Film About Gay Muslims is a Labour of Love

Hearts and minds
 A controversial film about gay Muslims is more a labour of love than
a call to arms, finds Jeremy Kay

Thursday September 6, 2007

>From the Guardian

Early on in the More4 documentary A Jihad for Love, which receives its
much anticipated world premiere at the Toronto International Film
festival on Sunday, a Muslim man and his two daughters are enjoying a
coastal drive in South Africa. It's a happy scene, yet the easy banter
belies the hardship this family has endured. The man, Mushin
Hendricks, is a former imam who was cast out by his community when he
declared his homosexuality. The girls' mother has since remarried, and
when Hendricks asks them  what they would do if he were arrested, the
answer comes without hesitation. The elder child, combining filial
love with the lessons of her Islamic education, says she would ask
that officials  spare him a protracted death by stoning, and kill him
with the first rock. Dignity and despair are woven tightly together in
A Jihad for Love,  a six-year endeavour by Indian film-maker Parvez
Sharma that explores Islam and homosexuality. Without a distributor in
the US, the film is one of the hottest tickets at the  festival, and
nobody knows what will happen at the first publicscreening. The film-
makers are hoping it will be received
 respectfully and inspire an open-minded dialogue. That would
certainly accord with Sharma's approach in making the $2m documentary,
which eschews the shock-and- awe school of investigative reporting in
favour  of a compassionate portrait of devout Muslims struggling to
reconcile their faith and sexuality.

 "All the people in my film are coming out as  Muslims," says the 34-
year-old film-maker. "Islam is the heart of this film. They are proud
to be gay, but fundamentally they're coming out as Muslims  and saying
they're as Muslim as anybody else, and their Islam is as true and
fundamental as anybody else's." Each of the men and women profiled in
A Jihad  for Love is courageous, defiant and resourceful. Mazen was
one of the Cairo 52, a group arrested in May 2001 aboard a floating
gay nightclub on the Nile. He was beaten, forced to stand trial twice
on "habitual debauchery" charges, and sentenced to a total of four
years in prison, where he was raped. He eventually moved to Paris,
where we see him no longer afraid to reveal his face, making friends,
moving into his own flat, and calling his mother in Egypt to say he
misses her. Maryam is a Moroccan lesbian in Paris whose lover lives in
Egypt. The teachings of her faith mean she still believes she deserves
to be punished for her sexuality, and it was only recently that she
was able to use the term "lesbian" for the first time. "Each of the
characters you see on the screen had to negotiate that relationship
with the camera," Sharma says. "It has taken me years to get to know
them and earn their trust." Sharma himself had a secular upbringing
in
India, where "Islam was all around me". As a gay man, he was acutely
aware of his country's
stance on homosexuality. "And as long as I wasn't marching around and
proclaiming it, things were fine. India is a culture that tolerates
same-sex behaviour between men and women, but it can't be in-your-
face."
 After graduating from university in India and working at the Star
News channel/NDTV in Asia and the BBC, he arrived in the UK to study
for his masters degree - he holds three - in broadcast journalism at
the University of Wales. Then he moved to the east coast of the US in
late 2000, and everything changed. "My whole religious identity and
the colour of my skin  became an issue," Sharma says. "After 9/11, I
was caught up in a climate that made gay Muslims like me a triple
minority: we were facing condemnation  for being gay as we had done
from our own communities; we weretargeted and ostracised because of
the way we looked; and even within gay communities, we were regarded
as  exotic outsiders.

"Those forces came together and I felt a tremendous sense of
responsibility to start a discussion of Islam that hadn't been  heard
before. I feel I was called upon to make this film. This was very
necessary for my being a Muslim and a gay man." Sharma compiled 400
hours of footage from a
dozen countries ranging from Iraq to Pakistan to the UK. The nature of
the work placed him at considerable personal risk. He adopted hardcore
guerrilla film-  making tactics, pretending to be a tourist in one
country, a worker for an Aids charity in another. Wherever he went, he
asked friends to keep copies of footage and destroy the tapes once he
had successfully smuggled the masters out of the country. Sharma
admits he thought long and hard about the title of the film,  and is
very clear about its message. "A very loud minority hashijacked my
religion and its pulpits. To see Islam depicted every day as a faith
of violence is very frustrating
 to me. It's something many Muslims face today: do they go with the
Islam being preached by a violent minority, or do we seekthe
fundamentals of this religion, in which we are taught not to harm any
human life? Jihad represents a life struggle, and I call myself a
jihadi with pride, and so do all the others in this film. Our struggle
is one of faith and understanding". ยท A Jihad for Love will receive
its UK premiere at the Sheffield Documentary festival, which runs from
November
 7-11.
 Guardian Unlimited (c) Guardian News and Media Limited 2007


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