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November 3, 2012

Gay Pakistanis, Still in Shadows, Seek Acceptance
By MEGHAN DAVIDSON LADLY

 
LAHORE, Pakistan — The group meets irregularly in a simple building among a row 
of shops here that close in the evening. Drapes cover the windows. Sometimes 
members watch movies or read poetry. Occasionally, they give a party, dance and 
drink and let off steam. 
 
The group is invitation only, by word of mouth. Members communicate through an 
e-mail list and are careful not to jeopardize the location of their meetings. 
One room is reserved for “crisis situations,” when someone may need a place to 
hide, most often from her own family. This is their safe space — a support 
group for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Pakistanis. 
 
“The gay scene here is very hush-hush,” said Ali, a member who did not want his 
full name used. “I wish it was a bit more open, but you make do with what you 
have.” 
 
That is slowly changing as a relative handful of younger gays and lesbians, 
many educated in the West, seek to foster more acceptance of their sexuality 
and to carve out an identity, even in a climate of religious conservatism. 
 
Homosexual acts remain illegal in Pakistan, based on laws constructed by the 
British during colonial rule. No civil rights legislation exists to protect 
gays and lesbians from discrimination. 
 
But the reality is far more complex, more akin to “don’t ask, don’t tell” than 
a state-sponsored witch hunt. For a long time, the state’s willful blindness 
has provided space enough for gays and lesbians. They socialize, organize, date 
and even live together as couples, though discreetly. 
 
One journalist, in his early 40s, has been living as a gay man in Pakistan for 
almost two decades. “It’s very easy being gay here, to be honest,” he said, 
though he and several others interviewed did not want their names used for fear 
of the social and legal repercussions. “You can live without being hassled 
about it,” he said, “as long as you are not wearing a pink tutu and running 
down the street carrying a rainbow flag.” 
 
The reason is that while the notion of homosexuality may be taboo, homosocial, 
and even homosexual, behavior is common enough. Pakistani society is sharply 
segregated on gender lines, with taboos about extramarital sex that make it 
almost harder to conduct a secret heterosexual romance than a homosexual one. 
Displays of affection between men in public, like hugging and holding hands, 
are common. “A guy can be with a guy anytime, anywhere, and no one will raise 
an eyebrow,” the journalist said. 
 
For many in his and previous generations, he said, same-sex attraction was not 
necessarily an issue because it did not involve questions of identity. Many 
Pakistani men who have sex with men do not think of themselves as gay. Some do 
it regularly, when they need a break from their wives, they say, and some for 
money. 
 
But all the examples of homosexual relations — in Sufi poetry, Urdu literature 
or discreet sexual conduct — occur within the private sphere, said Hina Jilani, 
a human rights lawyer and activist for women’s and minority rights. 
Homoeroticism can be expressed but not named. 
 
“The biggest hurdle,” Ms. Jilani said, “is finding the proper context in which 
to bring this issue out into the open.” 
 
That is what the gay and lesbian support group in Lahore is slowly seeking to 
do, even if it still meets in what amounts to near secrecy. 
 
The driving force behind the group comes from two women, ages 30 and 33. They 
are keenly aware of the oddity that two women, partners no less, have become 
architects of the modern gay scene in Lahore; if gay and bisexual men barely 
register in the collective societal consciousness of Pakistan, their female 
counterparts are even less visible. 
 
“The organizing came from my personal experience of extreme isolation, the 
sense of being alone and different,” the 30-year-old said. 
 
She decided that she needed to find others like her in Pakistan. Eight people, 
mostly the couple’s friends, attended the first meeting in January 2009. 
 
Two months later, the two women formed an activist group they call O. They 
asked for its full name not to be published because it is registered as a 
nongovernmental organization with the government, with its true purpose 
concealed because of the laws against homosexual acts. 
 
O conducts research into lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues, 
provides legal advice and has helped remove people from difficult family 
situations, and in one case a foreign-operated prostitution ring. The group has 
made a conscious decision to focus its efforts on the dynamic of family and 
building social acceptance and awareness rather than directly tackling legal 
discrimination. 
 
Their current fight is not to overturn Article 377 of the Pakistan Penal Code, 
on “Unnatural Offenses,” but to influence parents’ deciding whether or not to 
shun their gay child. They see this approach as ultimately more productive. 
 
“If you talk about space in Pakistan in terms of milestones that happen in the 
other parts of the world like pride parades or legal reform or whatever, that’s 
not going to happen for a long time,” the 33-year-old organizer, who identifies 
as bisexual, said. “Families making space — that’s what’s important to us right 
now.” Both women say their families have accepted them, though it was a 
process. 
 
There are distinct class differences at work here, particularly when it comes 
to self-definition. Most of those actively involved in fostering the gay and 
lesbian community in Pakistan, even if they have not been educated abroad, are 
usually college graduates and are familiar with the evolution of Western 
thought concerning sexuality. Mostly city-dwellers, they come from families 
whose parents can afford to send their children to school. 
 
Those who identify themselves as gay here are usually middle and upper middle 
class, the 33-year-old woman said. “You will get lower middle class or 
working-class women refusing to call themselves lesbian because that to them is 
an insult, so they’ll say ‘woman loving woman.’ ” 
 
While the journalist lives relatively openly as a gay man, and says his 
immediate family accepts it, he understands that older gays have separated 
sexuality from identity, and he also recognizes that this approach is changing. 
 
Still, he sees the potential for serious conflict for younger Pakistanis who 
are growing up with a more westernized sense of sexual identity. 
 
“They’ve got all the access to content coming from a Western space, but they 
don’t have the outlets for expression that exist over there,” he said. 
“Inevitably they will feel a much greater sense of frustration and express it 
in ways that my generation wouldn’t have.” 
 
That clash of ideologies was evident last year on June 26, when the American 
Embassy in Islamabad held its first lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender 
pride celebration. The display of support for gay rights prompted a backlash, 
setting off demonstrations in Karachi and Lahore, and protesters clashing with 
the police outside the diplomatic enclave in Islamabad. This year, the embassy 
said, it held a similar event but did not issue a news release about it. 
 
“It is the policy of the United States government to support and promote equal 
rights for all human beings,” an embassy spokeswoman, Rian Harris, said by 
e-mail when asked about the backlash. “We are committed to standing up for 
these values around the world, including here in Pakistan.” 
 
Well intended as it may have been, the event was seen by many in Pakistan’s gay 
community as detrimental to their cause. The 33-year-old activist strongly 
believes it was a mistake. 
 
“The damage that the U.S. pride event has done is colossal,” she said, “just in 
terms of creating an atmosphere of fear that was not there before. The public 
eye is not what we need right now.” 
 
Despite the hostile climate, both the support group and O continue their work. 
O is currently researching violence against lesbian, bisexual and transgender 
Pakistanis. 
 
“In a way, we are just role models for each other,” the 30-year-old said. When 
she was growing up, she said, she did not know anyone who was gay and she could 
not imagine such a life. 
 
“For me the whole activism is to create that space in which we can imagine a 
future for ourselves, and not even imagine but live that future,” she said. 
“And we are living it. I’m living my own impossibility.” 
 
 

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