Friday, February 16, 2007

Will GLADD Step Up And Challenge Iran

With the same vigor and passion and propoganda that they use to attack people whose comments about homosexuality are deem to be homophobic......

Iran's gays risk death for report
Talk to CBC about perils of life in the fundamentalist state

February 16, 2007
Nicholas Keung
IMMIGRATION/DIVERSITY REPORTER

Images of young men hanging out in dimly lit parks and coffee shops hint at a side of Iran the West doesn't see behind the defiant posturing of fundamentalist president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his trumpeted nuclear program.

Such fraternizing doesn't catch the eye of locals in Tehran, in a culture where men and women live highly segregated lives. But a closer look reveals a glimpse of Iran's Secret Gay World – a Canadian documentary to air on CBC Newsworld Sunday evening.

Arsham Parsi, an Iranian exile in Toronto, is intimately familiar with that world, having founded what passes for a gay-rights movement in his homeland as early as 2002. That's when he began an email list, circulating information to a group of 50 gays and lesbians on such topics as safe sex, equality rights and underground gatherings.

It was the Internet that first helped Parsi, now 26, put a label to his attraction to men. At 16, after studying the Qur'an from cover to cover for something that would explain his affection, Parsi added the word "men" to a Google search and discovered he's gay.

"I was very happy because I knew I wasn't alone in my feeling in this world. It's normal," noted Parsi, founder in 2004 of the Persian Gay and Lesbian Organization. "I was also afraid, because all Islamic books said the problem was very bad and should be punished by execution, stoning and hanging."

He was forced a year later to flee Iran to escape security forces and, last May, arrived in Canada as a refugee under the United Nations Convention. He devotes his life in Toronto to educating and helping others through his Iranian Queer Organization (www.irqo.net).

Parsi said he was surprised to be contacted last summer by fellow Iranian exile Farid Haerinejad, a CBC production editor planning a documentary on Iran's forbidden community. "Most people (in the media) are only interested in Iran's nuclear program," he said. "Here's someone who's interested in the gays and lesbians in Iran."

But the close-knit gay network there was hard to crack; Haerinejad had to film without attracting attention.

"Iran is an Islamic country and the gays want to decriminalize homosexuality. To change the law is to change the law of Islam," notes Haerinejad, 41, whose visit to Tehran last summer was his first since fleeing the Islamic revolution 23 years ago.

"These young gay men were shy at first, but they also had this hunger and thirst to share their life stories," added Haerinejad, who came to Canada in 1992 and is straight.

Participants in the film, stopped numerous times by police, said they were shooting a documentary about Iranian youth.

"They risked being arrested, tortured and killed to talk in front of the camera," Haerinejad said of his subjects.

Parsi says having the support of people like Haerinejad has made his own journey less lonely – and more empowering.

He runs a Persian online magazine (www.cheraq.net) that helps Iranian homosexuals with asylum claims and tries to build bridges with Canadian human rights activists.

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I lean to the right but I still have a heart and if I have a mission it is to respond to attacks on people not available to protect themselves and to point out the hypocrisy of the left at every opportunity.MY MAJOR GOAL IS HIGHLIGHT THE HYPOCRISY AND STUPIDITY OF THE LEFTISTS ON TORONTO CITY COUNCIL. Last word: In the final analysis this blog is a relief valve for my rants/raves.

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