Showing posts with label Homosexuality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homosexuality. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Sufism, Muslims - and homosexuality

Rida Khan is a Sufi Muslim and a bisexual — and she wants to shatter some misconceptions.
Melbourne-based Sufi Rida Khan sitting in a cafe, looking out of a window.
"It's assumed that a lot of same-sex, bisexual or other gender diverse Muslims are having sex and that's actually a myth," says the 24-year-old aged-care nurse.
"It's like saying that all Muslim youth that are straight are engaging in heterosexual sex — and that's just far out, like, come on.

What is Sufism?

  • Sufism, or Tasawwuf as it is known in Arabic, is Islamic mysticism
  • Sufi orders can be found in Sunni, Shia and other Islamic sects
  • Sufi rituals, such as dhikr (devotional chanting), encourage introspection and spiritual closeness with God 
"Most of us are scared of having an aunty identify us with a guy or a girl."
Rida realised she was bisexual as a 17-year-old, but she waited a few years before announcing this to her Pakistani friends and family. She and her family are Sufis — followers of the mystical branch of Islam.
"My experience of coming out was in fact quite positive, quite different from the stories we hear in other gender-diverse communities," she says.
"But I think it does have a lot to do with the fact that my parents have lived in Turkey, we have lived in Japan, we've lived in Australia.
"When I came out it was like, 'meh, okay, you're still the same to me'."

'Not right' for the community

Not everyone supports Rida's openness about her sexual orientation.
While some progressive Muslim leaders support same-sex marriage, it is widely interpreted by Islamic schools of thought that same-sex intimacy is 'haram' or 'forbidden'.
"People think if you're bisexual, if you're homosexual … that's God testing you to prove that you can be a better person, that you can be a better Muslim and that you can rise above your so-called lust," Rida says.
"It's the women who are bullying me, the aunties who are really horrible [saying] 'Stay away from her, she's not a good person'.
"I don't know if it's jealousy or what it is, but they need to be kinder to gender-diverse women, they need to be kinder to women from Muslim minorities in this country."
'If you're bisexual, prove yourself'
But the pendulum swings both ways.
Rida says she's received just as much discrimination from Australia's LGBTQI community — because of her faith.
"It's like they constantly ridicule your religion," she says.
"They don't understand that religion can actually act as a tool for empowering you."
Faith isn't the only friction point. Rida says she's felt an expectation to fit in with Western expressions of queer sexuality.
"Not all people of colour from gender-diverse backgrounds actually relate to the mainstream sexuality, particularly along the lines of hypersexuality and self-objectification," she says.
"And we do get put down for it, like, 'if you're bisexual then prove yourself'."
Sometimes, prejudice can feel like it's coming from all sides.
"First, you're not accepted by the Muslim community because you're bisexual, then you're not accepted by the gender-diverse community in Australia for being Muslim," Rida says.
"Then you also identify as a woman of colour — so when discrimination and bullying happens, you don't know which of the three they are discriminating against you [for]."

Sexuality or faith: Being forced to choose

Siobhan Irving is an anthropologist, PhD candidate and a board member for Sydney Queer Muslims.
She converted to Islam as a 19-year-old and has spent the past five years collecting stories from gay and lesbian Muslims in Sydney and Singapore.
Ms Irving says Rida's story isn't unique.
"In the queer community — and just in general, really — many people do not understand why a same-sex attracted Muslim would still embrace their faith ... would still be proud of their religious community," she says.
"It's difficult for them to express both their identities as Muslims and as same-sex attracted people — they often feel that they must choose."
Ms Irving says last year's national plebiscite on same-sex marriage brought Islamophobic attitudes to the fore.
"People in the queer community — and elsewhere — presumed that this just meant Muslims voted against it, because the Western suburbs are known as being very much populated by Muslim communities," she points out.
In the aftermath, Ms Irving spoke to many LGBTQI Muslims who felt pressured to defend their faith in queer circles and spaces, if they disclosed it at all.

Solace through spirituality

Sufism or Tasawwuf, as it is known in Arabic, is not a sect of Islam, like Sunni or Shia, but rather a spiritual practice, and theory, that can be found in all branches of the faith.
Rida's parents, for instance, practise Sufism within the Sunni Hanafi tradition.
Meanwhile, Rida describes her faith as "Aboriginal-Sufi-centric Islam"; a practice influenced by Indigenous Dreamtime stories and her 'Baloch' bedouin ancestry.
Introspection, meditation and dhikr (devotional chanting) are core elements of Sufism.
Rida says these practises give her an inner strength to combat the external conflicts that come from being a bisexual Muslim.
"The modern Sufi community here in Melbourne looks something like a mix of hipsters [who] have a very deep intimate relationship with God," she says.
"[It's about] sitting together, discussing life issues, reading Rumi's poetry, and overall just really trying to do the best we can in a world which is largely right-wing or left-wing — we really fall somewhere in the middle."
According to Ed Husain, author of The House of Islam: A Global History, Sufi poets like Maulana Jalaluddin Rumi and Omar Khayyam celebrate an inner spirituality that can be overlooked in more hard-lined expressions of Islam.
"Their poetry ... is much more focused towards drawing to God and the divine through love, attraction, passion, hope and optimism, rather than [being] fearful of God and fussing over sins and hellfire and worrying about the consequences of whether, you know, your hair shows," he told Rachael Kohn on a recent episode of RN's The Spirit of Things.
"The fact that the Prophet Muhammad was reciting beautiful poetry was because he was internally in communication with the divine.
"And if you lose that internal communication, externality becomes ugly and rigid."
For Rida, Muslims and non-Muslims alike can gain joy from introspection.
"Sufism itself is just a practice to help you become closer to your divine," she says.
"[It tries] to get you to understand that the universe is a much bigger picture than what institutionalised religion has made it out to be."

Tuesday, 8 May 2018

The invasion of the Liberal Party of Victoria


From The Age, Melbourne,Victoria
By Royce Millar & Ben Schneiders

A doctor and senior Mormon who blames ungodly love for HIV, as well as a prominent campaigner against the Safe Schools program, have been elected to positions in the Victorian Liberal Party.
They are among at least five Mormons elected as party officers at last week’s state conference.
Infectious diseases specialist Dr Ivan Stratov won a seat on the party’s powerful administrative committee as part of a ticket of ultra-conservatives and religious activists who are centred around 28-year-old Liberal factional whirlwind, Marcus Bastiaan.
Liberal elders believe Dr Stratov to be the first Mormon to hold a senior party position in Victoria.
Also elected, but in a more junior position as a party delegate, was controversial anti-Safe Schools campaigner, and Mormon, Marijke Rancie.

In her Liberal delegate campaign statement she described herself as a ''lobbyist against the appalling Marxist Safe Schools programs’’.
Ms Rancie, in online videos, called on Victorian parents to get ‘‘really angry’’ about the Safe Schools program, which she said was ‘‘grooming’’ children.
The Department of Education has said a number of claims made by Ms Rancie were false.
Sources confirmed that five or more Mormons were elected as party delegates, including Cynthia Watson and her husband Elliot, out of 79 people elected to party positions.
Where their conservative morality has made Mormons reliable supporters of the Republican Party in the US – especially in their home state of Utah – Australian Mormons have not traditionally been prominent in party politics.

But in recent years in Victoria, key Mormon figures have been active in Mr Bastiaan’s statewide party rejuvenation and recruitment campaign, which has been slammed by his critics as blatant branch-stacking.

The Bastiaan faction’s push for power paid off at last weekend’s Liberal State Council when it won 13 of 19 seats on the powerful administrative committee in an alliance with party president Michael Kroger and Opposition Leader Matthew Guy.
Mr Bastiaan was elected party vice-president.
Former prime minister Tony Abbott also recently met senior Mormons and missionaries in Melbourne where he reportedly spoke of his own experience of training to be a Catholic priest.
Dr Stratov was previously involved in the Family First Party. Alongside Mr Bastiaan, he has actively recruited Mormons and others to the Liberal party.
The Age approached Dr Stratov for comment.
In 2017, Dr Stratov sparked controversy while speaking at an anti-Safe Schools forum in Bendigo, part of his Liberal recruitment drive, when he blamed HIV on lapsed moral judgement.
“I studied a disease called HIV; 35 million people have died from that disease because they all decided they were going to make man’s love, not God’s love,” Dr Stratov reportedly told his audience.
The Age quoted Dr Stratov in 2017 as saying that his task for signing up new Liberal members had been made easier by community anger over progressive policies including the Safe Schools program and the assisted dying legislation.
How many Mormons have signed up to the Liberal party is unclear. One senior conservative estimates there are about 50 across Victoria, others say the figure is much higher.
Some more moderate Liberals see last weekend’s result as an effective takeover of the party by social conservatives likely to lead to more progressive Liberal MPs being replaced.
They also fear that many moderates and progressives may now abandon the party.
Further reading at the links below:
https://bit.ly/2rtS9OO
https://bit.ly/2rtyuj1
Who's behind the Safe Schools videos?
Marijke Rancie on Facebook as Political Posting Mumma
Michael Rancie
Rancie Financial

Thursday, 3 May 2018

Humanity overcomes the differences

With an estimated 22.5 million refugees worldwide, these Jewish families and organizations in the Diaspora are recognizing the imperative to be kind to the stranger, no matter what their religion.

Shoshana and Faraj were halfway through the 15-minute walk from the train station to her home when she felt compelled to say something. “I have to tell you straight off, we’re Jewish,” she told the young man about to live with her family.
Faraj, 22, who had escaped Aleppo and the Syrian civil war four years earlier, smiled: “That’s amazing, I’ve never met anyone Jewish before.”
In a sudden burst of honesty, he added, “And I just have to tell you – I’m gay.”