BY RUTH MORRIS (PRI.ORG)
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Illustration - www.corbisimages.com |
BANDA ACEH (TAG) – Indonesia has been called the smiling face of
Islam for its moderate religious bent. But for Echa, an LGBT activist in the
northern Aceh province, that smile can be deceiving.
New regulations in Aceh now punish gay sex with fines, jail time,
even canings. It’s the latest phase in a gradual rollout of Sharia laws that
also prohibit unmarried men and women from riding on a moped together, or
holding hands in public. Gambling is not allowed either, and all Muslim women
must wear the traditional head covering known as hijab. It’s the law.
Rights groups have decried the new laws as inhumane and
unconstitutional. The Indonesian government handed Aceh a unique allowance to
implement Sharia law 10 years ago as part of a peace deal with
separatists. Gay sex is not illegal in the rest of Indonesia.
“The private space for LGBT will be invaded,” says Echa, of the
new provisions that went into effect in late October.
“I believe Islam is very tolerant on these issues,” she adds. “I
believe in God, and God loves. Those who cast us out aren’t God.”
Echa (that’s not her real name. She asked that we use a pseudonym
to protect her identity) is a transgender woman who wears a floor-length pink
dress and a turquoise headscarf. Not a wisp of hair is showing. She has her own
reasons for wearing the hijab: It’s respectable.
“I don’t want the image of transgender people to be associated
with prostitution,” she says. Plus, in Aceh’s conservative religious climate,
she almost never gets called names as long as her head is covered.
Echa heads the local chapter of Violet Grey — an LGBT advocacy
group — and also works as a modeling coach.
On an evening drive through the capital Banda Aceh, the coffee
shops are brimming with young people on plastic chairs. There’s no alcohol
here, so coffee is king. Echa points out a hotel that used to be a hangout — no
more.
Then we pass a street Echa says used to be a “hotspot,” a meeting
place for gay and transgender people. Tonight it’s dark. The storefronts are
shuttered.
Syahrizal Abbas, director of the local government’s Islamic Sharia
agency, says the Sharia regulations were meant to guide people towards a more
devout life, not terrorize them. He takes pains to stress that Aceh’s version
of Sharia law is moderate — nothing like the Sharia practiced by extremist
groups like Boko Haram and ISIS.
“We want good Muslims in Aceh,” he says.
But he’s fully behind the new law that punishes gay relations with
up to 100 strokes of the cane. Adultery carries the same penalty.
Abbas argues that gay couples actually enjoy more freedom than
unwed straight people in Aceh. Unmarried heterosexual couples can’t be alone
together, and they can’t touch in public. But for gay men and women, such
behavior is permitted.
“Walking together, it’s no problem. Cooking in the kitchen, no
problem. Sleeping in one room, one bed together, is no problem,” Abbas says.
The problem, he says, is if the couple engages in sex.
At a small hair salon, Echa greets friends who are also nervous
about the new law. As they compare selfies and watch soap operas on TV, a gay
man who calls himself Mulan says the tightening restrictions make social media
more important than ever. Platforms like Blackberry messenger offer the safest
way to socialize.
Echa’s home is also a kind of safe haven. There’s a row of lockers
in the entryway. Her house is open to students, friends, and runaways. Some
members of the local LGBT community have left Aceh for Jakarta; Echa refuses to
go.
“We have to have a strategy to ensure that we stay strong and
solid. The important thing is for us to survive, even if we need to go further
underground,” she says. Then she adds, “We must take a step back and go along
with the game, go along with what is wanted.”[]
SOURCE: http://www.pri.org/stories/2015-11-02/transgender-woman-aceh-indonesia-ducks-under-cover-headscarf
Transgender Woman in Aceh
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
November 03, 2015
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