The Associated Press reports (via The Washington Post):
Even death cannot stop the violence against gays in this corner of the world any more.
Madieye Diallo's body had only been in the ground for a few hours when the mob descended on the weedy cemetery with shovels. They yanked out the corpse, spit on its torso, dragged it away and dumped it in front of the home of his elderly parents.
The scene of May 2, 2009 was filmed on a cell phone and the video sold at the market. It passed from phone to phone, sowing panic among gay men who say they now feel like hunted animals.
"I locked myself inside my room and didn't come out for days," says a 31-year-old gay friend of Diallo's who is ill with HIV. "I'm afraid of what will happen to me after I die. Will my parents be able to bury me?"
A wave of intense homophobia is washing across Africa, where homosexuality is already illegal in at least 37 countries.
Reader's Comments
But what about the Middle East, and the expansion of Islam through conquest, it'd be interesting to know how and when it became illegal in those countries too, though not all of them have made it illegal.
Sadly, even the more benign religions like Budhhism offer neither support for gay people nor condemnation of their assaillants.
(Catholocism is of course not benign.)
In his letter about the Los Angeles visit of the previous pope, Cardinal Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict) said gay people must expect to be brutalized for our loving acts - he had no condemnation for those who attack us.
I find it appalling and it just fuels my disdain for organized religion, Islam and Christianity chief among them. An absolutely gutting article for me to read.
more creepy articles from Sylvia Tan, where does she get this things? everyday scouring the web for the worst articles ever to again protray gay men in a bad light and associate the cause with extremist religious kooks, really morbid to read over my morning coffee and totally out of touch with her younger audience
i just read the leading cause of gay (and straight) men 20 to 30 years old is still traffic accidents so fasten your seat belts, followed by suicide
www.trevorproject.com
"...everyday scouring the web for the worst articles ever to again protray gay men in a bad light and associate the cause with extremist religious kooks, really morbid to read over my morning coffee and totally out of touch with her younger audience
"i just read the leading cause of gay (and straight) men 20 to 30 years old is still traffic accidents so fasten your seat belts, followed by suicide."
I guess the pain for these people must be very real; something that the rest of fortunate enough to be relatively more empowered cannot perceive from the relative comfort of our own situations.
These people are trapped in hellish societies and have no easy way out of even their own neighborhoods, unlike for some of us who could choose to fly off to Phuket for a full-body massage to calm our stressed nerves and recover from the trauma created by having skimmed through this article over a cup of coffee.
Try as I may, I am not able to visualise that guy's HIV positive boyfriend as looking any happier or more reassured with a seat belt strapped across his bed.
Also, clearly suicide is an outcome of something else; it is an effect arising from another cause, and not a cause of death in itself. It's not like a person gets up in the morning and wonders: should I have a shower, or should I commit suicide?".
Incidents like the one reported in this article add to the already deep sense of alienation from society among gay people; to the feeling of unworthiness, which robs life of meaning, builds up into depression, and makes them commit suicide. Obviously it makes no sense to separate the cause from the effect and then state that the effect is the cause. The question should be, "Why did they want to commit suicide?".
According to the reports coming out from Africa, I think it's irresponsible to make a sweeping comment that it's just a "few bad apples". Remember Rwanda? It usually starts from a "few bad apples" which eventually decay the minds of the rest into irrational acts of cruelty.
The reason human life is so cheap in Africa today, I believe, is because that is the value that Africans themselves place on it. This is exemplified by the Africans that think what they did in Senegal was appropriate.
xoxoxo
Yong
It looks like there was some minimal level of tolerance of the gay community there, but which has disappeared recently with the spread of religious fundamentalism, predominantly Islamic. Also, it has nothing to do with what Atzlan_oz suggests in his moralising about the behaviour of (other) gays, rather than their violent oppressors. - In fact it is the expression of stable unions between gays by a couple of local gay marriage ceremonies that has been used to whip up violence against gays in Senegal. Casual, secretive sex in the bushes is unlikely to bother them so much. Heterosexual behaviour seems to be far more promiscuous. The AIDs epidemic in Africa is very predominantly a heterosexual one. The western style, nuclear, monogamous family is, according to gayUganda, not the tradition in Africa, that is something that Western evangelists are trying to introduce, while simultaneously claiming that that is the "traditional" family there, and that gays are a threat to it.
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