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NOT
SO GAY PARIS
CITY
OF LIGHT SHUNS ITS DARK-SKINNED CITIZENS
BY GLENN WHEELER ( nowtoronto.com
)
Paris -- the number 6 train
shoots up out of the ground headed west from
Montparnasse Metro station, and we're suddenly
sailing on elevated track with greenery on both
sides. Ah, Paris. This is the city of food,
the Louvre and love. And, more specifically,
a refuge for the passions. How many queers have
fled here to escape their less forgiving home
countries? James Baldwin, Henry James, Oscar
Wilde....
But an exploration of Paris
haunts tells me it's not the sanctuary it once
was. In fact, a darkness has descended over
the City of Light. This is a burg that can elect
a gay mayor born in Tunisia but at the same
time vote in overwhelming numbers, as it did
earlier this year, for the anti-immigrant party
of Jean-Marie Le Pen.
"No one ever talks about
that now,'' sighs our host about the national
embarrassment caused by Le Pen's shocking first-round
election result earlier this year. Mercifully,
he was wiped out in the final. Then she heads
off on her holidays, leaving us an apartment
where you see the Eiffel Tower from the kitchen
window.
"The tower is friendly,''
French literary critic Roland Barthes wrote,
"connecting me above Paris to each of my
friends who I know are seeing it.''
But the camaraderie is selective.
There are really two cities here. One is in
the inner arrondisements (districts), where
the twinkle of the Eiffel Tower continually
makes unexpected appearances as you round the
corners. The other comprises the districts to
the east and the suburbs, beyond the shining
tower and the highway known as the Périphérique
that encircles Paris like a medieval wall. Here,
Arabs and other minorities crowd the apartment
blocks where crime and despair are the order
of the day.
If you want a measure of this
racial divide, all you need to do is check out
the gay/lesbian scene. On the walls of the Paris
gay and lesbian community centre are photos
from this year's Pride parade. But there's something
odd about the display: no black- or brown-skinned
partiers are depicted. Nor do you see many off-white
faces on a Saturday night in the gay cruise
bars, many of which are in the Marais, a tangle
of narrow streets that's now the improbable
home of both Orthodox Jews in yarmulkes and
coiffed gays in white tank tops.
But on Sunday nights in a club
known as the Folies Pigalle, located not in
the gay quarter but on the same street of sex
shops and strip clubs as the celebrated Moulin
Rouge cabaret, gay "beurs" (as French-born
Arabs prefer to be called) do what they can't
do at home -- be themselves.
On the balcony of the club,
there's a guy wearing a Jordan basketball jersey
who's so tall his head brushes the ceiling,
while more diminutive guys with 29-inch waists
display their keys conspicuously on their right
side, the telegraphing of submissive sexual
desire understandable in any language.
These "tea dances'' (6
pm to midnight on Sundays) are hosted by Kelma,
a gay beur group whose Web site (www.kelma.org)
gets hits not only from Paris but from guys
in Muslim countries. The musical lubricant at
the Kelma soiree is heavy on rai, the techno
version of traditional North African folk music.
The highlight of the weekly
party is the contest to pick the sexiest black
or beur in a bathing suit. Kelma president Fouad
Zeraoui emcees, asking the contestants, "Quel
age avez vous, quelle origine?'' Everyone has
an answer -- Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, the
Maghreb, Guadeloupe -- though these are the
birth countries of their parents, not places
most of them have ever visited. It's significant
that no one says "France.''
Of course, the muscle guy with
the big pecs wins. Then at midnight, studs turn
into Cinderellas and rush for the door to catch
the last commuter train to the suburbs.
I meet Zeraoui again the next
day, this time outside the Belleville Metro
station. It's only a few stops from the Paris
of baguettes, brasseries and tourists, but it
may as well be on the other side of the world.
The people spewing from the
rush-hour trains wear flowing African robes
and Muslim caps. A man next to me gives traffic
directions in Arabic to a passing motorist,
and another passes the time reading a Chinese-language
paper. The few white people have the drawn faces
and tattered clothes of poor people everywhere.
We repair to a shisha joint
down the street, and soon appear the hookah
pipes and ash of apple that Eastern people around
the world are fond of smoking. The level of
homophobia among young beurs is intense, he
explains, because unlike the France their fathers
came to 30 years ago to build a life, this country
has nothing to offer the progeny: no jobs, no
understanding.
"So they hate,'' Zeraoui
explains as the white smoke from our pipes bathes
our conversation in a bigger and bigger cloud.
It's especially difficult for young gay beurs
whose brothers have turned to religion. "Some
get violent,'' he says.
The city's layout makes the
problem worse, Zeraoui says, because suburban
beurs live among their own tribe, without the
liberalizing influences of mainstream French
culture. "They live in a ghetto, and they
watch everybody. They have a satellite dish
watching Arab TV. They live like they do in
the (rural) areas of North Africa.''
The young gay person faces
a painful dilemma, Zeraoui explains, because
family is so central in Arab life, exerting
an emotional pull as strong as the gay life
at the other end of the train line. "We
don't really have a concept of being merely
an individual, outside the family,'' he says.
"It's a comforting presence, and even the
gay son doesn't want to give that up.''
It's quite an indictment of
French society, I muse as I make my way back
toward the Eiffel Tower. What do others in the
gay community have to say? Curious, I get together
with Micha Meroujean Karapetian of the gay/lesbian
Armenian association of France. As he sits at
Le Troisième Chinon with his café
noir and a smoke, he could be just another Parisian
on a summer evening. But he's of recent vintage,
having arrived as a refugee in 1995 from his
native Armenia, where being gay is still enough
to get you shoved around by the cops.
"In Paris being gay is
no big deal,'' he says. The only thing, he says
as an afterthought, is that you must fit within
the confines of what it means to be a "French
citizen."
"They don't understand
multicultural,'' he says, adding forgivingly,
"I don't think there's any racism in the
Paris gay scene.''
Maybe there isn't. Maybe
"racism'' is too crude a word to describe
the tensions that swirl around this country,
which, while it wonders what to do with its
young beur population, also faces a threat from
the far right. A country that thinks so much
of its past is at a loss about how to deal with
the present.
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