-Caveat Lector-

"In Pashtun society, man-woman love was the one that dared not speak its
name: boy courtesans conducted their affairs openly."

This is some sick, sick shit. It seems to directly contradict the claims of
the homosexual activists like Andrew Sullivan who keep insisting that
homosexuality is not allowed in Afghanistan. To the contrary it seems
to be favored. This is a most curious phenomenon because it seems to have
similarities to rampant homosexuality among the Nazi SS.

BTW, there is a eye-opening book about that by Scott Lively called The Pink
Swastika - Homosexuality in the Nazi Party

http://www.abidingtruth.com/pinkswastika/book.html.





__________________________________

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/0,,7-2001344218,00.html



Repressed homosexuality? - The Taleban

News/Current Events Breaking News News Keywords: TALEBAN HOMOSEXUALITY
Source: UK Times
Published: OCTOBER 5 2001 Author: Michael Griffin
Posted on 10/05/2001 10:52:27 PDT by HowardJarvis
http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3bbdf35b127b.htm


Seven years after the Taleban movement was founded, the features of its
leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, are unknown outside Kandahar, where he lived
with his wife and children until the events of September 11. He has been
described as about 44 years old and 'unusually tall' for an Afghan;
alternatively 'heavy-set' or 'distinguished'. His right eye is stitched
shut, the result of an encounter with Soviet soldiers when he was a
Mujahidin commander with the Harakat-I Inqilab-I-Islami Party. The left
eye, his few visitors allow, has a 'hawk-like, unrelenting' gaze.

He assiduously cultivates this air of enigma in a refusal to be
photographed, and by delegating all but the most crucial encounters with
non-Afghans to colleagues or underlings. He has visited Kabul once since
the Taleban captured it five years ago. What scant media access the Mullah
permits tends to reinforce his image as a sphinx-like visitor from another
plane of being.

The atmosphere in his immediate court, by contrast, is relaxed and
informal.

Commanders come and go, dipping their fingers into the communal cooking pot
and contributing at liberty to whatever discussion is going on. The Mullah
keeps a strongbox by his side, handing out expenses as and when required.
This is expected under the Pashtun tribal code, known as pashtunwali, in
which relations between men are seldom hierarchical.

Muhammad Omar's first explanation of the Taleban's mission was that it had
arisen to restore peace, to provide security to the wayfarer and to protect
the honour of women and the poor. But the rise of the mullah under the
Taleban proved to be less a return to the elusive values cherished in
pre-communist times than the stupefying of a spiritual tradition that once
traced its origins back to the footsteps of the Prophet.

The sayed, the pir and the alim, Afghanistan's spiritual aristocracy,
comprised a legacy that combined 'High Church' trends in Islamic thought
with a popular belief in spirit possession and anchored them in the
everyday life of the village. The Taleban buried them all and the mullah, a
cross between a country parson and a Shakespearean clown, recited the
funeral rights.

The young taleb, or religious students, who rallied to the cause were the
product of the Deoband school of Sunni thought, founded 130 years earlier
in Uttar Pradesh, India. The Deobandis represent the extreme of attempts to
regulate the personal behaviour of their pupils, having issued nearly a
quarter of a million fatwa on the minutiae of everyday life since the
beginning of the 20th century.

Boys enter the system as wards, exchanging life in a poor family for bed,
board and an austere catechism that will one day lead to life as a mullah.

It is tempting to identify in this early separation from female relatives
the origins of the extreme misogyny that, even more than the objective of a
pure Islamic state, lent cohesion to the Taleban as they marched into and
subdued non-Pashtun lands.

But Taleban misogyny went so far beyond what is normally intended by the
word that it qualified as a kind of 'gynaeophobia' so broad that a glimpse
of stockinged foot or varnished nail was taken as a seductive invitation to
personal damnation.

Women had to be covered, closeted and, where necessary, beaten to prevent
more sin from being spewed into society. Part of this anxiety was sexual
and could be attributed to the highly charged rules of pashtunwali under
which girls embark on the perilous road to puberty at seven when they are
separated from boys and men. From then until marriage, youths have no
permissible contact with the opposite sex beyond the members of their own
family.

In Kandahar, the custom of seclusion had given rise to a rich tradition of
homosexual passion, celebrated in poetry, dance and the practice of male
prostitution. Heterosexual romance, by contrast, was freighted with the
fear of broken honour, the threat of vendetta and, ultimately, death by
stoning.

In Pashtun society, man-woman love was the one that dared not speak its
name: boy courtesans conducted their affairs openly.

The taleb grew to maturity on the gruel of orthodoxy, estranged from the
mitigating influence of women, family and village. This made early recruits
to the movement disciplined and biddable. If their gynaeophobia appeared
the product of a repressed homosexuality on the march, Taleban cohorts also
conjured up echoes of a medieval children's crusade, with its associated
elements of self-flagellation and an innocent trust in the immanence of
paradise.

The versatility of the Taleban elite, who alternate as military chiefs,
governors and ministers, as well as mullahs, combined with the ingrained
Afghan practice of adopting noms de guerre, argues in favour of the thesis
that the movement merely clothed its membership in ecclesiastical titles to
disguise their origins. This process of 'clericalisation' similarly
transformed each enemy defection into a Damascene conversion, just as the
enforcement of Sharia-based edicts in non-Pashtun regions added a patina of
religion to what was essentially the imposition of martial law.

It also veiled a coat rack of skeletons. 'Mullah' Muhammad Hassan, the
Governor of Kandahar, had nothing to do with the religious world before his
emergence as the Taleban's number three, while 'Mullah' Borjan, the
movement's Rommel until his death in 1996, was a former Afghan army officer
who had served under King Zahir Shah. Other military figures were in the
Afghan Army until 1992, making a mockery of Mullah Muhammad Omar's claim
that his goal was to rid Afghanistan of 'time-serving communists.'



__________
Michael Griffin is the author of Reaping the Whirlwind: The Taliban
Movement in Afghanistan

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