

There is (outer) space for everyone - Anonymous
The Gay Question?

"Let's not pretend it doesn't exist,"
Lee Kuan Yew, 24 Apr, 2007 [Reuters]
I have asked doctors this -- that you are genetically born a homosexual because that's the nature of the genetic random transmission of genes, you can't help it
Lee Kuan Yew, 21 Apr, 2007 [St James]
But what we are doing as a government is to leave people to live their own lives so long as they don't impinge on other people. I mean, we don't harass anybody.
Lee Kuan Yew, Friday, December 11th, 1998 [CNN]

" "We are born this way, and they are born that way, but they are like you and me," "I
PM Goh Chok Tong, 4 July 2003 [Time]
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By Agence France-Presse, 02/09/2010
Malaysia's gay community begins to push the limits
When Malaysia's only openly homosexual pastor announced he was
establishing the nation's first gay church, the proposal was met
with a torrent of outrage and criticism. Reverend Ouyang Wen Feng
faced down threats to block the plan by government and religious
leaders who said it would encourage homosexuality -- still a crime
punishable by 20 years in jail in the Muslim-majority nation. The
church he co-founded has however been operating quietly in suburban
Kuala Lumpur for the past three years, drawing a group of gay
Christians for Sunday services and bible studies. Ouyang's battle is
part of a campaign being fought on many fronts in Malaysia, where
there is a growing sense of activism among the gay community which
is beginning to mobilise to fight for its rights. "We are working on
encouraging more people to join the church, for Christians to come
out and live authentic lives," says the pastor, who was married for
nine years until he "came out" publicly in 2006. "Whether one is gay
or straight or bisexual, they are sexual orientations, it is not
something we do that makes us gay." Ouyang says the church, which
also embraces bisexuals and transsexuals as well as welcoming
heterosexuals to its services, wants to help the community know they
are not "alone in fighting the battle". "When I was young, how I
wished someone who was good, highly admired and respected in the
society could come out and tell me 'I am gay too,'," says the
40-year-old. Homosexuality remains a social taboo across the racial
and religious spectrum in Malaysia, a conservative country which is
also home to large ethnic Chinese and Indian communities. Gay men
and women are a visible presence out in public, and on the Internet
where they are connected through online forums.
However, authorities periodically crack down on the thriving gay
scene, carrying out raids at gay-friendly bars or massage parlours,
leaving some with a constant fear of persecution. Few feel they can
declare their sexuality openly, and there was a dearth of groups
representing the community until 2008, when the first "Seksualiti
Merdeka" or "Sexual Independence" festival was held. Organiser Pang
Khee Teik, an art gallery owner, said he was inspired by rising
activism in the region. India and Nepal have de-criminalised
homosexuality in recent years, in Thailand the annual Gay Pride
festival is being revived, and even in conservative Indonesia there
is an annual gay film festival. "We thought the time was right to
replicate something similar in Malaysia," Pang says. "We are trying
to tell people: you have sexual rights whether the state recognises
it or not." "The long-term goal could be the repeal of laws against
sodomy and oral sex for instance," says Pang, adding that
anti-discrimination laws are also needed. The annual festival, which
includes talks, music performances and film screenings, has seen the
number of participants double from 400 in 2008 to about 800 last
year. It will be held for the third time later this year and has
managed to avoid any action from protesters or the authorities,
partly due to efforts to keep it low-key.
But
religious figures who have an influential role in Malaysian society
remain vehemently opposed to the new mood. A top religious body in
2008 also issued a "fatwa" or Islamic religious ban on lesbian sex.
"Homosexuality is going to destroy the world as we are not thankful
to God's creation and we are going against His wishes," says
outspoken Islamic cleric Harussani Zakaria. "Homosexuality is a very
bad thing. God has created men and women, how can it be man with
man, and woman with woman?" The gay community takes heart from small
steps, including a recent Malaysian Film Censorship Board decision
to reverse a ban on the depiction of homosexuality and allow gay
characters to be featured in films. But in an indication of the
distance campaigners still have to go, the new guidelines also
stipulate that gay characters must repent or go straight before the
credits roll. "They recognise that we do exist and that is a
something positive, at least," says Azri, who has a boyfriend of
five years, as he sips coffee at one of Kuala Lumpur's upmarket
shopping malls. "My ideal world is to be recognised as a couple and
enjoy the rights just like any other heterosexual couples," says the
boyish-looking 28-year-old. "We can't rush, we are slowly building
the momentum."
+5 Dec 2007 law reform
+19 Nov 2007 Selective +Tolerance
+22 Oct 2007 Tommorow the World
+27 Oct 2007 Thinking Aloud +377A 05 Oct 20 Sen Craig's Guilty
+02 Oct 07 Christianity's Image
+Aug 07, Hetero voice
+Hillsong 04 Aug 07
+Today 21 July 07
+377A - 20 July 07
+377A- 15 July 07
Major statutes
News headlines
8 May 08 - Homosexuality shows Singapore needs revival
17 Apr 2008 - S'porean charged for tracts
16 Apr 2008 - Christian TV Host comes out!
08 Apr 2008 - Anti-Gay Bishop Reid resigns over opposite sex scandal
29 Mar 2008 - SG more Gay friendly?
28 Mar 08 - Only Ethical Course
25 Mar 08 - Christian group not honest
19 Mar 08 - God's cure for gays
10 Mar 08 - 14 months for Refund
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+ BBC - Arch. Bishop Tutu Dec 17, 2007
+ MCC 1973 One God - Troy Perry
Rev Yap KH on Christian Dialog
+ Rev Mel White @ Safehaven 2007
+ Ordination of Rev. William R. Johnson, 1972
+ Peggy Campolo - Part 1
+ Peggy Campolo - Part 2
+ Jeremy Marks - Courage
+ Gene Robinson Interview
+ Rev Jay Bakker (son of Jimmy Bakker)

Once we were not a people, God's people now we are
A gay and lesbian people, A new community,
We once feared condemnation, On earth and from above
Until God's grace and mercy showed us the way of God
We are a holy nation, empowered and called by God
As prophets, teachers, healers, to spread good news abroad
to live and work together, God called us from the light,
Of gloom and isolation into a wondrous light
We are an exiled people, with bitter tears baptized,
today, as through the ages, rejected and despised,
But always there have been those transgendered folks like me,
To claim their way of loving and boldly speak its name
We are a pilgrim people, of every class and race,
from many sects and cultures, Now gathered in one Place
We challenge one another to bend and grow, and be
A Church where all God's children can find a family
Once we were not a people, God's people now we are
A proud, determined people, still striving to be free,
A gentle, loving people with justice as our aim,
A queer and righteous people, united in Christ's name
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