taken by Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis
Rodriguez Zapatero's (photo) government on gay marriage, divorce and
the limitation of religious teaching in public schools.
But the only openly practising Catholic in the Zapatero cabinet, Defense
Minister Jose Bono, said the church had more important things to worry
about than gay marriage.
"
People sleep with who they want," he said. "Christ would
today be more concerned about the 25,000 children who die each day
from hunger in the world and by the deadly wars and breaches of international
law."
Author DW staff / AFP (sp)
http://www.dw-world.de © Deutsche Welle
365Gay.com
May 11,
2005
10
Spain's
PM Tells Catholic Church To Keep Out Of Gay Marriage Debate
by Malcolm Thornberry
Madrid - The Roman Catholic Church has called on the Spanish king
to refuse to sign legislation allowing same-sex marriage.
The bill has passed Spain's lower house and is now before the Senate.
(story) It is expected to be passed this summer.
The Conferencia Espiscopal, the Spanish Bishops' Organization, tells
the El Mundo newspaper that they wrote to King Juan Carlos last Friday
calling on
him to issue a clear and incisive statement opposing the legislation.
But, it is unlikely the King will take any action on the letter. Spain is
a constitutional monarchy and the king is not permitted to hold up legislation,
and as in Britain, the monarchy does not enter public debate on political
issues.
In his "state of the nation" address to Parliament on Wednesday,
Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero lashed out at the Church. "
I will never understand those who proclaim love as the foundation of life,
while denying so radically protection, understanding and affection to our neighbors,
our friends, our relatives, our colleagues," Zapatero told parliament.
"
What kind of love is this that excludes those who experience their sexuality
in a different way?" he said.
The Church has been involved in a lengthy dispute with Zapatero's Socialist
government over the gay marriage bill.
Last year, shortly after Zapatero announced he would bring in the legislation,
he was summoned to Rome for a lecture by Pope John Paul. Nevertheless,
Zapatero and his government refused to bow under the pressure.
The attacks have continued under Pope Benedict. The Pope, speaking through
Cardinal Alfonso Lopes Trujill, head of the Pontifical Council on the Family,
said Roman Catholics should be prepared to lose their jobs rather than co-operate
with the law.
In an opinion poll on the issue carried out by the government-run Centre
for Sociological Investigations last June, 66 per cent of Spaniards favoured
legalizing
gay marriage, while 26 per cent were opposed.
Homosexuality was banned during Franco's 1939-1975 dictatorship. Spain's
liberal 1978 constitution outlawed sexual discrimination and homosexuality
was decriminalized
shortly afterwards.
Same-sex marriage is legal in Holland and Belgium. Most other European Union
countries have some provision for recognizing those in committed same-sex
relationships. In December Britain will open its registry for Civil Unions.
In North America most of Canada has legalized same-sex marriage and a bill
to expand that throughout the country is currently before Parliament. Massachusetts
is the only US state to legalize same-sex marriage, although Civil Unions
are legal in Vermont and Connecticut, and several other states including
California
have domestic partner registries.
Toronto Star
June 25,
2005
11
Madrid takes pride in its `gaybourhood'--Spaniards
have much to celebrate these days
A week
from today, the Madrid Orgullo floats will be snaking down the streets
of Spain's capital city, bedecked with
giant pink feathers and dancing shirtless men in white cowboy hats.
Up to a million spectators will swarm the streets and fill Plaza Chueca,
the nucleus of Madrid's gaybourhood. There'll be drag queens in leopard skin
and
sequined gowns. The ground will vibrate with danceable beats, while whistles,
shouts, and lively Castilian chatter fill the air.
All night the bars will be packed while the aromas of cigarette smoke, cologne,
sweat, and fresh tapas waft out the doors. When dawn creeps over the rooftops,
the Pride celebrations will be far from over.
Spaniards have so much to celebrate these days, so many places to go, and,
because of their diminished need for sleep, so much time.
What to celebrate? Earlier this year, the government began the passage of
its same-sex marriage bill. This Catholic country, now being called the "Netherlands
of the South" is vying with Canada to be the third in the world, after
Holland and Belgium, to allow full-on matrimony. There is some resistance from
bishops, mayors, and senators, but, according to a recent Instituto Opina poll,
62 per cent of Spaniards support the move.
Richard Hastings, a Toronto flamenco dancer, felt the love during his last
visit. " I would not say that I encountered any homophobia, conscious or unconscious.
I felt very free walking, even outside of Chueca. You hear about this macho culture
and then you go to Spain and people are so open-minded. Ever since Franco, Spain
just jumped out of the closet and said, `We're here and we're not going away.'"
So, where do you go? Madrid has the most resources, but there are scenes in
Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, Malaga, Ibiza, and Sitges as well. For Madrid,
a recent issue of Zero Guia lists about a hundred gay and lesbian cafés
and bars, 75 restaurants, 15 saunas, 50 discos and 60 clothing stores. Many
of these, as well as a nudist bar and some tapaterias, can be
found near the Chueca metro station. Here, shopping focuses on shoes, designer
underwear, and literature. The long-running Berkana bookstore also sells
gifts, adult toys, clothing, coffee and pastries.
The afternoon
siesta may put a dent
in your shopping, but you'll benefit from a long nap, because late nights
don't just happen on Pride weekend. Dinner begins around 9 p.m., (hypoglycemics
beware),
and lasts till midnight. Bars fill up around 1 or 2 a.m., dance clubs peak
around three, and keep thumping till dawn. Bars are liveliest at the beginning
of the month, when newly-issued paycheques burn holes in local pockets.
Cover charges usually include the first drink, so you can start with
a tapas bar,
then, dance to a couple of tunes at "Black and White," sip cocktails
at "Rick's," meet the local lesbians at "Truco" and dance
with their ex-girlfriends at "Escape." From there, it's either
to bed, to the coffee shop, or to work, where Spaniards function remarkably
well
until their next siesta.
Julia Steinecke is a Toronto-based freelance writer. Contact her at traveljulia@yahoo.ca
Washington
Post/Associated
Press
July 3, 2005
12
Spanish Marriage Law to Go Into Effect--Gay Couples
Will Be Able to Wed, Adopt
Madrid - The law legalizing gay marriage in Spain has cleared
its last bureaucratic formality -- being published in an official government
registry
-- and will take effect on Sunday. An official of the ruling
Socialist Party, which sponsored the law, said the party will now seek
legislation to protect Spain's estimated 8,000
transsexuals.
The gay marriage law, passed Thursday by the lower house of parliament,
was published Saturday in the gazette, the Boletin Oficial del Estado,
which records
all government decisions in Spain. The document specified that the new
law would go into effect Sunday.
The law was signed by King Juan Carlos and Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez
Zapatero.
Gay couples are not expected to start getting married until late this month
because of the paperwork needed before they go to town halls and other
civil bodies that marry people in Spain, according to Spain's main federation
of
gay men and lesbians.
The law gives same-sex couples the right to wed, adopt children and inherit
each other's property, making their legal status the same as that of heterosexual
couples.
Spain is the third country in the world to grant full recognition to gay
marriage. The others are the Netherlands and Belgium. Canada is
expected to enact similar
legislation later this month. Several European countries and a few U.S.
states recognize civil unions among same-sex couples, but this falls short
of treating them like married
couples. Fierce criticism of the law from the Catholic Church continued,
with the head of the Spanish Bishops Conference, Bishop Ricardo Blazquez,
branding
the measure
unconstitutional.
Doug Ireland News
http://direland.typepad.com/direland/2005/07/when_the_spanis.html
July 4, 2005
13
Spanish Premier Zapatero's Remarkable Gay Marriage Speech--in
favor of full equality for those with same-sex hearts
When the Spanish parliament yesterday took its historic vote legalizing both
gay marriage and adoption of children by gay couples, Socialist Prime Minister
Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero--who put the full prestige of his office
and party behind passage of the gay human rights legislation--made probably
the most remarkable speech in favor of full equality for those with
same-sex hearts ever delivered by a head of government anywhere, in which he quoted
two of the most illustrious gay poets in history. Here are excerpts from Zapatero's
speech:
"We are not legislating, honorable members, for people far away and not
known by us. We are enlarging the opportunity for happiness to our neighbors,
our co-workers, our friends and, our families: at the same time we are making
a more decent society, because a decent society is one that does not humiliate
its members.
"Today, the Spanish society answers to a group of people who, during many
years have, been humiliated, whose rights have been ignored, whose dignity has
been offended, their identity denied, and their liberty oppressed. Today the
Spanish society grants them the respect they deserve, recognizes their rights,
restores their dignity, affirms their identity, and restores their liberty.
"It is true that they are only a minority, but their triumph is everyone's
triumph. It is also the triumph of those who oppose this law, even though they
do not know this yet: because it is the triumph of Liberty. Their victory makes
all of us (even those who oppose the law) better people, it makes our society
better. Honorable members, There is no damage to marriage or to the concept of
family in allowing two people of the same sex to get married. To the contrary,
what happens is this class of Spanish citizens get the potential to organize
their lives with the rights and privileges of marriage and family. There is no
danger to the institution of marriage, but precisely the opposite: this law enhances
and respects marriage.
"Today, conscious that some people and institutions are in a profound disagreement
with this change in our civil law, I wish to express that, like other reforms
to the marriage code that preceded this one, this law will generate no evil,
that its only consequence will be the avoiding of senseless suffering of decent
human beings. A society that avoids senseless suffering of decent human beings
is a better society.
"With the approval of this Bill, our country takes another step in the
path of liberty and tolerance that was begun by the democratic change of government.
Our children will look at us incredulously if we tell them that many years ago,
our mothers had less rights than our fathers, or if we tell them that people
had to stay married against their will even though they were unable to share
their lives. Today we can offer them a beautiful lesson: every right gained,
each access to liberty has been the result of the struggle and sacrifice of many
people that deserve our recognition and praise.
"Today we demonstrate with this Bill that societies can better themselves
and can cross barriers and create tolerance by putting a stop to the unhappiness
and humiliation of some of our citizens. Today, for many of our countrymen,
comes the day predicted by C.P. Kavafy (the great Greek/Egyptian gay poet)
one century ago: 'Later 'twas said of the most perfect society/someone else,
made
like me/certainly
will come out and act freely.' "
Thanks to valiant gay journalist Rex Wockner for providing this translation.The
New York Times Company
July 5,
2005
14
First Gay Couples Apply for Marriage Under New Spanish Law
by Renwick McLean
Madrid - When Ramón Vizcaíno and Luis
Ibarcena tried to apply for a marriage license here two months ago, they caused
a minor scandal. Confusing news reports had led them to believe that Spain
had legalized gay marriage, they said, when, in fact, it had only passed a
preliminary
vote in
Parliament. "The people there were very surprised to see two men asking
about marriage," said
Mr. Vizcaíno, a 38-year-old security guard. "They looked at us like
we were crazy."
But on Monday, the baffled faces and dismissive tones gave way to smiles and
handshakes, as the men became one of the first gay couples to seek government
authorization to wed under Spain's new marriage law, which took effect on Sunday. "This means we are no longer second-class citizens," Mr. Vizcaíno
said in an interview Monday. "We have always had the same obligations as
other citizens. We deserve the same rights, too."
The lines inside the Madrid Civil Registry, where capital residents apply for
marriage licenses, swelled with gay and lesbian couples for the first time
on Monday, four days after Parliament passed a law giving same-sex couples
across Spain the right to marry and to adopt children.
The vote makes Spain the first nation to remove all legal distinctions between
same-sex and heterosexual unions, say advocates for marriage rights for gay
couples. Belgium, Canada and the Netherlands have also legalized gay marriage,
but only Canada's laws, which do not yet apply to all of the country, contain
language as liberal as Spain's.
Near the close of business on Monday, Boti G. Rodrigo, an official at the registry,
said that only four gay couples had formally applied for marriage licenses
but that many more had come seeking information about the process. "We
expect that the number of same-sex couples will be disproportionately high
for weeks, if not months to come," she said.
Ms. Rodrigo said that most of the couples requesting information on Monday
had been together for years.
Parliament's decision to legalize gay marriage has provoked tremendous animosity
among religious conservatives in Spain, a predominantly Roman Catholic country.
In a speech before Pope Benedict XVI in Rome on Monday, the archbishop of Madrid,
Cardinal Antonio María Rouco Varela, condemned the law, saying it was
evidence of a society in which "not only is faith denied, but also human
reason itself." Ricardo Blázquez, the president of the Conference
of Catholic Bishops, also denounced the law on Monday, saying at a news conference
near Madrid that
it "throws moral and human order into confusion."
Many of the gay couples interviewed on Monday said they had grown up in Catholic
households but were no longer practicing Catholics, in part because of the
church's opposition to gay marriage. But Mr. Ibarcena, 32, the partner of Mr.
Vizcaíno and also a security guard, said he still attended church regularly. "I stand up and challenge them when they say things that are anti-gay," he
said. "I haven't given up on them yet."
Associated
Press
July 06, 2005
15
Spain's
gay marriage law hits first snag--foreigners exempt
by Daniel Woolls, Madrid
Spain's new gay marriage law hit its first
snag Wednesday as a court said a Spanish man can't wed his Indian partner because
India does not allow same-sex marriage.
The Supreme Court of Justice of Catalonia cited an article in the Spanish civil
code which says foreign residents seeking to wed Spaniards are bound
by the laws of the country where they have citizenship. The Indian man is resident
of Spain but holds an Indian passport.
The dispute erupted Tuesday, six days after Spain's parliament made this country
the third in the world to legalize gay marriage. The others are Netherlands
and Belgium. A decision in Canada is pending until later this month. The court's
comments - released in a statement prompted by media inquiries, not in a formal
ruling - suggest that for the time being at least, gay Spaniards
seeking to marry foreigners can only do so with people from the Netherlands
and Belgium. The Spanish Justice Ministry did not return calls seeking comment.
The Indian man, identified in news reports as Vipul Dutt, 33, went to a judge
in the Barcelona-area village of Canet de Mar with his partner, 45-year-old
Spaniard Enric Baucells, seeking to file papers that will allow them to get
married. Their lawyer, Jose Maria Ortiz, told the newspaper El Periodico that
the judge informed them he could not marry them because Dutt is from India,
which doesn't
allow same-sex marriage. The court said that the couples can appeal to a Justice
Ministry department that oversees Spain's civil registries.
The Associated
Press
July 11,
2005
16
Two
men first to wed under new Spain law
Madrid - Two men who have been together for 30 years got
married Monday, becoming the first couple to wed under Spain's new law allowing
same-sex marriages.
The ceremony took place in Tres Cantos, a town outside Madrid. The law took
effect eight days ago, making Spain the third country in the world to grant
full legal recognition to same-sex couples. The others are the Netherlands
and Belgium. Similar legislation is pending in Canada.
Spanish television showed video of the couple — identified in news reports
as Emilio Menendez and Carlos Baturin — smiling broadly and holding
up wedding rings after the ceremony at the town hall in Tres Cantos.
Los Angeles
Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-gayspain18jul18,1,3056497,print.story?coll=la-headlines-world
July 18,
2005
17
A Long Road From Fascist Era to Gay Marriage--As Spain's first
same-sex couple is wed, church objections recall the Franco years for some.
by Tracy Wilkinson, Madrid
The groom
wore white. The other groom wore orange. Both trimmed their mustaches
for the Big Day. After 30 years together, Carlos Baturin and Emilio
Menendez tied the knot last week in a suburban Madrid city hall,
becoming the first Spaniards
to avail
themselves of one of the world's most liberal laws sanctioning homosexual
marriage.
The new rules have put Spanish authorities into bitter conflict with the
Roman Catholic Church and revived angry rhetorical ghosts from Spain's
civil war,
when the church backed dictator Francisco Franco and homosexuality was
a crime. The church has branded the law, a pet project of Socialist Prime
Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, as nothing less than an unprecedented
threat
to Christian
civilization. When the Socialist-dominated parliament approved gay marriage
this spring, a senior cardinal at the Vatican called on Spanish officials
to refuse to enact the law.
Several mayors jumped on the bandwagon and declared their defiance, saying
they would refuse to marry gay couples as a matter of conscience. (In Spain,
couples have to undergo a civil ceremony officiated by a mayor or city
official and may then opt for a religious wedding in addition.)And so,
amid the furor,
Baturin and Menendez said their vows before a suburban alderman from the
United Left party, witnessed by a dozen of the couple's closest friends
and relatives,
and about 100 journalists, photographers and TV cameramen. "It is a testimony
to who we are and what we are," said Baturin, a psychiatrist. "Now
we are more official. We both believe in marriage and family, and we wanted
to be part of that."
Menendez's 88-year-old mother, Marina, gave the couple an Adriatic cruise
as a wedding gift. She attended the ceremony and was reported to be in
excellent spirits and proud of her son, for whom growing up gay
in Franco's Spain was
not easy. As a youth, Menendez completed military service in the
Spanish army, finding a niche with other gays like himself, none of whom
could reveal their sexual
orientation openly but who could protect each other. "We knew how
to hide it," Menendez said. "It was a clandestine
way of living, and not just because of being a homosexual. The '70s were
a time when you spoke softly about certain things, and only in private."
Franco died in 1975, a few months after Baturin and Menendez started dating,
secretly, and the transition to democracy in tradition-bound Spain was
launched. A few days after the wedding ceremony, the newlyweds were still
basking in the glow of marital bliss, sitting in the lobby of their favorite
gym
and
receiving congratulations, kisses and handshakes from passing friends.
Menendez, a window dresser for Spain's leading department store chain, El
Corte Ingles,
said he remained disappointed that his church had so vociferously
opposed
gay unions. "The first commandment is to love each other, and the
church has lost a beautiful opportunity to show love," he said. "It
makes me very sad."
Baturin and Menendez are around 50 (they won't give precise ages, they say,
out of vanity) and clearly comfortable with each other, an ease born of
many years as a couple. Baturin, a little older than Menendez, has close-cropped
blond-white hair, intense eyes and an angular, thin face. Menendez has
wavy,
dark hair and a dimpled smile. For the wedding, Menendez, the shopper of
the family, chose striped jackets for the pair, beige for himself and blue
and white for Baturin. Menendez
added an orange shirt, and Baturin donned a white shirt and trousers. They
exchanged
white-gold rings, each inlaid with a diamond.
They say they had intended to keep the ceremony low-key but that journalists
got wind of the historic event and descended on City Hall. Guests threw
rice and rose petals to greet the newlyweds, but the pair declined to kiss
in
public. Although numerous countries today recognize some form of same-sex
partnership, the Spanish law goes beyond most because it eliminates all
legal distinction
between heterosexual and homosexual marriages. A gay married couple has
all the same rights as a straight married couple, including the right to
adopt
children. A similar law exists in the Netherlands, and one is pending in
Canada.
Zapatero says the law will help transform Spain into a new and "decent
society." His agenda also includes plans to liberalize divorce, abortion
and stem-cell research.
But the
church is incensed, saying the very definition of family is being
destroyed. To underscore their point, church leaders took the unusual
step of joining forces with the political right wing and heading
a massive street demonstration
last month to demand that the traditional definition of marriage be preserved. Many
on the left warned of a throwback to the days of Franco, when the
church and fascism worked hand in hand. But political leaders on the
right, including
Mariano Rajoy, the head of the Popular Party ousted last year by Zapatero's
surprise electoral victory, blamed the Socialist government for sowing
division.
Though Spain is traditionally a Roman Catholic country, Spaniards
are increasingly less likely to go to Mass and follow other religious
customs. Rajoy and some of the opponents of gay marriage say
they don't mind legislation recognizing civil unions for homosexuals.
They draw the line, however,
at giving it a status equivalent to the marriage of man and woman. The
issue has roiled debate in a number of countries, including the U.S.
The Bush administration and its conservative backers are promising to
fight
the
kind of same-sex unions that a number of jurisdictions have enacted. "We've been awakening a lot of awareness," said Benigno Blanco, vice
president of the Spanish Family Forum, which organized the protest march
and has collected half a million signatures to force a new law that would define
marriage as the joining of a man and woman. "This is what Spaniards
really want. The marriage of husband and wife is the natural niche from
which new life
arises."
And so, as Baturin and Menendez take off on their honeymoon, Spaniards will
continue to debate how far and fast their society is changing, and whether
some changes are long overdue or too much at once. "The legal relationship between homosexuals must be different from conventional
marriage," Mario Amilivia, the mayor of the city of Leon, said in
a statement explaining his decision to refuse to marry gays. "This
type of thing only generates friction in society, in a gratuitous way."
BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4707787.stm
July 20,
2005
18
Spain
sees first lesbian marriage
More journalists than guests were at Veronica and Tiana's wedding
Two women have become the first in Spain to get married since a new law allowing
same-sex weddings.
Veronica
and Tiana, from Spain and Argentina, were married in Mollet del Valles
near Barcelona.
On Thursday, a judge in southern Spain angered the gay community by preventing
two other women from tying the knot.
The judge questioned whether the new marriage law was compatible with the constitution,
which refers to marriage only between "a man and a woman."
The first marriage between two men took place on 11 July a week after the marriage
law came into force. Spain's lower house of parliament voted in favour of the
bill on 30 June, overruling its rejection by the upper house, the Senate. Polls
suggest most Spaniards
back the move, although thousands joined a Madrid rally against the bill before
it was passed. And some of Spain's local mayors have said they will not officiate
at gay marriages.
Gay.com/PlanetOut.com
Network
http://www.barcelonagay.com/inicio.html
12 August,
2005 19
Spain
allows gays to wed foreigners
Spain's
justice ministry ruled this week that citizens can marry a same-sex
partner who
is foreign, even if that person's home country would not legally
recognise
the
marriage.
The ruling
was published in the Official State Bulletin, according to
international news reports. The action resolves the first snag
in Spain's new law allowing same-sex couples to marry. Last month
a
gay Spanish
man was denied the right to marry his Indian partner when a court
in the northeastern Catalonia region ruled that the union would
not be
acceptable because India does not permit same-sex marriages.
The country's justice
ministry overruled however.
"A marriage between a Spaniard and
a foreigner, or between foreigners of the same sex resident in Spain,
shall
be valid as a result of applying Spanish material law, even if the
foreigner's national legislation does not allow or recognise the
validity of such
marriages," it said. Despite heavy opposition from the Roman
Catholic Church, Spain legalised same-sex marriage at the end
of June. Spain is
one of four countries that grant full marriage rights to same-sex
couples; the others being Belgium, Canada and the Netherlands.
-------
August
2005
Gay Spanish reader comments about gay marriage:
"
The reason why my friends--a gay couple--want
to get
married next Spring (insteaed of now) is
the partners
don't
want to see themselves in all the newspapers (one of them is very
famous in Politics). They met each other 4 years ago and I'm sure
they are not virgin :-) I also tell you: people who
want to get
married in Spain need a certificate that says "This person can
get married because is single". A Spanish man who wants to get
married with a man from Australia has said to me that people from
Australian embassy
don't want to do this certificate because marriage between men is
forbidden in Australia and the name of the partner has to be writen
in the certificate.
Finally I said to him: Say to your Australian partner that he has
to go alone to the embassy and that he has to write the name of a
woman
in the certificate (where he has to write the name of his partner).
Perhaps this solution has a good end and lets them get married.
Kind regards, Marco
http://www.typicallyspanish.com/cgi-bin/news/exec/view.cgi/1/1459
19 December
2005
20
Lesbian
activists marry in Madrid 
by h.b.
Beatriz Gemeno (left) and Boti Rodrigo on their happy day
(Photo
EFE)
With Britain’s first civil union taking place in Northern Ireland today,
Madrid saw over the weekend the marriage between two of Spain’s most
visible lesbian activists. Beatriz Gimeno, who is President of the State
Federation of
Gays and Lesbians, and her partner Boti Rodrigo. Partido Popular councillor
Luis Asua was among those present and spoke of his admiration and affection
for the
couple.
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