Get Religion
 
 
 
June 22, 2016 
Gays in the Quran: NBC  report raises issues but doesn't answer them 
 
Jim  Davis


 
As I wrote on Friday, mainstream media in the wake of the shooting in 
Orlando  are just starting to feel their way around the ultra-sensitive topic 
of 
Islam  and homosexuality. NBC News also tried its hand, _building a story as 
a Q&A_ 
(http://www.nbcnews.com/feature/nbc-out/orlando-highlights-islam-s-complicated-relationship-homosexuality-n594336)
 . 
But the answers are frankly what you might expect from a secular liberal 
news  outfit:   
Islam's approach to homosexuality has been in the spotlight since  the 
massacre at an Orlando gay club — criminal or compassionate? Prejudiced or  
progressive?

While ISIS death squads enforce an extreme version of Islam that  punishes 
gays with death, the religion's history is far more nuanced. And like  most 
relationships, when it comes to Islam and homosexuality — it's  complicated.
Among the questions posed are "What does Islam say about being gay?" and 
"Who  says homosexuality is punishable by death?" But by skewing its sources, 
NBC  clearly tries to nudge us toward the "right" views. 
The network is alert for spotting a coverage trend. As I noted on Friday, 
the  Associated Press and other media have begun looking at 50 gay Muslim  
organizations that have been seldom covered. NBC News honestly reports Islamic 
 antagonism toward homosexual behavior, saying it overwhelmingly teaches 
that  "same gender sex is a sin." 
NBC notes also how some Muslim national leaders have denounced the Orlando  
shootings while their own homelands jail or kill gays: 
"Middle Eastern and North African countries have denounced the  Orlando 
shooting when at the same time they criminalize homosexuality with  sentences 
ranging from years in prison to the death penalty," said Ahmed  Benchemsi, 
communications and advocacy director for the Middle East and North  Africa at 
Human Rights Watch. "Those governments should repeal laws and  abolish 
practices that persecute people based on their sexual orientation and  gender 
identity."
But when the article asks, "What does Islam say about being gay?", it 
doesn't  answer immediately. First it quotes a historian who says, "There is 
sexual  diversity in Islam." It also says that "most scholars agree" (a close 
cousin to  the _blurring expression "sources say"_ 
(http://www.getreligion.org/getreligion/2016/3/23/relapse-atlanta-journal-constitution-follow-up-ignores
-religious-sources-again) ) that early Muslims like Al  Dalal and Rumi were 
gay. 
The story finally offers useful info: "The Muslim holy book, the Quran, 
tells  the story of Lot and the destruction of Sodom — with sodomy in Arabic 
referred  to as 'liwat,' based on Lot's name. Men having sex with each other 
should be  punished, the Quran says, but it doesn't say how — and it adds 
that they should  be left alone if they repent." 
It doesn't say, but the excerpt is probably _surah  7:80-81_ 
(http://www.islamawareness.net/Homosexuality/homo.html) : "We also (sent) Lut: 
he said to 
his people: 'Do ye commit lewdness  such as no people in creation (ever) 
committed before you? For ye practice your  lusts on men in preference to 
women: ye are indeed a people transgressing beyond  bounds.' " 
NBC likewise cites but doesn't directly quote the main source of anti-gay  
Islamic teachings: "The idea of the death penalty comes not from the Quran 
but  the Hadith — the traditions or sayings of the Prophet Muhammad." 
Again, a hadithic quote or two would have helped. _This  collection_ 
(http://hadithoftheday.com/homosexuality/)  has commands such as: "If you find 
anyone doing as Lot’s people  did, kill the one who does it, and the one to 
whom it is done." 
However the verses may be interpreted, readers and viewers should at least  
get to see them. 
NBC does report that at least 10 countries execute gays. But then it blurs  
matters: 
No fewer than 40 out of 57 Muslim-majority countries or  territories have 
laws that criminalize homosexuality, prescribing punishments  ranging from 
fines and short jail sentences to whippings.

However, same-sex relationships are not strictly illegal in 20  
Muslim-majority nations including Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Turkey,  
Kosovo, 
Jordan, and the Palestinian West Bank.
I would have liked a definition of "not strictly illegal." Does that mean  
socially banned but not forbidden? Or technically illegal but not enforced, 
as  in Lebanon? 
NBC also lets its scholars demur over the source of Muslim homophobic  
attitudes: whether they're based on religious teachings or merely the taboo  
nature of sexual topics in Muslim societies.   
A broader range of sources would have produced a broader NBC report. It did 
 not, for instance, quote Farrokh Sekaleshfar, _as ABC Australia did_ 
(https://youtu.be/1rZhopaBPGo) .  Sekaleshfar said his remarks -- that it would 
be compassionate to execute gays  -- were taken out of context; but public 
furor still drove him out of Australia  in a hurry. 
NBC also could have asked Irshad Manji, a lesbian Muslim journalist who has 
 long criticized Muslim attitudes. _She told CNN_ 
(http://www.cnn.com/videos/tv/2016/06/19/muslims-accurately-represented-by-u-s-media.cnn)
  that 
journalists have "settled for mere, often  hollow condemnations" of the Orlando 
attack from moderate Muslim leaders. 
Manji recommended two follow-up questions: "What are you doing to reach out 
 to mosques in this country and demand that they stop preaching intolerance 
of  gay and lesbian people?" Also, "Do you acknowledge that there is a 
certain  interpretation of Islam that does allow for these attacks to be 
happening?" 
She concluded: "Let's put those who are crying for civil rights -- as they  
should be crying -- let's put them on the hot seat as well, to see how 
deeply  they're willing to go to offer the truth and the facts." 
One could say the same of mainstream media reports as  well.

-- 
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