Gay Arabs and Jews come together in Tel Aviv
AROUND THE WORLD / Palestinian gay party rocks Israel
Kaj Hasselriis / National / Friday, June 11, 2010
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June 11 is Pride Day in Tel Aviv, and Israel’s party capital was packed with great, gay events. But I doubt any of them was as much fun as the one I found myself at a couple of months ago.

It all started with a lame LGBT picnic in a downtown park, right next to Tel Aviv’s gay and lesbian resource centre. I arrived with my friend Mimi, a lefty dyke, and her five-year-old son Boaz, to find a rainbow flag and a small band of bored-looking Jewish queers. It was just hours before my only Friday night in Tel Aviv, and I was determined to find the best party possible.

One of the fags at the picnic, a young guy named Zohar, said he and a friend were planning to check out a gay Arab party. I asked him what that meant but he said he didn’t know – he’d never gone to one before. He gave me the address and encouraged me to check it out.

Hours later, after primping at Mimi’s, I handed the address to a cab driver. He didn’t have a clue where it was and neither did I. After all, I was a tourist in Israel. As I told my friends back home, I was there “to see what the fuss is all about.”

I was about to find out where the fuss was on that Friday night. The cabbie had to stop three times to ask for directions, until we finally came upon a warehouse district. Finally, upon hearing the address, a guy said, “That’s the gay party around the corner.” He didn’t look like he was involved with it but he didn’t look like he minded it, either.

 “Do you think it’s all right if I go?” I asked.

“Yeah, of course,” he said.
Revellers kick it at gay pride last year in Tel Aviv, Israel.
(Xtra.ca)

I was a bit suspicious, since he pointed toward a dark alley. But when the cab turned, we suddenly found what I was looking for: gay men. And these weren’t just any gay men, they were the most beautiful group of gay men I’ve ever seen in my life.

There were about 50 guys, mostly wearing dark T-shirts and jeans, milling about and (in some cases) making out. Most of the guys had dark, tanned skin, dark brown eyes, thick black eyebrows and amazing physiques.

I heard music, which I followed into a large warehouse space. The entrance had a banner announcing the name of the host organization: Al-Qaws (Rainbow) for Sexual and Gender Diversity in Palestinian Society. A gorgeous guy at the entrance asked for 30 shekels ($8) and stamped my hand.

Inside, the party was sensational. There were about 200 sweaty guys – all around a massive bar – and just about everyone was shaking their hips, flailing their arms and belly-dancing to loud Arabic pop music. There was no border between the dancefloor and the rest of the party. The whole space was a dancefloor, with guys (many of them shirtless) moving to the beat in groups of three or four, singing along and switching partners between songs.

In the centre of it all, on top of the bar, was a drag queen dressed in a white wedding dress, enthusiastically lifting her skirt. And on a riser right behind her was Zohar, the Jewish guy I met at the picnic. He was there with another guy I saw that afternoon. At first I thought they were boyfriends, but they were so friendly with so many other guys around them that I couldn’t figure out if they were part of a twosome, a threesome, or a moresome. One thing’s for sure: they were having a wicked time.

At the end of the night, when everyone spilled out into the alley, I asked Zohar how many other Jewish guys were there. He shrugged and said he didn’t know. For him, it didn’t seem to matter. Then I found the organizer, a guy named Raafat, and asked for his estimate of the Jewish/Arab mix. Again, he shrugged and said he wasn’t counting. The party, he told me, was open to everyone.

When I got back to Mimi’s place, she and her partner Dana were still awake. They were fascinated, but not entirely surprised. In Israel, they admitted, Jews and Palestinians don’t often travel in the same social circles. But when it comes to the gay community, they said, there are a lot more connections than you might think.



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Reader Comments


 
a comment from one of the organizers
grrrrr, ino why everything has to be titled and described by "Arabs and Jews come together"- it is a Palestinian queer party for the Palestinian queer community and has no, what so ever, goal of "bringing together Palestinians and Jews". The organizers didn't know to answer the question because it is an irrelevant question for us - it is true thought it is an open party where non-Palestinians can come and enjoy. I have to say that it is irritating me that they wrote this article on the occasion of the TLV gay pride – a pride that we all should boycott- but who am I to talk, the important thing is that TLV presented again as the gay heaven of gays and Arabs too (only when they come with Jews)- so here is another grrrr to close this long comment
Haneen, Jerusalem Jerusalem
06/11/10 6:37 PM EST
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party
Lucky you, Kaj. Thanks for the great insight.
Jean-Paul, Bathurst N.B.
06/11/10 8:02 PM EST
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Indeed
I agree with Haneen, this magazine seems to have a bit of a strange Middle Eastern politics obsession... Who cares what ethnicity/religion/whatever the guys were? As long as they're hot ;) As Haneen points out, they certainly don't seem to, so why should you?
William, Montreal QC
06/11/10 9:36 PM EST
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Maybe...
... maybe that was the author's point, William. A lesson learned - North Americans tend to see middle eastern politics as very black and white (or, black vs. white, or whatever opposing alternatives you'd like to substitute into that phrase), when in reality that's not even close to the truth. Where some may assume that palestinian = jew-hating and israeli jew = palestinian-hating, that's so far from reality and this is one of millions of examples that disprove these binary assumptions we make. I do agree, however, that to write off Tel Aviv pride with "I doubt any of them was as much fun as" this does diminish coverage of an event that, good or bad, legitimately deserves to be reported on.
Neal, Toronto ON
06/11/10 11:02 PM EST
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well well
It should how the QuAIA lies even more. They started about the rights of Gay Palestinians and we see them in Tel Aviv. Congrats it just proves there lies even more and shows how they are nothing but a bunch of Useful Idiots
Peter from, Toronto ON
06/12/10 5:22 AM EST
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Palestinians do live in TLV too
Peter, i am not sure you know this fact but Palestinians do live every where including TLV and yaffa. and i am not sure how you got to this "interesting" link between palestinian gay rights, QuAIA and this party/article. it is a queer party that happened to be in TLV. Palestinian gay rights, it is a wider and more complicated issue.
Haneen Maikey, Jerusalem Jerusalem
06/12/10 6:17 AM EST
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don't worry about little ole' Peter
Darling Haneen, I wouldn't worry much about anything 'Peter from' says. If Xtra wrote an article that said only "Two Palestinians had a nice cup of coffee. The coffee was good and they enjoyed talking to one another." Peter would probably respond saying "YOU SEE? QuAIA didn't invite any Israelis or Jews for the Palestinian coffee! So they are anti-semites, all of them!!" I think also Peter missed the point that it is difficult or impossible for most Palestinians to come Tel Aviv for the parade, but yet at the party that the Arabs throw, everyone is welcome, even stupid writers that missed the point of the party in the first place.
Sav., Toronto ON
06/12/10 10:03 AM EST
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@ Sav
So your still not getting the point but your group seems to more Anti Israel then caring about the rights of Gay Palestinians( I bet its a cover) and I find it more interesting that most of the organizations do operate in Israel such as the one Xtra does point out, just Google it and again a useful idiot and Sav there is no point in making up definitions such as anti-Semites because deep down you are one and here the meaning of that word in English ( http://mw2.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/anti-semitism ) but of course I do understand Useful Idiots like to twist words in order to suit their political agenda. But Sav please tell us about the Rights of Gay Palestinians under Hamas or the Palestinian National Authority? I'm only asking this since they are the democratically elected body of the Palestinian People but of course.
Peter From, Toronto ON
06/12/10 1:56 PM EST
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lemme get this straight
200 guys, most of them Palestinian, have a fabulous party in Tel Aviv. The organizer then complains that Tel Aviv is "presented" as a gay heaven! Maybe that's because it IS a gay heaven. Where else in the middle east could this party safely be held?
Peter, Hamilton on
06/12/10 7:14 PM EST
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a tale of two peters
So, Peter From, you accuse my support of queer and trans Palestinians of being a "cover"? Yet there is a queer Palestinian in this conversation who you consistently disparage and dismiss her remarks! See, you are supportive of queer Palestinians... up until the point where you actually meet one. To go any further you would have to support the "Palestinian" part equal with the "queer" part and we all know that isn't going to happen, is it? That's why it is you who is using a cover... you use your "support" for queer Palestinians as a cover to hide your racism against all Palestinians, including the queer ones. ... As for the second comment, Peter, believe it or not there is an underground LGBT scene in many nations in the Middle East where such parties may be possible, if somewhat hidden from public view. The queer movement in the Arab world is still in the early stages, but it is growing and I for one think that is great!
Sav., Toronto ON
06/13/10 10:10 AM EST
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Beautiful Article
I have visited Jerusalem twice (and the Occupied West Bank)in the past few years but I've never made time to check out the gay scene. Thanks for this beautiful article, full of joy and togetherness. It's exactly what we need.
J Roman, Toronto ON
06/14/10 10:11 AM EST
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Sav and Haneen
I like to believe that I have some understanding of the issues facing queer Palestinians and the wider issues of the Occupation. I am a little lost though as to why your reaction to the article is so virulent? What is wrong with presenting the story as Jews and Arabs coming together? From what perspective would you have preferred the story be told? In solidarity...
J Roman, Toronto ON
06/14/10 10:43 AM EST
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J Roman: perspective of the story
Hi J Roman, thanks for your thoughtful question. Keep in mind that the issues around surrounding the queer dynamics of the Palestine/Israel conflict are often dramatically oversimplified here in Canada. But let me explain by drawing a comparison. Think of the Blockorama party here in Toronto at our own Pride festival. The main goal of Blockorama (and the organizers would agree with me on this) is provide a comfortable accepting space for the black queer and trans community. That is also a complicated issue with a lot of intersectionality. I remember a Jamaican gay man telling a story of how Blocko created a place where he felt safe after fleeing from homophobia in his native country. Now, imagine that a reporter wrote a story in which the headline was "Gay blacks and whites come together in Toronto" and the whole story of Blockorama was reduced to some idea of people "getting together" across racial lines. But that is not what Blocko is at all... Blocko is for the black community to have a place to feel welcome... it speaks also to the racism that exists in the larger LGBT community of Toronto. If you only talk about "blacks and whites getting together" you have missed entirely that aspect of the story. You have also injected a story of white people's needs into an event that is really about another community. That itself is racist. The situation with this party in Tel Aviv is similar. Many queer and trans Palestinian Arabs do not feel welcome at Tel Aviv pride. In the case of a Palestinian from the West Bank, if they don't have a Jewish Israeli to vouch for them, they risk arrest. So for the Arabs to hold a party in Tel Aviv isn't about bringing Jews and Arabs together it is about giving Arab queers a safe place to be at all. The fact that the author takes the added step of only talking about gay males (ignoring the female Palestinian organizer on this thread for example) further narrows the lens through which he is v
Sav., Toronto ON
06/14/10 11:23 AM EST
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[cont.] response to J. Roman
[cont.]... The fact that the author takes the added step of only talking about gay males (ignoring the female Palestinian organizer on this thread for example) further narrows the lens through which he is viewing the event. I hope that helps to understand why this story would be so frustrating to read for a queer Palestinian. Please feel free to comment further or ask questions... I will answer if I am capable or I could ask Haneen to comment again. I would be curious to hear your response. thanks.
Sav., Toronto ON
06/14/10 11:30 AM EST
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@ Sav
SAV, after reading your comments to J. Roman, it would seem that you are willing to justify your anger, bitterness, and intent on bringing negativity any which way you can. STOP bashing everyone on this comment thread that wants to see the positive in the story. It seems on one hand your are saying that Palestinian gays are progressing and then on the other hand you are mad at the world because Palestinians are being oppressed. Please, pick a side and stick with it because reading between the lines of your posts, you seem lost and hell-bent on being negative just for the sake of being negative. You're hurting any change you might be taken seriously. One more thing Sav, there's nothing wrong with a little happiness and positive thinking. Give it a try - you just might like it !
Jeff Taylor, Toronto Ontario
06/14/10 11:53 AM EST
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Understanding
Sav - I agree with your opening statement, oversimplified and largely misunderstood. Most people don't seek to understand they hold onto fear and ignorance thinking it offers protection. I've read through so many of the aticles and comments on the stories regarding Pride Inc (censors), QuAIA, the all to brief article on Amman etc.. There is so much racism and ignorance in the comments, it's very disturbing. But, I don't think the authour beleived / intended to have this story interpreted as racist. The comparison to Blockorama brought understanding. All groups of people need a place to feel welcome and safe among their peers and although at Blocko white people are welcome the party isn't about them it's about black people coming together the same as this party in Tel Aviv was about Palestinians coming together without having to worry about accpetance from anyone else, for the same reason we need a gay baseball team, gay olympics, gay bars, somewhere we know we can go without fear. I'm a little embarrased that I couldn't see that without asking ;) but I'm glad I asked. I doubt that the author intended to write an aticle that would be percieved as racist by queer members of the Palestinian community. I would like to hear the authors rationale for not highlighting a female perpsective as well as his thoughts on your comments - xtra editors, is it possible to get some comments from Kaj?
J Roman, Toronto ON
06/14/10 12:39 PM EST
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@Jeff
Try to understand Sav's comparison, it makes sense to me. Like you I didn't immediately pick up on the nuances of the story but rather than going into attack mode I reread the article and all of the comments including my own and asked how could my initial reaction have been so different from some of the others. Did I miss something? Haneen is a Palestinian from Jerusalem and Sav, although we've never met, I respect him via his comments on other stories. These are people with a different perspective from my own (I'm talking personal history vs. ideology (people I can learn from), hence my question. Can't you see, just a little, in the comparison made by Sav in his comments regarding Blockorama?
J Roman, Toronto ON
06/14/10 1:00 PM EST
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J Roman and Jeff, quick comment
J Roman, I didn't mean to imply that the author was _intentionally_ writing something so racialized. Even in the Blocko case, I doubt someone would do that intentionally. My point is that it is better to reserve comment unless you can really get into the thing and understand it from all angles. Thanks for considering my comments though, I'm really glad we're having this conversation. Jeff Taylor, you're confused. You accuse me of being negative when I'm saying something so positive! I'm saying that Arab and Palestinian queers have the hope to liberate themselves! And we can support them, as long as we take the time to really carefully consider their issues and understand the complex situation that they face (racism from one side, homophobia from all sides)... how can expanding the liberation struggle to Palestine and beyond be a negative thing?!
Sav., Toronto ON
06/14/10 1:14 PM EST
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oh yeah, I'm a chick!
please use female pronouns! :-)
Sav., Toronto ON
06/14/10 1:21 PM EST
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Flip / Flop ?
Sav, I've re-read ALL you comments once again. After doing so, I'll stand by my original comments I directed your way. As for J. Roman's latest comments, see my original comments to Sav, re: picking a side and sticking with it.
Jeff Taylor, Toronto Ontario
06/14/10 1:29 PM EST
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Sav
I understood that you didn't mean to imply that the author was intentionally being racist ... but it is clear from the comments from Haneen and you that the author missed the point of this party then I'd still like to hear from him. If I were the author of this story and heard comments from one of the organizers that I misunderstood the whole thing I would want to explain my position because the points made by her and you are valid points that should be addressed. The story may have been better adresed in two articles, one focus on Palestinian struggle for liberation (sexual and geo-political) and one focus on the larger celebration of Tel Aviv pride generally. I think trying to mix the two stories into one fairly short article was daunting. Overall though I am very pleased that xtra has expanded it's articles on gay communities in the world outside of Canada, the USA and Western Europe.
J Roman, Toronto ON
06/14/10 1:39 PM EST
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:)
Jeff - you're hopeless. Sav - whoops! my apologies! :) I hope to join QuAIA or the Coalition for Free Speech at the Pride Parade, so who knows, maybe we'll meet at some point. In Sol., JR
J Roman, Toronto ON
06/14/10 1:52 PM EST
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Sides spilt people apart
I understand what Sav is saying. Jeff, you are just being childish.
Ramat H., toronto Ont
06/14/10 5:55 PM EST
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Israel our friend
Seems like Gays and Lesbians have life pretty good in Israel including Palestianians As previously stated by an author Slawny, in Israel, first and foremost, gay rights are protected by law. Gay marriages - performed outside Israel - are recognized by the state, and same-sex couples are permitted to adopt. Gays can serve openly in the military (unlike the United States). Gender reassignment surgery is legal and openly performed. The gay community has gained wide acceptance throughout Israeli society, including in the political, legal, military and cultural realms. In fact, the city of Tel Aviv has one of the most flourishing gay communities in the world. Because of these freedoms - and intolerance of gays in Muslim countries and entities such as areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority (P.A.) - Israel has become a haven for gay Palestinians who flee persecution in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, where they are subject to severe abuse by their families, communities, Hamas and the Palestinian Authority. Let alone the lack of reproductive choice in Palestine vs Israel (but don't even get me started on that one). May Gays and Lesbians always have such a good friend as Israel, instead of Hamas and Iran. That is why the Ontario legislature unanimously (including NDP MPPs Cherri Di Novo and leader Andrea Howarth) joined all parties condemening the term Israeli Apartheid in Ontario
Geraldine, Toronto On
06/14/10 7:57 PM EST
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I agree 100% with Haneen.
Thanks for putting to words what I was thinking, Haneen. It seems that in order for Palestinians to have legitimacy or coverage, it must be framed in terms of coexistence. As if the only thing preventing resolution is a lack of "togetherness". Well, it's not, it's racism, occupation, the aparthied wall, unequal laws, militarism, blockades, and poverty. Basically systemic discrimination and violence directed towards Palestinians. The fact that many of us party and go about our lives can be attributed to nothing short of the fact that Palestinians are still human and the same needs and desires as any other group. But don't take a party as compensation for the lack of substantive equality.
Queer Palestinian, Toronto ON
06/15/10 12:11 PM EST
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your welcome to Israel to whatch this as well
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYOVG9OnIMo :)
roy, tel aviv israel
06/19/10 12:16 PM EST
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One party
I am interested in that several of my friends cite this article about one small gay part as an example of how good things are for queers and Palistinians in Israel. I note that this party took place in Tel Aviv and not in the occupied territories. Does anyone have any insight into how this may be a very limited perspective in the article?
Ryan, Toronto On
06/30/10 8:24 AM EST
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get the Jews
Who cares about gay Jews and Arabs having fun in Israel. We have to demonize Israel / Jews as much as we can and if we destroy gay pride in Toronto doing so, well who cares about a bunch fags anyway? We can always scream "censorship" if someone calls us on this.
queero, toronto ont
07/04/10 1:46 AM EST
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queero
Thanks Queero, You make it so much Pro easier for the Pro Israeli queers to be held in esteem for your hatred of israeli and Jewish People. Thanks keep it up, you make Lgbt Jews supporting Israel look Good. We are so happy you are an avid supporter of freedom of speech. Come wave your Palestinian flag next to mt Israeli flag today. More power to the LGBT Jewish community. Shalom
Jamie, Toronto Ontario
07/04/10 7:19 AM EST
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Ummmm
Jamie I think it's obvious to everyone that queero is being ironic and does not support the QuAIA...
Mr. Queermo, Toronto Ontario
07/04/10 12:51 PM EST
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yeah...
Queero's "irony" (or more like crude sarcasm) is obvious.
Sav., Toronto ON
07/04/10 9:29 PM EST
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