November 23rd, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Gay Moroccan writer takes on homophobia


(Paris) A soft-spoken slip of a young man, Abdellah Taia hardly looks the part of an iconoclast. But as Morocco’s first high-profile, openly gay man, Taia has made it his mission to win acceptance for homosexuals throughout the Muslim world.

Taia has defied Moroccan society’s don’t-ask, don’t-tell attitude toward homosexuality – and prison sentences that are still on the books in the North African kingdom – to write five autobiographical novels about growing up poor and gay in the northern coastal city of Sale.

The novels, peppered with sexually explicit passages, have catapulted him to fame in his native country and made him the de-facto poster child of its budding gay rights movement.

His work has sparked harsh criticism. Taia said some outraged critics have called on him to renounce Moroccan citizenship so as “not to bring shame” on the country.

It’s also alienated him from his parents and eight siblings, who figure extensively in the books and complain that Taia has publicly humiliated them.

But the 35-year-old author insists he’s never been cowed by fallout from his work.

“When I write, I feel a sense of urgency, as if my life depended on it,” Taia said in an interview in Paris, where he has lived for almost a decade. “When I first started writing, it never occurred to me to invent some fictional character and talk about made-up things.”

His latest novel, “L’armee du Salut,” or “Salvation Army,” focuses on his decision to move to Europe. An English translation recently came out in the United States, with an introduction by author Edmund White.

Though Taia immigrated legally – he was awarded a scholarship to study in Switzerland – his experiences in Geneva paralleled those of thousands Moroccans living in Europe without papers.

After his older Swiss lover who was supposed to pick him up at the Geneva airport never shows up, a penniless Taia seeks refuge at the Salvation Army, where he lives among illegal immigrants from throughout the developing world.

In the book, he also talks about his blooming sexuality, describing teenage trysts in the back of dark movie theaters and flings with European tourists looking for more than sun on their Moroccan holidays.

Like nearly all Arab countries, Morocco considers homosexual relations a crime, punishable by fines and prison sentences of six months to three years. Such penalties are rarely applied, though, and in practice, Morocco has a long history of leniency toward homosexuality and other practices forbidden by Islam.

Asked whether he sees himself as courageous, Taia said, “The most difficult thing was to work up the courage to pick up the pen and write for the first time.”

He grew up with a family of 11 sharing a two-room house. His father, a petty civil servant, and a his mother, an illiterate housewife, emphasized their children’s education, sending five to college.

That was where Taia began to write. Surrounded at Rabat University by children of Morocco’s French-speaking elite, he began to keep a diary to improve his written French.

His journals now serve as the foundation of his novels, which are written in French and have been translated into seven languages, including Arabic and now English.


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  • SteveMD2 Said: May 30th, 2009 at 8:57 pm
    • Fat chance. The only difference in much of the Muslim world, is that he would be killed with a sword. Here in the USA, thousands of gay kids, and thousands of bashings, every year, are caused by the churches using their words to incite others to do their dirty work, and to drive kids to kill themselves.

      In the name of their God and absolute truths”

  • Morgan Said: May 27th, 2009 at 11:42 pm
    • “I love how one-sided straights always are:” One of my best friends is a very liberal, tolerant and smart straight woman. She has 3 cats and knits. She loves rainbow and likes the company of gay men. To say that all straight are always one sided is unfair and untrue. I know that from my own experience. I know some straight people who are more tolerant than some gay people.

      You just can’t stereotype and pigeonhole everyone. There is always someone who comes alongs and busts up your stereotypes.

  • John S Said: May 27th, 2009 at 6:42 pm
    • Some one will kill him

  • woodroad34 Said: May 27th, 2009 at 6:00 pm
    • I love how one-sided straights always are: “It’s also alienated him from his parents and eight siblings, who figure extensively in the books and complain that Taia has publicly humiliated them”. I guess it never ocurred to them what a great embarrassment they are to him. And I’ll also bet now that his books are widely published in many languages and he’s probably raking in the money, that embarrassment will slowly dim into the light of greed.

  • Morgan Said: May 27th, 2009 at 2:36 pm
    • The Salvation Army took him in and fed him and lodged him when he didn’t have a choice and had no money.

      Sometimes when you are desperate for a place after coming a thousand miles to someone who was to take you home and has maybe dumped you by not showing up at the airport and you don’t have a penny. Can’t always be a chooser when down and out.

      And clearly his stay at the Salvation Army was temporary judging by this article placing back home in Morocco campaigning for societal change in his country for gay people.

      And Switzerland has civil unions for same-sex couples, a modern and well-off Western country. So maybe overall it is not a bad place to be dumped if you are going to be dumped by a someone with maybe a case of sudden “cold, clammy feet of clay”.

      Salvation Army is homophobic yes, but what does this say about the gay community when a homophobic organization grows a “bigger heart” than the cowardly jerk who left him stranded and helpless at the airport? Something to think about.

  • Chris Sullivan Said: May 27th, 2009 at 2:07 pm
    • Odd that he seek refuge at the Salvation Army – which is very homophobic itself.

      I give him a lot of credit for the courage to take on people who are so brainwashed into their disturbed belief systems that they have precious little objectivity at all.

  • Ready4theFight! Said: May 27th, 2009 at 1:35 pm
    • “acceptance throughout the muslim world”? wow. Good luck with that! if you still have your hands and head left, tell us about that!

      the idea in the muslim world is that LGBT don’t exist and if they do, they are “sinners, criminals” and should not be seen, moreless accepted….

 
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