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Transvestiten, Haschisch und ekstatische Tänze: Ethnologe zeigt einen anderen Islam

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Als einer der grossartigsten Erfahrungsberichte der deutschen Ethnologie beschreibt Stefan Weidner in der Sueddeutschen das Buch Am Schrein des roten Sufi. Fünf Tage und Nächte auf Pilgerfahrt in Pakistan von Jürgen Wasim Frembgen.

Der zum Islam konvertierte Ethnologe und Leiter der Orient-Abteilung am Staatlichen Museum für Völkerkunde München verbindet seine Forschungsaufenthalte oft mit dem Besuch eines religiösen Festes. Sein Buch ueber seine Pilgerfahrt zeigt einen hierzulande wenig bekannten Islam auf:

Frembgens Teilnahme an der Pilgerfahrt zum Schrein des “Roten Sufi” Lal Schahbas Qalandar in der südpakistanischen Kleinstadt Sehwan zeigt einen Islam, der, wollte man ihn in westliche Vorstellungen übersetzen, sein Äquivalent im rheinischen Karneval oder dem anarchischen Potential des Flower-Power findet, gleichwohl jedoch, wie im Westen nirgendwo mehr, von Aberglauben, Askese und Spiritualität geprägt ist.

Ekstatische Tänze, permanenter Genuss von Rauschmitteln während des Festes, vor allem Haschischzubereitungen , die Anwesenheit von Tänzerinnen oder Prostituierten und zumal die sich gezielt zur Schau stellenden sogenannten Hidschras, die Kaste der Hermaphroditen, Transsexuellen und Transvestiten, verwischen auf archaische Weise jede von Religionsgelehrten gezogene Grenze.

>> weiter in der Sueddeutschen

Auf schwarzaufweiss.de wird jedoch die Religioesitaet des Ethnologen als Defizit angesehen:

Zum Schluss bekennt Frembgen, dass er mehr mit dem Herzen und weniger mit dem Verstand sehen will. Das mag für ihn persönlich erfüllend sein, wie Religion die Privatangelegenheit eines jeden ist. Für den Leser ist dies aber weniger von Interesse, er hätte lieber etwas mehr kritische Distanz zu solchen die Sinne berauschenden Festen, die ja auch dazu dienen, genau den Verstand der Menschen auszuschalten und sie in ihrer Abhängigkeits- und Leidenssituation zu belassen. Gern hätten wir in diesem Buch mehr an den Kenntnissen des Ethnologen und Islamwissenschaftlers partizipiert.

>> weiter auf schwarzaufweiss.de

>> Interview mit Frembgen auf newsline.com

SIEHE AUCH:

Saison in Mekka: “Dieses Buch ist eine Sensation”

In Egypt: Economy and perceptions of modernity change religious festival

Akbar Ahmed’s anthropological excursion into Islam

Doctoral thesis: Towards a transnational Islam

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Als einer der grossartigsten Erfahrungsberichte der deutschen Ethnologie beschreibt Stefan Weidner in der Sueddeutschen das Buch Am Schrein des roten Sufi. Fünf Tage und Nächte auf Pilgerfahrt in Pakistan von Jürgen Wasim Frembgen.

Der zum Islam konvertierte Ethnologe und…

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(updated) Server upgrade issues about to be solved

My hosting provider has moved antropologi.info to a new, faster and much better server (with php 5) last night, but this also means that some parts of the website no longer work as they should.

Links from some rss feed readers are broken (visit the front page instead) and the popular overview of anthropology blogs at http://www.antropologi.info/blog/ no longer works either (visit the overview at http://www.antropologi.info/feeds/anthropology instead).

I’ll try to fix this during the weekend.

I might upgrade the whole blog application which means that the layout might change a little bit as well (due to compatibility issues).

UPDATE:: In case you have problems with the rss-feed use the atom-feed http://www.antropologi.info/blog/anthropology/anthropology.php?tempskin=_atom

UPDATE 26.5.09 The new anthropology newspaper blogroll is online http://www.antropologi.info/blog/ I hope everything works now, otherwise I’ve found some alternatives. The “recent news” are back as well, the rss-links seem to work again, and within the next week, I’ll upgrade the whole blog application to the newest version

My hosting provider has moved antropologi.info to a new, faster and much better server (with php 5) last night, but this also means that some parts of the website no longer work as they should.

Links from some rss feed…

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Anthropology, islam and homosexuality

Anthropology student Lykke Bjørnøy sent me an article on homosexuality and islam that she wrote as part of her studies at the University of Cairo. She tries to understand why homosexuality often is demonized. Not only in Islam, but also in Christianity (and other religions I suppose), homosexuality is a touchy subject.

It is (as always) work in progress and Lykke Bjørnøy is interested in getting feedback and comments:

Are homosexuals impure according to Sunni Islam?

Written by Lykke V. Bjørnøy

Last year I lived in the noisy metropolitan city of Cairo. Living there as a western, blond girl, my thoughts about discrimination and womens’ rights was flourishing in my head. I have never been so visible in my life and I wondered: Are there other groups that are invisible, but feel even more visible than I did? I looked different than all the others. However, I didn’t feel different.

Almost every religion has an opinion about homosexuals, or at least a view on sodomy. In Christianity sodomy is considered as “a sin against nature” and it’s the same in Judaism where it’s written in Leviticus: “[A man] shall not lie with another man as with a woman” Leviticus 18:22), both Christians and Jews are referring to this particular verse when the issue about homosexuality is questioned.

Islam doesn’t have the same clear restrictions on this subject, like other religions, but there are several hadiths and views on the topic. Islam contains much more written and boundary filled sexuality than Christianity. The Qur’an for instance is filled with restrictions according to sex, how it’s done, who it’s ought to perform and what time it should be done. One of the reasons for this can be the prophet Muhammad behavior, he was a sexual man in a contrast to Jesus. For the Prophet to cope with all the difficulties that could appear concerning sexual actions and the interaction with all his wives, he made restrictions and rules that would help the participants to deal with the conflicts that could emerge.

However, rules that are related to the control and restrictions against sodomy and sex in general is not just special for Islam, but all the religions, there is a set of laws in most holy texts, especially about the outsiders and the un-traditional actions that can take place in a society. The religion creates boundaries for the participants hence; it’s a way to deal with elements that need restriction or are considered unusual. Homosexuals have a different position and status than the mainstream in a society, and sometimes they are not even acknowledged. The president of Iran, Ahmadinejad, said on Fox News that they didn’t have a problem with homosexuals because they didn’t exist. Even though Ahmadinejad is seen as a Shi’a, his point still stands, his impression of homosexuality is just another act of sodomy which is not prohibited.

In order to understand the reasons why homosexuals often are considered as heathens, and why they are frequently demonized, it is therefore necessary to examine the basis of the condemnation. Demonization is often related to sickness and disturbances and these themes will be discussed further as we go along.

Homosexuality as a sickness
If you ask any religious scholar about homosexuals you get many different answers. One of the issues that are frequently discussed is the linkage between homosexuality as a disease. And if it is a sickness is it curable? There are scientists who do research on this matter right now; the internet is loaded with organizations and pages that discuss this issue (www.narth.com). So why do some people have the cravings to solve the “un-normalities” in the society and why is it so frowned upon?

What is it about the homosexuals that are so obviously wrong that needs to be solved? One argument that has been questioned is the fact that homosexuals have no function in the society and in the world in general, hence there has to be something wrong with them. The lion eats the zebra, the zebra eats grass; the circle of life. With homosexuals the circle of life is not being fulfilled.

Mary Douglas argues in her book “Purity and danger” that every human has a certain feeling of order. That objects or people are seen as impure if they don’t fit in a specific system. If homosexuals don’t fit in circle of life, they cannot reproduce, for this reason they are seen as impure according to Douglas. Several imams states that “if everyone was a homosexual, the world would go under”, which is true in the long term, because there would be no reproduction. Or as I see it a perfect solution to solve the global problem of constant increasing world population.

Levi-Strauss’ argument about impurity builds around the imam’s statement. For him, impurity is often linked to progress and logic. He proves this by looking at why incest is prohibited in most societies. He claims that one of the reasons that incest is prohibited is because it only reproduces defected human beings, which in the long term would lead to the extinction of human kind. If homosexuality is seen as impure because of their lack of reproducing skills, then why would God created them?

Most religious scholars reject the fact that it’s biological, by that I mean that homosexuality is something one is born with or can inherit. This is often stated because God doesn’t differentiate between people, we are all children of Adam according to the Sunni tradition. The hollowness in our stomachs, the lack of control, these are all factors that make us all similar (Katz, 2002:177.) In spite the fact that we all are made from the same foundation, Adam lost his purity in the Garden of Eden because apparently – no man is perfect. Since humans are not faultless there are stories in the Qur’an and in the Bible about what happens to people that don’t behave themselves, commit sins or disobey God.

The most famous one is the story about “The People of Lot” that exist both in the Quran and in the Bible. “The people of Lot” commits sins, like sodomy. The word homosexuality is of course not mentioned in the Qur’an or the Bible because it’s a modern expression. We can’t find an expression that is even comparable with the English term that was first used in the early 19th century, but the closest we get to homosexuality in is the act of sodomy (Qur’an:302).

The People of Lot got punished by God for their behavior and their towns were “turned upside down, and rained on them stones of backed clay, in a well arranged manner one after another” (Quran: 82) Apparently, these cities were in Palestine which today is the Dead Sea. This is the only punishment mentioned towards sodomy, however it’s pretty brutal. There are discussions about how sodomy ought to be punished today in some countries especially the Arab world, some scholars say that they should be stoned to death and get the same treatment as those who commit adultery, on the other hand this interpretation of the Qur’an has been created after the time of the Prophet Mohammed and has its origins from the hadiths and not the Holy script itself.

In the legal sources there has been differentiated between a grand and a petty sodomy. The grand sodomy is the action that takes place between two men and requires death of both participants (Wright & Rawson 1997:116) according to legal sources. A petty sodomy is anal sex between a man and a woman, although sexual intercourse with the opposite sex is” legal” this action is also forbidden by the Sunni tradition (Ibid). Since the Qur’an doesn’t differentiate between peoples’ feelings for the same sex and the actions of sodomy, means that the acts of sexual intercourse is the factor that makes sodomy impure and forbidden, not the homosexuals themselves.

As I mentioned in the introduction, sexuality has been an important part of literature and has played a much bigger part in Islam rather than it has in Christian societies. The grand example of this sort of literature is “One Thousand and One Nights” that were written in the early 1900’s and is filled with stories which all have elements of sexual actions, including sodomy. The simplicity of the sexual actions that were taken place in these stories say that sexual actions were not frowned upon, but rather appreciated. Why sodomy has the status of being “The Sin” contains an arsenal of meanings. The sexual act of sodomy is seen as animalistic, and naturally the sexual image of dog sex may have it’s similarities to sodomy, since the modern term of anal sex is called “doggy-style” is not taken out of the blue.

Islam has its restrictions and guidelines toward sexual actions and distinguishes between minor and major ahdaths. One example of a major ahdath can be regular sexual intercourse. Reinhart argues in is article “Impurity no Danger” that there is no danger in being in an impure state as an answer to Douglas’ article. He argues that there is a lack of control that makes something impure, not that an object is out of place. Reinhart says that Douglas’s argument don’t stand because semen, tears and mothers milk is not seen as impure objects in Islam. So it’s the action of ejaculation that is seen as a lack of control and therefore gains the same status a laughter break-out during prayer.

On the other hand another anthropologist named Julie Marcus agrees with Douglas and says that the fluid of sexual liquid across the body boundaries is seen as crucial (Marcus 1992:78). In other words the only solution to prevent oneself from getting in a position of impurity, is control. Therefore, if one compares adultery with sodomy as comparable sizes the only way the actor cannot become impure, is restriction. And in fact if you resist your desires you get paid in heaven according to the Qur’an (Qur’an:200).

The social sexual hierarchy in Islam
One of the foundations in Islam are that women and men are ought to be treated equally since they are both made from the same soul (Qur’an:7.189). Men and women are different biologically and Islam has rules on how the sexes cooperate with their biologically differences towards Islam. There are restrictions on menstruation, childbirth, sexual actions etc. and these are all considered major ahdath so they require major ablution before entering a mosque or pray.

Marcus argues in is article “Islam, Gender and hierarchy” that there do exist a basic social hierarchy in Islam. She says that women are naturally under men in the social hierarchy. She claims that since women menstruate and give birth they are considered below men in the social hierarchy. The lack of control concerning menstruation places women in an impure position regularly, without the possibility to change her status. She continues in her article “hierarchy is achieved at the point at which women are constructed as uncontrolled (…)”(Marcus 1992: 88.). By this statement she says implicit that men have a way to control their impurity, hence achieve then the higher rank in the hierarchy.

I will take Marcus’ theory a little bit further and make the comparison with homosexuals. Where do they fit in Marcus’s theory? If we state Marcus theory as a fact, man to man sex doesn’t fit into the system. If the regular dichotomy doesn’t hold its normal position, the factor is then according to Douglas’s theory impure, because it’s a matter out of place, in other words it’s un-placeable. If the natural order in the sexual hierarchy is not maintained and when the inferior is changed with the superior we end up with two sizes that are exactly the same.

This theory still stands if one just discusses sodomy which could happen between the same sex and the opposite sex. It is honorable to be the penetrator and it’s a disgrace to be the one’s being penetrated (Wright & Rowson 1997:199). The ones who is the penetrator has the power and the ones receiving are the inferior and when the action is between two men the action itself creates a hierarchy not the actors themselves.

Conclusion
The concept of same-sex sexual interactions has a tendency to disgust religious scholars and an attempt of legalizing homosexuals’ rights is seen as another “Western influence”. One of the reasons why religious scholars don’t acknowledge homosexuals is that it is not written implicit in the Qur’an how to handle them, just the actions of sodomy. Homosexuality is “The Sin” in Islam; the causes are that the well-known and “normal” social hierarchy that is presented in the holy scripts and in nature as we know it, is being tampered with.

A meddled system always creates chaos, and at the same time destructs the natural order as well as creating impurity. Since the impurity is characterized by actions that are located in social hierarchies, the status of a homosexual is not seen as impure.

The fact that there are two masculine human beings having sexual intercourse Marcus’ hierarchy is not being fulfilled, where there ought to be one superior and one being the inferior. When the sexual hierarchy is in chaos, who is then there to help us get the system back on track, when religion is the one factor, according to Durkheim that creates a system in chaos. Since the sexual actions between two men create an unbalance, will there ever be a system that accepts the interactions between homosexuals?

Bibliography
Douglas, Mary “Purity and Danger” 1966
Marcus, Julie, “A world of difference. Islam and gender hierarchy in Turkey”, Sydney 1992
Katz, Marion Holmes, “Body of Text: The Emergence of the Sunni Law of Ritual Purity”
Ithaca, New York, U.S.A.: State Univ of New York Pr 2002,
Reinhart, Kevin “Impurity / No Danger” University of Chicago;1990
Wright, W Jr. & Everett K. Rowsen “Homoeroticism in Classical Arabic Litterature” Colombia University Press: 1997
Dr. Muhammad Taqi-ud-Din Al-Hilali & Dr. Muhammad Muhsin Khan “Al-Quran” Islamic University, al-Medinah al-Munawwarah

SEE ALSO:

Native American Tribe Allows Gay Marriage

A subculture of hefty, hirsute gay men is attracting the attention of academics

An anthropologist on sex, love and AIDS in a university campus in South Africa

Researched the sexual revolution in Iran

Anthropology student Lykke Bjørnøy sent me an article on homosexuality and islam that she wrote as part of her studies at the University of Cairo. She tries to understand why homosexuality often is demonized. Not only in Islam, but also…

Read more

Rosengård: “Snakk heller om makt enn kultur”

Like etter at 40 flyktninger måtte flykte fra svenske nynazister fra Vännäs til Umeå fortsetter antropolog Aje Carlbom å skrive bekymret om “voldelige mannlige innvandrere” i Rosengård utenfor Malmø. “Carlboms diagnostisering av händelserna i Rosengård är som hämtade från en främlingsfientlig hemsida. Vetenskapens roll, menar jag, är en annan”, , skriver antropolog og sosiolog Diana Mulinari i en krass artikkel i Sydsvenskan.

“Rosengårds bränder handlar om manlighet”, skrev Carlbom:

De som står bakom de utmanande handlingarna är, såvitt jag har förstått, unga män med bakgrund i bland annat Afrika, Mellanöstern och östra Europa. De har sålunda socialiserats i miljöer där manlighet innebär något annat än i svenska medelklassmiljöer. Visst, flera av dem har växt upp i Rosengård som ligger i Sverige, men det är bara ett geografiskt konstaterande. Kulturellt är inte Rosengård en helt svensk stadsdel.

Mulinari er dypt uenig med Carlbom. Maskuliniteten som skapes blant ungdommer i Rosengård er ikke mindre “svensk” enn den som synligjøres i form av en mobb som trakasserer flyktninger i Vännäs:

Den form för maskulinitet som skapas i exempelvis Rosengård när pojkar och unga män utmanar polisen är, som Carlbom påpekar, utan tvekan problematisk men den är inte mindre ”svensk” än den som synliggörs i form av en mobb mot 40-tal försvarslösa flyktingar i Vännäs, i form av fotbollssupportrar på ett flyg mellan Malmö och Stockholm efter en match mellan Malmö och Djurgården, eller den manlighet som för det mesta göms i piketbussar med en jargong som normaliserat ord som apejävlar och hot om kastrering, för att ta några aktuella exempel.

Så låt oss istället prata om makt och konflikter. Låt oss prata om exkludering och motstånd. Låt oss prata om maskulinitet och våld. Men det förutsätter en vilja att diskutera, nyansera och reflektera. Att, som Aje Carlbom gör, förenkla, renodla och förvanska så att allt svenskt blir gott och allt utländsk blir ont, så att människor som är födda i Sverige och med svenskt medborgarskap förvägras rätten att bli kallade svenskar, det är inte bara dålig vetenskap utan bidrar också till att upprätthålla konflikten och problemen.

(…)

Kulturkritikern Slavoj Žižek hävdar i sin bok Violence att det är vårt ansvar som forskare att inte förföras av den mediemanipulering som synliggör vissa former av våld men osynliggör andra.

Kravet på att den nationella insatsstyrkan skulle marschera in i Rosengård är framsprungen av (över)exponeringen av ett visst våld på Rosengård. Samma TV-skärm visar aldrig det symboliska våld – för att låna sociologen Pierre Bourdieus begrepp – som Rosengårdsborna utsätts för.

>> les hele saken i Sydsvenskan “Nidbild av Rosengårds problem”

Se også tidligere innlegg om Carlbom Bekymret over “muslimenes avsondring” – Paranoid antropolog kritiserer mangfoldsideologien (men i FrP-saken om Rosengård avdramatiserte han situasjonen) og om Mulinari som kritiserer innvandringsforskningens fokus La oss studere normaliteten!

SE OGSÅ:

Har studert norsk forståelse av vold og minoriteter

Fri diktning om vold mot barn i “innvandrerfamilier”

– Vold mot kvinner handler ikke om kjønn eller ære

København: Diskriminering skaper brannstiftere

– Vi vet for lite om voldelige menn

Like etter at 40 flyktninger måtte flykte fra svenske nynazister fra Vännäs til Umeå fortsetter antropolog Aje Carlbom å skrive bekymret om "voldelige mannlige innvandrere" i Rosengård utenfor Malmø. "Carlboms diagnostisering av händelserna i Rosengård är som hämtade från en…

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Hvordan studere og forstå lidelse?

Kan vi forstå menneskenes lidelse gjennom å betrakte den på avstand, med forskningens nøkterne blikk? Medisinsk antropolog Lisbeth Sachs har i Svenska Dagbladet skrevet en fin tekst om en heller uvanlig artikkel i fagtidsskriftet Lancet.

Der har nemlig en av de store innen medisinantropologien, Arthur Kleinman, skrevet om sitt forhold til sin kone som har Alzheimer og forsvinner mer og mer i en verden han ikke lenger kan forstå. Hun kan ikke lenger lese, skrive, fortelle historier, kjenne igjen mennesker eller orientere seg i tid og rum.

“Den griper tag i läsaren på ett sätt som är ovanligt vid läsning av denna tidskrift, inriktad mot rapportering av medicinska forskningsresultat”, skriver Lisbeth Sachs:

Det Arthur Kleinman vill berätta är hur han långsamt lärt sig att bli en vårdare genom att vårda sin Alzheimersjuka hustru. I sin artikel skriver han om personer som i likhet med honom vårdar sina nära som lider av svagheter vid ålderdom, grava oförmågor, terminal sjukdom och de konsekvenser som hälsokatastrofer vid stroke och demens innebär.
(…)
Budskapet i Kleinmans berättelse om sin hustru Joan är att han inte kunnat tillgodogöra sig någon erfarenhet genom sin profession som psykiatriker och medicinsk antropolog kring hur det är att vårda. Det är endast genom att vara den vårdande parten i sitt äktenskap som han lärt sig vad det innebär. Som han säger, är det endast genom att vårda en älskad nära människa som han har lärt sig att bli en vårdande människa.

Det är inte förrän vi ställs inför den nära upplevelsen som vi inser det vetenskapliga kunskapssökandets begränsningar. Vi kan inte få en fördjupad förståelse av lidande genom att betrakta det på avstånd. Det som gör oss mänskligare är när vi deltar, agerar, svarar på det direkta tilltalet från vår omedelbara närhet.

Kleinmans nyeste bok heter What Really Matters: Living a Moral Life amidst Uncertainty and Danger. Der fins det en reproduksjon av Pablo Picassos bilde som viser en medisinstudent med et lukket og et åpent øye. Både medisinstudenten og antropologen bør derimot ha begge øyne åpne, mener Kleinman:

Kleinman gör iakttagelsen att en medicinsk student lär sig att ha ett öga öppet för patienters smärta och lidande men också att stänga det andra för att skydda sin egen sårbarhet inför smärta och lidande.

Även antropologen har sin reträtt, sitt slutna öga, då han lämnar bakom sig lidandet för att med distans beskriva det. Kanske är det så, föreslår Kleinman, att Picasso, som i flera av sina bilder låter ett öga se och det andra vara stängt, har kommit fram till en oroande moralisk insikt? Det Arthur Kleinman berättar om i sin artikel är hursomhelt hur han endast genom erfarenheten av att vårda en älskad människa lärt sig se lidandet med båda ögonen öppna.

>> les hele saken i Svenska Dagbladet

Lancet-artikkelen kan lastes ned gratis hvis man registrerer seg som bruker (gratis).

Det er noen få artikler av Kleinman på nett, bl.a. Anthropology in the Clinic: The Problem of Cultural Competency and How to Fix It. Han er blitt intervjuet av Boston Globe. Og på nettsiden til Durban University gir han skrivetips.

SE OGSÅ:

For en kultursensitiv psykiatri: “Hør på syke mennesker!”

Antropolog: Sykepleiere må kjenne pasientenes hverdag

Kulturens forakt for svakhet – eller: Hva er normalt?

Medicine as power: “Creates new categories of sick people”

Going native – part of the darker arts of fieldworkers’ repertoir?

Panic, joy and tears during fieldwork: Anthropology Matters 1/2007 about emotions

Kan vi forstå menneskenes lidelse gjennom å betrakte den på avstand, med forskningens nøkterne blikk? Medisinsk antropolog Lisbeth Sachs har i Svenska Dagbladet skrevet en fin tekst om en heller uvanlig artikkel i fagtidsskriftet Lancet.

Der har nemlig en…

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