Change Sex Or Die
By: DOUG IRELAND
05/10/2007
Gay City News
Vol. 6
Iss. 19 / May 10 - 16, 2007
http://www.gaycitynews.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18324930&BRD=2729&PAG=461&dept_id=569346&rfi=6
The situation of the
transgendered in Iran has been the subject of frequent media reports
that paint a rosy picture of life for them in the Islamic Republic, and
which characterize Tehran - in a recent description in the U.K. daily
The Guardian - as "the unlikely sex-change capital of the world."
Western journalists seem to find it exotic that, in Iran's
patriarchal society - in which sexuality and expressions of sexual
identity are religiously codified with the force of law, women are
restricted to second-class citizenship, and homosexuality is a crime
punishable by death - sex reassignment surgery has mushroomed, with the
approval of the country's religious authorities.
This came about after Maryam Khatoon Molkara, then a 33-year-old pre-op
transman, forced his way into an audience in the early 1980s with the
late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini - leader of the 1979 Iranian Revolution
and founder of and undisputed authority in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Moved by Molkara's pleas, Khomeini was eventually persuaded to issue a
fatwa which declared that sex-change surgery was permitted since it was
not mentioned as forbidden in the Koran.
Western journalists present the contemporary Iranian theological
discourse on transsexuality that has developed in the ensuing years
since Khomeini's fatwa as a curiosity that contradicts the West's
prevailing view of Islamic attitudes toward all things sexual.
But Afsaneh Najmabadi,
an Iranian who is a professor of Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality
at Harvard University, says she feels "uneasy" when reading these
"celebratory" portrayals of Iran's attitude toward the transgendered.
"Every time I read one of these reports I want to say BUT, BUT, BUT,
because there are some scary things going on that have gone almost
unnoticed," she said.
Najmabadi, author of "Women with Mustaches and Men without Beards:
Gender and Sexual Anxieties of Iranian Modernity" (University of Chicago
Press), says that Iran's official position on the transgendered has
manufactured "a religio-psycho-medicalized discourse on 'unnatural and
deviant' [ghayr-i tabi'i and inhirafi] sexualities" that is "deeply
troubling because of the explicit framing of transsexuality within a
particular mapping of sexuality that simultaneously renders
homosexuality, and more generally any sexual and gender non-conformity,
as deviant and criminal."
And while a positive and progressive attitude toward sex-change surgery
is liberating for genuinely transgendered people, it can have an
enormously deleterious effect when deformed to be used as a supposed
"treatment," or even as punishment, to "normalize" homosexual desire.
Because homosexuality is a capital crime in Iran, and because the regime
of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been engaged in a what he has
called a "cultural revolution" that involves highly-organized
persecutions targeting feminists and homosexuals, the choice presented
to Iranian same-sexers is often a stark and unpleasant one, a choice
epitomized by the title of a recent documentary by the France 2 public
television network's newsmagazine "Envoyé spécial," which called its
half-hour broadcast on the transgendered in Iran "Changer de Sex ou
Mourir" - "Change Sex or Die."
How Iran's official discourse on the transgendered conceals a multitude
of evils and ills can be seen in the following, eye-opening interview
with Atrian, a 26-year-old male-to-female transsexual activist also
known as Sayeh, who fled Iran last year to Turkey.
Atrian was extensively interviewed in Kaysen, Turkey, on April 5 by
Arsham Parsi, the 27-year-old executive director of the Iranian Queer
Organization (or IRQO, the new name adopted by the Persian Gay and
Lesbian Organization, or PGLO). Parsi was on a fact-finding trip to meet
and help the many LGBT Iranian refugees in Turkey whom the IRQO is
assisting.
The interview with Atrian was conducted in Persian, and a transcript was
provided exclusively to this reporter, and translated into English for
Gay City News by Morteza Dehghani.
Atrian says that there are many people who accept sex-change surgery to
escape persecution as homosexuals.
"A significant number of people who get a sex change in Iran are gay, as
you cannot state in Iran that you are a man and want to be with another
man, even if your appearance is feminine," Atrian declared.
"There are only a small percentage of people who get a sex-change
operation who are actually transgendered. Out of some 100 transsexuals
whom I've encountered," she reported, "only 20 of them were genuinely
transgendered, and the rest are gay."
Atrian explained, "If you are known to be gay, you will be hanged.
Therefore, many gays try to plead for societal acceptance by announcing
themselves as transgendered. A lot of gays have been brainwashed into
believing they are ill. Some believe that if they present themselves as
women, they might find a boyfriend more easily."
It is not often mentioned in Western reports, but to gain approval for
sex-reassignment surgery, one must have a certificate signed by the
religious authorities declaring that one is "mentally ill." So, Atrian
said, "Many gays believe they will get accepted more easily by society
by claiming they are ill [as transgendered]."
Unable to endure the barrage of government persecution, scathing
religious opprobrium, and often the hatred of their own families, said
Atrian, "Many gays, for many different reasons, become emotional and get
the operation. But soon after getting the operation, they'll cry for
days at the mistake they have made."
Atrian recalled her visit to one gay man who had opted for sex-change
surgery.
"I was visiting him in the hospital, and he told me, 'If you can, flee
Iran.' I asked him why - and as he was crying like a river, he replied:
'I have committed a huge mistake. Why did I want to become a woman? I
didn't even become a woman, I've become something deficient, and I would
give anything to go back to my previous state.' In another incident, I
was at a doctor's office and encountered two transsexuals who were
begging the doctor to operate them to go back to their previous state."
This sort of thing, Atrian related, is quite common.
Atrian described the typical path of what she calls "the many gays who
are forced by the society into believing that they are transsexuals.
This group is under constant pressure from their parents, telling them
that they have been led into deviation from the righteous path. They
start analyzing themselves, thinking 'I am a boy, so how can it be that
I like other boys? Because this is a sin! I must be a prostitute. I've
deviated from the righteous path!'"
So, Atrian recounted, these gays "start contemplating ways to obtain
society's acceptance so that it would be okay for them to like other
boys. And then they reason: The only way to do that is to attach a label
to myself that shows I'm a sick person, because when you are sick,
people pity you and say, 'Oh my god, this poor kid! This is the way God
has created him, it is a genetic disease!' So, he will be forced to make
himself known as a transsexual" who is mentally ill, in order to be
treated leniently.
"If you want to prove you're not a homosexual," Atrian underscored,
"you'll be forced to get the sex-change operation. You don't want to be
forced to explain why you are attracted to your own sex, and the only
way to avoid that is to get the operation."
And, added Atrian, "A lot of people become drug addicts after the
operation because they realize it was a mistake, they become depressed,
and often commit suicide because there is no way to undo the operation.
But neither the doctors, nor the parents, nor anyone else take
responsibility for these tragedies, because no one respects or values
transsexuals."
Atrian said that transsexuals are often raped by the very doctors who
are involved in their surgery.
"This is a quite normal occurrence, as normal as saying that your doctor
smokes," she explained. "The doctor knows that the patient is scared and
does not have any family support, therefore he will listen to the doctor
who claims he wants to help him. But just because they are doctors
doesn't mean they are ethical."
Moreover, Atrian said, "You can't complain about these doctor rape cases
to anyone, because the police forces themselves commit the same sort of
acts. When I'm already depressed and have problems about my situation,
and when this doctor - whom I desperately need and who is in control of
my future destiny - forces me to have sex with him, I think to myself,
'How can someone possibly take advantage of another human being in this
situation? What such a doctor is doing is similar to a supposedly
charitable person who asks a hungry person for sex in exchange for a
loaf of bread.'"
In Iran, Atrian said, sex-reassignment surgery has become a lucrative,
assembly-line business.
"The doctors performing the operations in Iran are so careless - for
them, it is like cutting paper and not flesh," she explained. "Left and
right, on a daily basis, they perform sex-change operations on people
without even paying proper attention to each case, just because it's a
highly profitable business. Yet they are so proud that they are in a
country that allows people to have sex changes. But they perform all
these operations improperly, and often incompletely."
Atrian asserted that, "Out of all the people they operate on, only a few
remain healthy. How many of these patients do not become psychotic
because of the way they've been treated and mutilated? How many do not
commit suicide? How many can live a normal life after their operation?
Most of them don't even get the chance of finding a companion - they are
shunned as transsexuals, and their past will always haunt them."
Atrian added that even some psychiatrists "take advantage of the
simpleness of their patients. A couple of years ago, one of my friends
visited a psychiatrist - and this doctor told him that, if my friend
wanted to prove that he had feminine emotions in order to be permitted
to get a sex-change operation, my friend had to have sex with him. This
is not a common sort of incident with psychiatrists, but it happens from
time to time."
Transsexuals in Iran, Atrian said, are often targeted for beatings in
the streets - both by the Basiji (the thuggish para-police used by the
regime to enforce its draconian moral codes) and by people pretending to
be Basiji. "Anyone who wears Basiji gear and has a motorcycle can beat
you and nobody would question them for it, no one would ever check their
IDs to make sure they are Basiji forces." (See this reporter's interview
with Mekabiz, a 21-year-old, self-described "transsexual man" who was
tortured by police and raped with the complicity of his jailers, in the
February 9-15, 2006 issue; url follows below.)
Atrian related that, "Even though the special forces of the police have
no specific orders to arrest transsexuals, they too can arrest you. I
myself have been arrested three times, and was disrespected in the most
brutal way possible. I remember how four men who looked like Basiji beat
me close to death in the middle of the street. They kept slamming their
boots on my head so hard that even now, when I think about it,
subconsciously my head starts moving to dodge their boots."
For transsexuals, said Atrian, Iran is "a sick society which made you
ill in the first place and is now pointing at you and calling you sick."
With help from the IRQO, Atrian has obtained a visa to Canada, and is
now waiting for a departure date from Turkey, where homophobia and
transphobia are rampant and where she has been beaten several times and
been threatened with death.
"I hope to get to Canada alive," she said. "Even if it is only for one
year there, I would like to be myself and live without needing to
pretend to anyone that I'm a poor and helpless person, live without
needing to beg them not to belittle me or attack me. I don't want to
feel the need to explain to people that I'm not a dirty and inferior
person."
"My life," Atrian added, "is not like a cigarette that you can smoke and
then throw away, as I will live and suffer in its ashes. I might get to
Canada, or I might not. But I will never forget that all my rights were
taken away from me in Iran.
From now on, I want to build my life."
For more information on the plight of the Iranian LGBT community, or to
make a credit card donation via the secure PayPal system to help
refugees from persecution like Atrian, visit the
IRQO Web site.
LATE-BREAKING NEWS: The IRQO has just learned of a police raid on a gay
party in a private home in Tehran two weeks ago. The police arrested 15
gay men, who were sentenced to be lashed with 60 to 80 strokes each -
simply for having been at a gay party. More details to follow as they
become available.
DOUG IRELAND can be reached through his blog, DIRELAND, at
http://direland.typepad.com/direland/ . Ireland's February 2006 with
Mekabiz, a 21-year-old, self-described "transsexual man," can be found
at
http://gaycitynews.com/site/index.cfm?newsid=17007893&BRD=2729&PAG=461&dept_id=568864&rfi=8
.
©GayCityNews 2007