A harassed gay minority in a conservative suburb in otherwise tolerant Amsterdam has found a guardian angel in the local Muslim mayor.
To the astonishment of many, the local Muslim mayor has turned guardian angel for the harassed gay minority in a conservative suburb in otherwise tolerant Amsterdam.
Ahmed Marcouch, 41, is on a self-appointed mission to end homophobia in Slotervaart, just a stones' throw from the capital but light-years away from its anything-goes mentality.To make his point, Mayor Marcouch recently invited Amsterdam's annual Gay Pride parade to pass through his constituency when it takes place in August.
"It is necessary to confront this issue, to say that homosexuals are normal people like all of us and that we require them to be respected," Marcouch told AFP.
Slotervaart's population is mainly of immigrant origin, many of the Muslim faith, like Moroccan-born Marcouch himself who came to the Netherlands in 1979 at age 10. The suburb has recently been in the news for homophobic incidents, with gays being called names, spat on and generally bothered.
The community grew particularly restless over gay men using Slotervaart's De Oeverlanden public park as a place to meet and have sex, a practice known as "cruising".
After gay lobbyists made complaints over incidents of homophobic violence, the local council erected signs in the park indicating the spots where gay sex is known to take place, in a bid to avoid any unfortunate encounters.
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"They don't see homosexuals as humans. These people can be orthodox Christians, Muslims or immigrants," he said.
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The mayor has asked municipal police to be extra vigilant about homophobic aggression, and has even organised debates on the topic in mosques to press home his message.
More than 55 percent of the 45,000 inhabitants of Slotervaart are of immigrant origin and 22.4 percent are younger than 17 -- two groups that Marcouch says are the least tolerant towards homosexuals. Gays themselves make up about 7.5 percent of the population of Amsterdam.
"I always say: your freedom to be an orthodox Muslim is the same as that of a homosexual to be homosexual," said Marcouch, himself heterosexual. "Freedom is guaranteed in the constitution" of the Netherlands.
The Netherlands was the first country in the world to legalise homosexual marriage, in 2002.
The mayor hopes Slotervaart will become part of the route at Amsterdam's annual Gay Pride parade this August. The parade hitherto has been limited to the canals of the historic city centre.
"Some inhabitants are furious and are challenging Mr Marcouch vehemently," said Dennis Boutkan, a spokesman for homosexual lobby group COC.
Among them is imam Mohamed Adardour of the el-Oumma mosque, who told AFP that gay people are "impure" and accused the mayor of "constructing his political career" at the expense of Muslims.
The local Roman Catholic parish has also refused to work with the mayor, according to Marcouch who said the parish told him "homosexuality is contrary to the laws of nature".
The mayor is undaunted. "At least I have opened the issue for discussion," he said.
Atef Salib, who owns an Arab-themed gay bar in the centre of Amsterdam, says he is encouraged by the mayor's efforts and is looking for a spot in Slotervaart to open a dance bar. "It would be a great step forward."
But Slotervaart teenager Said retorted: "If a homo bar opens here, it will soon burn down."
Source-AFP
TAN