Islamic treatment of homosexuals
"As Muslims, we have a responsibility that goes beyond
ourselves, our community, and the ummah to the world as a whole. Concern for
humanity, for suffering and ailment, for famines and disaster, for cruelty and
hunger is only the first step towards this awareness."
The prostitute Fantine, in Victor Hugo's Les Miserables, is
rather despicable. She has chopped off and sold her beautiful hair and her two
front teeth in order to provide for the
needs of her daughter after being driven away by gossiping tongues from the
factory where she once worked and made an honest living. She parades up and
down the snowy streets outside a tavern, and becomes an object of amusement for
a young man indulging himself in idleness and drink. He makes fun of her
appearance, calling out jokes and jibes each time she passes by, but she
ignores him. Once beautiful, noble, now abandoned by the father of her child,
she has taken to selling her body in order to survive.
The young man decides he doesn't like being ignored, so he
grabs up a handful of snow and puts it down her back. Fantine whirls in a rage:
she has had quite enough of the world and its wickedness and unfairness. A
mighty battle takes place, but it is Fantine who is dragged off to the police
station. She is, after all, a prostitute. And it is the landed young man, rich,
an idler, born into privilege and plenty, who slinks off into the darkness. No
harm will come to him because he's a citizen who has rights and privileges that
are not accorded to all. He is part of the status quo; Fantine is not.
Hugo says, "The deepest misery, an opportunity for
obscenity."
I think often of Fantine when abuse is hurled at me, when I
hear myself called faggot, or pervert, or sodomite, or when I am accused of
mental illness, depravity, or when what I am - a homosexual - is deemed
disgusting, unnatural, sick.
Just recently I read a story in the newspaper about how the
Muslim fundamentalist group Taleban, in Afghanistan, had put two homosexuals to
death by collapsing a wall on top of them. A few weeks later, I read another
story about the Taleban carrying similar executions of up to half dozen more
homosexuals.
The report made mention of the fact that after the wall is
collapsed - a traditional Islamic punishment for homosexuality - onlookers wait
for a period of 30 minutes and, if the homosexuals are still alive, they are
then given medical treatment and sent on their way. No doubt once recovered
they are driven from their homes and families and communities in shame and
disgrace.
Amnesty International filed a report in early May of 1998
stating that at least five men convicted of sodomy by the Taleban's Shari'a
courts had been "placed next to walls by Taleban officials and then buried
under the rubble as the walls were toppled upon them." In one such
incident, three homosexuals were punished thus while Taleban leader Mullah
Mohammad Omar watched along with thousands of spectators. After the 30 minute
waiting period, the three men were still alive, but two died the next day. What
became of the third is unknown.
Concerning another punishment of two homosexuals, the
Taleban's Radio Voice of Shari'a is reported to have said:
"Shari'a-prescribed punishment has been administered to two sodomites [in]
Herat Province. Bakhtar Information Agency informed us [two men] who had been
arrested by security officials on charges of committing sodomy were publicly
punished for their deeds in the city of Herat today. The cases of the accused
were investigated by the public prosecution office of Herat Province where the
accused confessed to their crimes without duress or torture."
AFP filed another report stating that Taleban soldiers in
Kabul, the capital city, had spent "several hours publicly beating two
fellow soldiers they caught having sex." They were then handed over to a
military court and will most likely be executed.
But these are only the latest in a long string of crimes
committed against homosexuals in the name of the religion of Islam, crimes
which often go unreported in the Western press.
According to Wockner News, in September 1994 a gay man from
Pakistan was granted asylum in the US because of his home country's persecution
of homosexuals. The report noted that Pakistani civil law punishes those who
have gay sex with two years in prison, and that Islamic law calls for 100
lashes or death by stoning. The report says the gay man "was expelled from
the Pakistani Cricket Association for being gay, and shortly thereafter, he
received a letter from the local Lahore Cricket Association dismissing him from
the team for being a 'faggot.' That letter was presented as evidence in the
U.S. immigration hearing."
In August of 1995, twenty members of OutRage! staged a
sit-down demonstration in London's Trafalgar Square in protest of the Islamic
group Hizb ut Tahrir, which it says "advocates the murder of Jews and
homosexuals." Police broke up the protest. OutRage! spokesman John Jackson
was quoted as saying: "Our protest was lesbian and gay self-defense
against Islamic fundamentalists who endorse the killing by Iran of an estimated
4,000 homosexuals since 1980, and who threaten and intimidate gay students on college
campuses in Britain."
In October of 1996, separatists in Chechnya said they would
base their legal code on Islamic law, and that gay sex would be banned with
punishments of either five years in prison or death. Two months later, in
December, Kuwaiti police arrested seven Filipino hairdressers and deported
them. The Philippine Embassy quoted a police official as saying, "The
presence of gays and their actions cannot be tolerated."
In a first for France, in February of 1997, asylum was
granted to a gay man from Algeria on the grounds of sexual orientation. The man
had founded Aids and human rights organizations in Algeria and was thus
frequently harassed by police, "chased and beaten by Muslims",
according to the report.
The World Organization Against Torture, in June of 1997,
targeted Pakistan over reports that two gay men caught having sex in a public
toilet were whipped. In August, the underground European newspaper Al Djamaa
filed a report stating that Algeria's terrorist "Armed Islamic Group"
was killing homosexuals, as well as those who do not pray, people who drink
alcohol or take drugs, and "immodest or debauched women". One of the
group's leaders, Abou el Moundhir, said the "fighters only kill those who
deserve to die." Apparently more than 700 had been killed during the previous
three months.
The Iranian gay and lesbian human rights group Homan says
that since 1980, more than 4,000 Homosexual men and women have been executed by
the Iranian government, and provided the following translation of Iranian law
concerning homosexuality: "The Islamic Penal Law Against Homosexuals in
Iran, approved by the Islamic Consultancy Parliament 08.05.1370 (30.07.1991)
and finally ratified by the High Expediency Council on 07.09.1370 (28.11.1991)
calls for the following: Article 110: Punishment for sodomy is killing; the
Sharia judge decides on how to carry out the killing. Article 129: Punishment
for lesbianism is one hundred (100) lashes for each party. Article 131: If the
act of lesbianism is repeated three times and punishment is enforced each time,
the death sentence will be issued the fourth time."
OutRage! adds that Muslim militia groups on the Philippine
island of Mindanao have been terrorizing Homosexuals, threatening them with
castration in an effort to drive them elsewhere. They say Homosexual
relationships are banned in many Islamic countries including Algeria, Bahrain,
Bangladesh, Bosnia, Iran, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Malaysia, Oman, Saudi
Arabia, Syria and the UAE. Homosexuality is punishable by death in Iran,
Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Yemen. In Malaysia, the Homosexual can be
put in prison for 20 years.
EXCERPT FROM: http://www.well.com/user/queerjhd/sxislamictreatment.htm
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