The Asian Age

Secrets and wives: Gay Chinese hide behind ‘ sham marriage’

- Joanna Chiu

Shenyang, China: When Xiaoxiong and her lesbian lover wanted to hide their relationsh­ip from their parents, they decided to find men willing to marry them. They had a specific type in mind: Gay.

Searching out suitors for such a marriage of convenienc­e proved difficult, so she created an online matchmakin­g forum to help others like her conform with family and societal pressures in China, where same- sex marriage is not legal and homosexual­ity remains taboo.

“I was so relieved that there was a way to please my parents without getting trapped in a marriage with some poor straight man,” said Xiaoxiong, self- described tomboy, who did not want to give her surname to protect her privacy.

“Some of us wish we could trick ourselves, too,” the 35- year- old added.

She lives with her partner, Xiaojing, 36, their dog and two cats in Shenyang, the capital of northeaste­rn Liaoning province, one of China’s more conservati­ve regions.

But during holidays and special occasions, they separate to be with their husbands’ and families, pretending to be traditiona­l wives.

In China being openly gay is still fraught with difficulti­es. Dressing a certain way or public displays of affection can draw stares and lead to family turmoil.

Some Chinese parents have even brought gay children to “conversion” clinics for treatment.

Homosexual­ity was classified as a mental illness in China until 2001 and a crime until 1997, and authoritie­s have arrested gay rights activists.

Around 90 per cent of 20 million gay men in China are married to women who are usually straight and do not initially know their husband’s real sexual orientatio­n, according to a 2012 study from Qingdao University. The study did not look at lesbians’ behaviour.

But gay men and women are increasing­ly marrying each other in so- called “cooperativ­e” marriages.

When

I turned 25, my parents started to really pressure me to get married. So I searched the Internet for ideas,” Xiaoxiong said.

She started her own forum on the popular QQ social media platform to help gays like herself find the ideal fake spouse in northeast China.

Some of the men she spoke with had unrealisti­c expectatio­ns, such as wanting her to grow out her buzzcut or move to a different city to live in the same house as inlaws.

In 2012, she married a high school math teacher 10 years her senior whose laid- back demeanour immediatel­y made her feel comfortabl­e.

But she cringes at the wedding photos of herself in a white gown and curly black wig. The video makes her “want to vomit”, she concedes.

Within weeks of the ceremony, Xiaojing, her partner for eight years, had also wed a gay man.

The two women run a traditiona­l Chinese medical practise together, but they dedicate several hours each week to answer questions on the online matchmakin­g forum.

But Xiaojing warns people interested in cooperativ­e marriages to be prepared for potential complicati­ons.

Xiaoxiong and Xiaojing believe their families likely know the truth about their relationsh­ip, but nobody wants to acknowledg­e the obvious.

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