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One Foot in the Closet

Being born in Egypt to a Muslim father and a Christian mother wasn't ideal -- but writer Omar Hassan says his experiences are nothing compared to the torture most LGBT Muslims must endure on a daily basis.


I was born in Egypt to a Muslim father and a Christian mother. It's safe to say that this wasn't exactly the ideal place for a burgeoning gay man to grow up. After all, Egypt is notorious for physically torturing homosexuals, using police entrapment to out gay men and to subsequently imprison them. Luckily enough, my parents' respectable professions allowed them to emigrate to the West, where personal liberties are more or less protected.

But it didn't matter where I existed geographically -- religious piety consistently seemed to pervade my life. In the U.S. and later in Britain, my family encouraged me to adhere to moral codes, which suggested that I would spend the rest of my days as a semicloseted homosexual.

This was exceptionally difficult, especially considering my sexual awareness began when I was 12 years old. As I grew older I tried to rebel, but confronting the issue openly was a risk I never had the guts to face. To deal with the pressure, I tried to find solace wherever I could. This longing led to an intimate relationship with a man who was more than 20 years older than me, when I was only a teenager. I wanted him to shield me from the pain that was to come imminently. It never dawned on me then that I was being exploited because I was so young and vulnerable.

By my sophomore year in college, I was living in the U.K. with my mother and three brothers. Following many years spent traveling, living life in flux, we had developed into a relatively tight-knit family unit. With this stability came a new comfort. I began to frequent the gay bars in my city and I joined an LGBT society, helping others come to terms with their sexuality, even though this was something I could never seem to achieve myself. Still, my relationships with men were always promiscuous and fleeting in nature. I simply couldn't have anyone find out that I was a fraud.

One late night I came home to find that my sheltered bubble had been burst. I entered my bedroom, where my mother and one of my brothers were sitting on my bed, which was strewn with gay memorabilia. Films, magazines, and books of a homoerotic nature were presented to me. They had gone as far as to root through my letters, and even some of my e-mails were printed out to prove my gay orientation. For the first time my secret life was there for them to see. With this realization I plummeted to a dark and desperate place.

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Drew
    Date posted: 5/20/2009 5:40:00 AM
    Hometown: Los Angeles, CA

    Comment:

    "Why is it that often white queers say " just leave your family"... For those of us rooted in a culture that is attached to browness/race/language it is the absolute last resort." If it's the last resort then why do so many families expel their gay members? You should criticize that much more than queers suggesting abandonment, I'd say. Every person must make the decision for him or herself when it comes to dealing with an unsupportive (or even hateful) family, but I really don't think that leaving such a family is that unreasonable.

  • Name: Suzie Q
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 8:21:00 PM
    Hometown: Orlando, FL

    Comment:

    When I was in college an exchange student came to our dorm from Iran. She was very shy, a little older at twenty six but her brother still ruled her life. He went to a men's college down the road from our school and she could not accept any invitation until she cleared it with him. She got permission to come to a slumber party and one of the girls jokingly said she liked her nightgown so much she probably had to sleep with the door closed to prevent her from attacking her. Another student from Iran was there and overheard it. Before we even went to sleep her brother was over there dragging her out of this ill repute house of heresy. Before the week was out he had transfered her to another school and forbid her to have any contact with any of us. All this for a joke, can you imagine what would have happened if it was for real.

  • Name: SF Griego
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 7:18:00 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco, CA, USA

    Comment:

    I, too, was born into another culture in the same region of the world... in fact, one that is often associated with the first "socialization/institutionalization" of homosexuality in ancient times. Ironically, that couldn't be further from today's reality, with much the same reactions from today's families and Orthodox Christian clergy in my home country as those in the Muslim world & Bosnia described by Omar & Dario. Whether we all always have a choice to "just leave" is not a given. Many don't have the means or a place to which to escape. And leaving the family unit is often an unthinkable option. We must be careful not to view others' situations through our own cultural lenses & experience, and take for granted that we all have the same options, the same freedom of movement. We don't. I'm very lucky to now be living in SF, a "gay Mecca," but I don't believe my life here is available to "just anyone" that wants it. It's not. Omar, thanks so much for sharing your story!

  • Name: Jim
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 5:09:00 PM
    Hometown: Seattle

    Comment:

    To Femme Flame, not to diminish your point here, however it seems to me that after a blood brother holds a knife to you neck and tells you there's worse to come . . . . . Fine, honor your roots from the grave by your own brother's hand. Regardless of anyone's race or religion or language, there's a clear choice here between life and death.

  • Name: Femme Flame
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 4:47:00 PM
    Hometown: Canada

    Comment:

    Why is it that often white queers say " just leave your family"... For those of us rooted in a culture that is attached to browness/race/language it is the absolute last resort. Did someone miss reading the importance of the journey he and his family undertook to get to the UK? Omar, you do whatever you need to do to keep all parts of your soul intact and stay alive. Flame ( who isn't from the North)

  • Name: Jim
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 4:38:00 PM
    Hometown: Seattle

    Comment:

    I guess I do not totally understand Omar and why he remains in this situation while living in a free Western society. He has every chance to escape - chances he may not have if his family still lived in the Middle East. I was raised in a strict Southern Baptist home in the Southern United States. My parents would have sent me to "repairative therapy" if they had of had the chance. Not only did I leave the religion I had been raised in, I left my family. The ties are cut and I live my own beliefs, my own life, and by my own morals. Occasionally I get a letter from my parents telling me how they still pray my soul will be saved from eternal burning damnation. The only thing burning are those letters when they arrive. It's not an easy choice, but Omar does have a choice here.

  • Name: Dario
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 10:30:00 AM
    Hometown: Toronto

    Comment:

    Your story echos the struggles of millions of other LGBTIQ individuals across the world, and especially in more religious societies like Egypt. I'm originally from Bosnia, and the recent disturbing events at the first Queer Sarajevo Festival show how little tolerance there is and how violent our opponents are. I believe that in many of these cases, organized religion provides an indesputable excuse or even mandate by god to hate and exterminate us. We see this world over, from Teheran to San Francisco.

  • Name: Joe
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 3:27:00 AM
    Hometown: Los Angeles

    Comment:

    Perhaps when Obama goes to Egypt in June to speak to the Muslim world he can mention something about homophobia there. But then again he hasn't done much for gays here in the US. Why is it that no leader Democrat or Republican or even European leaders talk about the abuse of gays that prevails in the Muslim world? They talk about women's rights and democracy there but nothing about gay treatment. I guess abusing someone because he is gay is not THAT terrible, right?

  • Name: Adrian
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 2:31:00 AM
    Hometown: Northridge, CA

    Comment:

    I understand how it feels to live in a muslim country, which poisoned by distorted dogma. I was in your shoes for 25 years. Now, I am more than grateful for the privilege of living in a free country like America. Although we still have to fight with the extremist christians, the situation is far more better than before. The truth is prevailing. God is on our side.

  • Name: Mike
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 1:28:00 AM
    Hometown: oroville, california

    Comment:

    Omar, Thank you for telling your story so far. It is very difficult to stand up to the ignorance. Freedom comes in increments. All the attempts at change are part of the flow. Your article will help many who read it understand how hard being out can be in a conservative religious country. I think you are right to work toward a "family" of friends who will support and accept you. You do deserve itl



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