What Does Islam Say About Being Gay?
On June 29,
Turkey’s 12th Gay Pride Parade was held on Istanbul’s crowded Istiklal Avenue.
Thousands marched joyfully carrying rainbow flags until the police began
dispersing them with water cannons. The authorities, as has become their custom
since the Gezi Park protests of June 2013, once again decided not to allow a
demonstration by secular Turks who don’t fit into their vision of the ideal
citizen.
More worrying
news came a week later when posters were put up in Ankara with a chilling
instruction: “If you see those carrying out the People of Lot’s dirty work,
kill the doer and the done!” The “People of Lot” was a religious reference to
gays, and the instruction to kill them on sight was attributed to the Prophet
Muhammad. The group that put the posters up, the so-called Islamic Defense
Youth, defended its message by asserting: “What? Are you offended by the words of our prophet?!”
All of this
suggests that both Turkey and the Muslim world need to engage in some
soul-searching when it comes to tolerance for their gay compatriots.
Of course this
intolerance is not exclusive to either Turks or Muslims. According to the
International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association, Turkey
scores slightly better on measures of gay rights when compared with some nearby
Christian-majority nations such as Russia, Armenia and Ukraine. Indeed,
Turkey’s secular laws don’t penalize sexual orientation, and some
out-of-the-closet L.G.B.T. icons have long been popular as artists, singers or
fashion designers. Among them are two of the most popular Turkish entertainers
of the past half-century: The late Zeki Muren was flamboyantly gay and the
singer Bulent Ersoy is famously transsexual. Their eccentricity has apparently
added to their popularity.
But beyond the
entertainment industry, the traditional mainstream Islamic view on
homosexuality produces intolerance in Turkey toward gays and creates starker
problems in Muslim nations that apply Shariah. In Saudi Arabia, Iran, Sudan or Afghanistan,
homosexuality is a serious offense that can bring imprisonment, corporal
punishment or even the death penalty. Meanwhile, Islamic State militants
implement the most extreme interpretation of Shariah by throwing gays from
rooftops.
At the heart of
the Islamic view on homosexuality lies the biblical story of Sodom and Gomorrah,
which is narrated in the Quran, too. According to scripture, the Prophet Lot
had warned his people of “immorality,” for they did “approach men with desire,
instead of women.” In return, the people warned by Lot tried to expel their
prophet from the city, and even tried to sexually abuse the angels who came
down to Lot in the guise of men. Consequently, God destroyed the people of Lot
with a colossal natural disaster, only to save the prophet and a few fellow
believers.
The average
conservative Muslim takes this story as a justification to stigmatize gays, but
there is an important question that deserves consideration: Did the people of
Lot receive divine punishment for being homosexual, or for attacking Lot and
his heavenly guests?
The even more
significant nuance is that while the Quran narrates this divine punishment for
Sodom and Gomorrah, it decrees no earthly punishment for homosexuality — unlike
the Old Testament, which clearly decrees that homosexuals “are to be put to
death.”
Medieval Islamic
thinkers inferred an earthly punishment by considering homosexuality as a form
of adultery. But significant names among them, such as the eighth-century
scholar Abu Hanifa, the founder of the popular Hanafi school of jurisprudence,
argued that since a homosexual relationship did not produce offspring with an
unknown father, it couldn’t be considered adultery.
The real Islamic
basis for punishing homosexuality is the hadiths, or sayings, attributed to the
Prophet Muhammad. (The same is true for punishments on apostasy, heresy,
impiety, or “insults” of Islam: None come from the Quran; all are from certain
hadiths.) But the hadiths were written down almost two centuries after the
prophet lived, and their authenticity has been repeatedly questioned — as early
as the ninth century by the scholar Imam Nesai — and they can be questioned
anew today. Moreover, there is no record of the prophet actually having anyone
punished for homosexuality.
Such
jurisprudential facts might help Muslims today to develop a more tolerant attitude
toward gays, as some progressive Islamic thinkers in Turkey, such as Ihsan
Eliacik, are encouraging. What is condemned in the story of Lot is not sexual
orientation, according to Mr. Eliacik, but sexual aggression. People’s private
lives are their own business, he argues, whereas the public Muslim stance
should be to defend gays when they are persecuted or discriminated against —
because Islam stands with the downtrodden.
It is also worth
recalling that the Ottoman Caliphate, which ruled the Sunni Muslim world for
centuries and which the current Turkish government claims to emulate, was much
more open-minded on this issue. Indeed, the Ottoman Empire had an extensive
literature of homosexual romance, and an accepted social category of
transvestites. The Ottoman sultans, arguably, were social liberals compared
with the contemporary Islamists of Turkey, let alone the Arab World.
Despite such
arguments, the majority of Muslims are likely to keep seeing homosexuality as
something sinful, if public opinion polls are any indication. Yet those Muslims
who insist on condemning gays should recall that according to Islam, there are
many sins, including arrogance, which the Quran treats as among the gravest
moral transgressions. For Turks and other Muslims, it could be our own escape
from the sin of arrogance to stop stigmatizing others for their behavior and
focus instead on refining ourselves.
Mustafa Akyol is the
author of “Islam Without Extremes: A Muslim Case for Liberty.”
(nytimes.com,
28/87/2015)
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