After Escaping Certain Death in the Middle East, Gay Man Faces New Challenges in America. [Video] – The Good Men Project
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A young man’s life was in danger. Seen as too gay, too western, or both, his safety and that of his family were constantly threatened – even resulting in death of a family member. Thanks to hard work and a Fulbright scholarship, he was able to enroll in grad school and relocate to the United States. While his new home country offered a more hospitable environment for living an openly gay life, he quickly learned that while his life was no longer in danger, persecution of another kind was ever-present.
Transcript provided by YouTube:
00:10
It was 2003.
00:11
It was a hot summer day.
00:15
I was coming out of my work where I worked with an American company,
00:20
crossing the bridge, trying to take a cab to go back home after a long day of work.
00:25
I come the next day to work and one of my coworkers come to tell me the day before,
00:30
as I was crossing the bridge, him and his militia friends were driving over the bridge.
00:37
They saw me crossing the bridge and they thought that I was gay and – just because I was carrying
00:43
a passenger bag, and they considered us to be a Western gay kind of sign.
00:50
And they wanted to kidnap me and some, my family.
00:53
My friend, who is at work, who was working with the militia while working with me in
00:58
the company, he is the one who recognized me and he is the one who diverted them away
01:03
from attempting to kidnap me.
01:06
Fast forward from that date, one day I was sitting at home at night with my family.
01:12
I hear knocking on the outside gate and, you know, I walk out.
01:19
Someone on the other side of the door say that they are here for my dad.
01:24
They are tenants in his building, apartment building.
01:27
I opened the door and while it’s completely pitch black, you couldn’t see anything, all
01:35
I know someone was pointing a gun to the back of my head and saying that “We know that
01:42
you are infidel, we know that you are gay, you need to quit working with, you know, the…
01:48
the Americans or foreigners, and we will go after you and go after your family if you
01:56
don’t quit your… your behavior.”
01:58
Luckily I didn’t get shot at that day.
02:02
Run back home, you know, completely shivering and scared.
02:07
Obviously couldn’t tell my family that they started calling me gay, but I tell them they
02:11
are threatening me because of my association with an American company.
02:16
Shortly after this threat, my brother-in-law and his brother both got kidnapped and murdered.
02:22
Following that they went even further and they tried to attack my other sister on her
02:28
husband in their apartment and literally just by luck, they happened to be out of the apartment
02:34
for that day.
02:35
So from that point forward, I knew that there is absolutely no future for me there.
02:41
Shortly before that one of my friends had applied for a Fulbright scholarship program.
02:46
This is a program that’s sponsored by the Department of State and it enables exchange
02:52
students to come and study in the United States.
02:56
It was very competitive but I worked really hard for a year.
03:00
I got accepted to the Fulbright program.
03:03
I remember receiving that email and this was probably the most overwhelming congratulation
03:08
that I’ve ever seen or heard and my entire life because that was the moment that I knew
03:14
my entire life is about to change.
03:16
I got accepted into Syracuse University to do my Masters.
03:19
I was really excited about all of this.
03:23
I moved to the United States and everything in the beginning was overwhelming.
03:27
I was adjusting, making friends, meeting new people.
03:31
So as I started feeling a little bit more comfortable around my sexual orientation,
03:35
I started exploring ways to connect with other people that have similar, you know, sexual
03:42
orientation and the LGBT resource center and in Syracuse University was the first thing
03:47
that I could find and thought it would be a safe space for me to connect with them.
03:53
There was an event.
03:54
In the event.
03:55
I started meeting people.
03:57
People obviously started asking about my background, where I’m from, and one of them was saying,
04:02
“Hey, what are you doing after this?”
04:04
And I said, “I actually don’t have anything to do.”
04:07
So he said, “Oh, we’re, you know, meeting and having a party at a… at a house, if
04:12
you want to join us.”
04:14
You know, I said, “Yeah, that, you know, that is completely fine.”
04:17
His friends came to pick us up who ironically happened to be also from the Middle East.
04:23
And I very quickly realized that their intentions was to go to a party or just, you know, chill
04:30
or, you know, just talk or eat or drink or whatever it is… that they actually were
04:36
fetishizing me.
04:37
And when they expressed the idea that, “Hey, let’s go and have sex,” when I was like,
04:44
“I’m not sure.”
04:47
The guy that was driving the car comes from the Middle East, he said “Maybe he is not
04:51
into it.”
04:52
The other guy, he’s like, “Come on, who doesn’t have a Middle Eastern fetish.”
04:59
I realized, you know, there’s a mix of people some of them will continue to see me just
05:06
as a fetish, and some of them were really wonderful and continue to be friends of mine
05:12
until today.
05:13
Fast forward, I graduated, I finished my degree and went to Boston, started seeing more of
05:20
the microaggressions around my other parts of my identity, but wasn’t prominent enough
05:26
for me to actually raise the alarm and say, This is something that I’m going to be suffering
05:30
from in the future.
05:31
However, all of that started changing very quickly after moving to New York.
05:37
I remember very clearly a very senior professional at a company, literally he said, “So you
05:45
are gay. You are Muslim.
05:48
You are from the Middle East.
05:49
You are an immigrant.
05:51
I don’t know if I should love you or hate you.”
05:55
And he say that relatively jokingly, but the message was loud and clear.
06:01
The tone is being set for how people like me will be perceived from the top.
06:07
Even though the United States at the time was that the right decision and I don’t regret
06:14
It opened a lot of doors for me.
06:15
But I feel that the society here puts a cap on you as well.
06:20
So I am realizing very quickly whether the United States will continue to be opening
06:26
those doors for me, or if I have maxed out on, you know, my opportunities here and my
06:32
future here.
06:34
And I know many people might look at my story and think, “You basically came out, you
06:41
know, of harm way.
06:42
And the bigger picture, the United States is really a blessing for you.
06:48
Why’re you complaining?”
06:49
I think my answer to people that might be thinking this way – in each context, and then
06:58
each environment, each problem is… is big for the context of that situation and for
07:04
that scenario.
07:06
Just because I am not being threatened and there isn’t a gun being pulled… pulled
07:08
and you know, put in my head or in my family, it doesn’t minimize the issues that I have
07:19
But I can guarantee you many people will have the exact same challenges.
07:24
This is not just my story.
07:26
This is really the story of thousands and thousands that live today in the United States.
07:31
It’s just that they go completely unnoticed every day, because there are other issues,
07:38
or people are not recognizing that when you combine those components of your identity,
07:45
it creates a completely new challenge for you that doesn’t necessarily fit in any bucket
07:51
that that people recognize and associate with.
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This post was previously published on YouTube.
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Photo credit: Screenshot from video