Banda Aceh, TAG - In their best Acehese costumes, kitsch
jewelry and towering hair buns, 40 transsexuals sashayed down a stage on
Saturday to loud club music, disco lights and rapturous applause as they
competed in the Miss Transsexual Aceh 2010.
The
streets of Aceh may be monitored by the Wilayatul Hisbah, or Shariah Police,
but that did not deter the audience in the auditorium of the Radio Republik
Indonesia building in the provincial capital, Banda Aceh, as they welcomed the
finalists with screams and whistles.
There
was no seat left unoccupied. Drag queens, homosexuals and members of Aceh’s
minority communities forked out Rp 10,000 for tickets to the show, with some
having to sit on the ground or watch from the balconies.
Transsexuals
entertained the audience by lip-syncing to local songs and dancing to dangdut
music. Some wore sexy outfits while others donned the hijab , the Muslim
headscarf.
The
winner of the Best Transsexual Catwalk wore a sash with the words “Cet Work,” a
misspelling of the word catwalk, splashed across it.
Organized
by Putroe Sejati Aceh (True Sons of Aceh), an organization that provides
shelters for transsexuals, the 40 contestants represented 23 districts and
cities in the staunchly Muslim province.
University
student Zifana Letisia, from North Aceh, was crowned the pageant winner and
will represent Aceh at the Miss Transsexual Indonesia 2010.
She said she was
treated well at her campus despite her sexuality. “At cam
pus,
my achievements are quite extraordinary. Nobody dares to put me down.
“People
on campus are polite, even respectful and proud of me, even though I am a
transsexual,” Zifana said, adding that she did not take Islamic law lightly.
A
third-year nursing student and part-time beauty therapist, Zifana, whose real name
is Anggah, beat out finalists Jasmine Mulan Sayuri, from South Aceh, and Joy,
from Central Aceh.
“We
are very careful today [when it comes to Islamic Shariah law]. One day, we will
build a special forum to try and find a middle-ground over this matter in
Aceh,” Zifana said.
Organizing
committee chairman Jimmy Saputra said the event had been approved by Aceh’s
Ulema Consultative Assembly (MPU).
“After
we explained that this activity would be a positive event, the MPU scholars
gave us permission,” said Jimmy, who also goes by his transsexual name Timmy
Mayubi.
The
event was judged by a three-person panel. The judges were Marini, from the
Indonesian Women’s Coalition of Aceh, and Perak Sebayang and Santi, both from
RRI Banda Aceh.
The
pageant started out with 40 contestants, of which 15 were selected as
finalists. These 15 were further winnowed down to the final six.
Many
contestants struggled to understand the judges’ questions, which covered a wide
range of issues, from corruption to the daily struggle of transsexuals and
Shariah law in Aceh.
When
asked to comment on allegations that the province’s Shariah Police were
violating the laws they enforced, 23-year-old Alin, from Lhokseumawe, said in a
lilting voice: “I will follow the law of Islamic Shariah because I live in
Aceh.”
The
audience burst into laughter when Carla, 20, who was representing Aceh Besar
district, replied to a question on the link between poverty and corruption with
the answer: “If [the concept of] poverty was not applied, there would be no
corruption.”
Carla,
in true beauty-queen style, kept poised and elegant despite the crowd’s
reaction, and walked along the stage while waving her right hand.
Other
contestants were unable to speak at all when questioned by the judges.
But
some received standing ovations, including 19-year-old Joy, from Central Aceh
district.
In
response to a question on the existence of transsexuals at a time when Muslims
were subject to Shariah law, Joy loudly declared: “The application of Islamic
law in Aceh is not in accordance with the wishes of the people because many
people in Aceh are still violating Shariah, especially during Ramadan when they
are not fasting and commit adulterous affairs.”
Cut
Nyak, 20, of Pidie district, said Shariah law was a “tool applied in Aceh to
manage the public because the majority of Acehnese were Muslims,” adding that
she supported the implementation of Islamic law in the province.
Aceh’s
controversial Qanun Jinayat code is a set of local bylaws that were passed in
September by the province’s legislative council, and replaced parts of the
Criminal Code with sections of Islamic law for Muslims.
Under
the code, people deemed to have committed adultery or had premarital or
homosexual
sex could be sentenced to lashings with a cane or be stoned to death.
Corporal
punishment can also be meted out to rapists, child molesters and those caught
drinking alcohol or gambling.
Muslims’
interactions with members of the opposite sex who are not family members are
also strictly regulated.
After
the code was passed, international human rights groups spoke out against the
regulations and called them a violation of basic rights.
Aceh’s
governor, Irwandi Yusuf, has refused to sign off on the Qanun Jinayat.
Jimmy,
the event organizer, said “raids against women clad in tight pants” should be
the least of Aceh’s worries, as the province had many other problems.
“There’s
unemployment and other problems affecting the livelihoods of the people — that
should be what we focus on, rather than on issues concerning people’s personal
affairs. Everyone has the right to express their personality,” he said.
“Especially
when it comes to sex. It should not be banned, because all people need sex. I
also really need sex,” he said. He added that there were about 150 transgenders
in Banda Aceh and they were able to fit into the community without any
problems.[]
Transsexuals Take to the Stage in Rare Beauty Contest
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
February 14, 2010
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