The (not so) silent killer of Lebanon's queer community - L'Orient Today - 0 views
today.lorientlejour.com/...-lebanons-queer-community.html
Lebanon opinion politics identities LGBT LGBTQ LGBTQIA lgbtME

-
I am often asked: “How is it like living in an LGBTQ+ friendly MENA country?” My response is usually snarky. The truth is queer people in Lebanon are living on bought time, waking up to the constant threat of erasure. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, gender non-conforming, and queer persons in the country are well aware that powers of hegemony, including national authorities, regressive religious institutions, and conservative social groups, are coming for both their feet and their hearts.
-
I recall how close we were to reclaiming ownership over the queer identity. There was a real, palpable possibility to create a system that celebrates the queers, all of the queers: the femme, the masc, the raging and the revolutionaries, the discreet, and everyone in between.
-
Authorities took it upon themselves to wage a psychosocial war against the country’s queer community. Last week, caretaker Minister of Interior Bassam Mawlawi, forwarded a letter asking security forces to take urgent measures to halt any social gatherings seeking to “promote homosexuality.”
- ...4 more annotations...
-
The Lebanese state, backed by key religious authorities, has made it a point to crackdown on anyone who dares stray from their patriarchal herd.
-
the patriarchal system in Lebanon is reinventing its legitimacy by further making minority groups more vulnerable, especially queer people. And when we say queer people, we must acknowledge that one’s sexual identity exists with other identities, like nationality, gender, race, class, and ability, which in turn situates different queer people in different positions of vulnerability.
-
Following the ministry’s heterosexist directive, none of the elected opposition MPs proposed an action plan or expressed willingness to restore the queer community’s sense of safety, including ensuring access to their social and economic rights alongside the right to assembly.
-
Faced with violent threats and mounting security concerns, Helem, the first LGBTQ+ rights organization in the Arab world, alongside other activist groups, had to call off a protest responding to MoIM’s daunting decree.