February 27, 2008
Transsexuals in Iran: Another BBC Two anti-Iranian propaganda that doesn't exactly work how it should
If you are a Jewish Iranian, living in the U.S. from the age of 6, it is very likely you don't like Ahmadinejad. So of course you would like to show how you hate him and how he is such a liar and how evil the entire government he represents is, in any way you can.
So you decide to attack one of the only positive angles Iran has been reported: Sex-change. And why not connect it to Ahmadinejad's speech in your city's university, Columbia, where he said in Iran homosexuality doesn't exist the same way it does in the U.S. (We all know the united Republican/Democrat anti-Iran front translated that to a denial of homosexuals in Iran.)
Tannaz Eshaghian's 'Be Like Others' (or 'Transsexual in Iran,' as BBC titled it) is a well-made documentary, but it is dishonest and unfair.(Watch it on iPlayer) It basically try to say being gay in Iran is so hard that forces gay men to go through the brutal process of sex-change. So even though the Islamic Republic look surprisingly cool with transsexuality on the surface, it is actually killing scores of gay men by separating them from their family, forcing them into a constant struggle of identity, inflicting physical and psychological pain on them -- and turning them into prostitutes, in the end.
But this is not exactly what every viewer would see in the film. They might ask, for instance, if being gay is so hard, how come Ali (Anoush's boyfriend) doesn't feel marginalized, isolated, or even under any kind of pressure?
Ali likes Anoush even before Anoush does the sex-change operation and while he still has male sexual organs. So if Iran is so cruel to homosexuals and hangs them, how come Ali is still not only walking, but working as a hairdresser and even is so comfortable with his name, face and identity be revealed by the film?
Ali's character, in my mind, is the most important one in the film and he is the one that undoes the main message of them film. He is a living evidence of how homosexuality exists in Iran and how and why it is tolerated, and Eshaghian fails to bring it into her core message of the film.
He shows how homosexuality, as a social phenomenon, doesn't exist in Iran because the lines between being straight and gay has historically been blurred in the Iranian culture. Sexuality has never been forced into strict categories in Iran and this could be quite related to what Judith Butler argues in her work.
But the film is also dishonest in details. The most important part, which is also central to the core of the message, is when she shamelessly mistranslates the young cleric who defends sex-change operations. He says transsexuality has nothing to do with homosexuality which is "immoral and irreligious". But guess how it is translated by Eshaghian to twist his logic: "something unnatural and against religion." Wow!
I don't want to get into the list of funders and producers of the film. But I can't resist the temptation of raising two questions. Especially given the continuous anti-Iran propaganda the BBC Two has produced and showed in the past few years.
a) Why Alexandra Kerry's name (Yes, John Kerry's daughter), as a co-producer is missing from the BBC credits?
b) Why the name of another co-producer, Ilan Ziv, an Israeli film-maker and producers with such films as Human Weapon (on the history of suicide bombing traced back to Iran), People Power (on 'non-violent revolutions around the world' with insight from Gene Sharp, 'a leading expert on non-violent struggles') is also removed from the BBC credits?
Posted by hoder at February 27, 2008 1:37 PM| TrackBack
Well, as a straight man living in England, and watching this programme, the message I got from it was the terrible pain and anguish that homosexuals have to endure by a government that kills people for loving someone of the same sex.
But I do see the point, that to some straight men they would have overlooked the hurt that was shown and seen this as a moderate alternative.
But I very much doubt that 'that sort' would have even watched it.
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This film and other likes, usually try to portrait an essential and homogeneous picture of Iran as a devil. They simply overlook the fact that what would happen if the same scenario occurs in the west. i.e. in a rural part of Ireland or US ,Germany or Italy to say; one finds out that his son is gay or transsexual. What would he have done? Are all people in the west clear and open-minded about gays?
I doubt it.
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For anyone interested in the dynamics of wielding a liberal cause as a bludgeon against the demonized Other, here's an interesting take on '"Queer" As A Tool Of Colonial Oppression: The Case Of Israel/Palestine' by Blair Kuntz:
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=10756
Also, discussion on this issue beteween minutes 18-53 here:
http://outfm.org/images/stories/2007/03/070312_100001outfm-dst.mp3
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Amin,
I will only comment on your peceptions regarding this issue in the West (not in Iran - because i don't have much personal experience with this in Iran). I don't know how much you know about sex reassignment surgery in the West. But it does happen here too. It is hard and not as accessible because it is a very expensive procedure. I work in a clinic with many trans-sexual/gendered individuals, who would die to have the surgery and have expressed much interest in how easily this is being done in Iran. Granted, I personally believe that people undergoing this surgery need much counselling before and after (people here also commit suicide both before and after the surgery) but the responses you get from these individuals themselves living in the West is very different than what you have perceived it to be. Homosexuality is not the same thing as Transsexuality. Please get informed and educated about these topics before posting any other comments.
my 2 cents.
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I am surprised that such a homosexual like you hoder is against an attempt to show teh reality of the lives of homosexuals in your filithy Islamic republic where human repression is the paramount creed.
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hoder we cant see that in us,is there any link for youtube?
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You are right. But the good thing is the spin propaganda does not work as it used to do so. People are bored with this kind of BS and switch to the X-Factor, Strictly Come Dancing etc... Funny, huh? What goes around comes around.
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Rubbish. You are not getting the point. That programme was a pro-Iran, not an anti-iran programme. It didn't clearly concluded what a horrible crime the govenment of Iran is doing agaist homosexuals or what they call it "transexuals". You failed to understand those people's feeling. They wouldn't operate and cut a part of their body if they lived outside Iran. They undertake such a dangerous operation and tolerate the pain of being isolated from their family only because they want to live freely in Iran without harrassment from the society. They operate because if the pressure and harrassment of our stupid society and the government. They operate because they get arrested by the police for their faminine behaviour. Did you hear it was mentioned in the programme that majority of them after operation commit suicide? Do you know why this operation is not common in west? Because it is harmful, because it is something unnatural. The government of Iran by giving grants and encouraging homosexuals to operate is cheating them, not helping them. Watch the programme again and see the last scene when the girl talks about her desperate situation and and cries.
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