Bangkok Post

OUT AND PROUD IN CHENGDU

China’s low-key ‘gay capital’

-

It’s Saturday night at the HUNK club in Chengdu and men in gold lycra shorts and black boots dance on stage. They wear kimonos, in an apparent tactical compromise with new morality codes creeping into China’s “gay capital”. But across town, young women still lounge on leather sofas drinking beer at a lesbian club, while a nearby bar is hosting an LGBTQ board game night.

Far from the administra­tive glare of Beijing, the cosmopolit­an southweste­rn city, dubbed “Gaydu” by Chinese millennial­s, has long cherished its reputation as a safe haven for a community that faces stigma and widespread harassment elsewhere in the country.

However, activists now say the city’s permissive streak is under threat, as the central Communist leadership puts the squeeze on the few bastions of sexual freedom across the country.

But Chengdu’s resilient LGBTQ community is not ready to be forced into the closet.

“There is some tacit acceptance by the authoritie­s, but it is very delicate,” said Matthew, an activist from the NGO Chengdu Rainbow, who requested use of his first name only.

The recipe for survival, Matthew says, is “making small progress” rather than big political and social statements that rattle China’s hyper-sensitive authoritie­s.

The mood in Chengdu started to sour in October when the MC Club was closed after explicit photos were posted online and local media reported that HIV infections had been linked to sex parties allegedly taking place at the venue’s sauna.

Some in the gay community say a spike in the number of domestic LGBTQ visitors — unable to travel abroad because of the coronaviru­s pandemic — had been drawing unwanted attention from city authoritie­s.

Major gay bars in the city were temporaril­y shut down, ostensibly to control a public health crisis.

Then, an activist told AFP, all of the city’s LGBTQ organisati­ons were suddenly investigat­ed.

China’s LGBTQ population still encounters discrimina­tion and lacks legal safeguards in a country that as recently as 2001 still classified being gay as a mental illness.

Gay marriage is still not legally recognised, despite mounting calls to introduce it, especially among the younger generation­s.

But major obstacles block their progress.

President Xi Jinping has overseen a drive against anything considered antithetic­al to Communist Party values — leaving little room for gay pride.

Beijing also frowns on large civil society mobilisati­ons of any kind.

In August, ShanghaiPr­ide — China’s longest-running annual LGBTQ festival — abruptly announced that it was shutting down for “the safety of all involved”.

No explanatio­n was given for why the event was pulled, but rumours abound of pressure on the organisers as the LGBTQ community is boxed-in by conservati­ve social values.

To locals, Chengdu is the final holdout.

They say the city’s gay-friendly ambience derives from its eclectic mix of ethnic minorities and cultures — as well as its distance from Beijing (1,800 kilometres) and the strictures of mainstream China.

The city’s allure is “its openness”, said activist Matthew, whose office is festooned with rainbow flags and posters reading “Be proud, Be yourself”.

“People here generally don’t care what your sexual orientatio­n is.”

Before it was shut, the MC Club was packed with about 1,000 people each night, an activist told AFP.

Its anything-goes reputation is the stuff of legend across the gay community in the city of 16 million.

One gay man told AFP he received a sexual massage in a sauna on the premises and had previously attended a party in the dark where no clothes were allowed.

China’s first widely reported gay

China’s permissive ‘gay capital’ refuses to fold despite more ominous signals coming from Beijing. By Helen Roxburgh in Chengdu

marriage took place in Chengdu in 2010 — a symbolic ceremony between two men as same-sex unions still have no legal basis.

Still, China’s rainbow community remains in the dark compared with counterpar­ts in many freer Asian countries.

People at gay bars contacted by AFP refused on-the-record interviews and most interviewe­es declined to be identified.

“These past few years, mainstream ideology became more aggressive and the LGBT community has been more marginalis­ed,” said Tang Yinghong, a professor who teaches sexual psychology.

At HUNK club, there are no rainbow flags and most clubbers chat quietly, holding hands.

Its dancers have recently added the kimonos to their kit to avoid the unwanted attention garnered by the MC Club, a patron told AFP.

Teacher Ray, who relocated to Chengdu this year, said he was uncomforta­ble with coming out at home in the northern city of Xi’an.

But “everyone in Chengdu knows I’m gay — my boss, some of my students’ parents, all of my friends”.

The secret to survival is avoiding noisy social and political advocacy, says Hongwei, a member of a Chengdu non-government­al organisati­on, using a pseudonym.

LGBTQ groups in the city instead focus on community needs such as psychologi­cal support and help for those coming out, while some readily report planned events to authoritie­s to keep everything above-board.

At a trendy teahouse in the city centre, same-sex couples snuggle together in wicker chairs and sip tea, without raising any eyebrows.

“I’ve never had anyone here tell me how to live,” says Hongwei, pouring out cups of green tea from a stylish black pot.

“We just manage our own business here, and don’t interfere with others.”

“I’ve never had anyone here tell me how to live. We just manage our own business here, and don’t interfere with others”

HONGWEI NGO worker in Chengdu

 ??  ?? The MC Club, a gay sauna in Chengdu, was closed in October after explicit photos of activity there were posted online. The incident has prompted many in the local LGBT community to adopt a lower profile.
The MC Club, a gay sauna in Chengdu, was closed in October after explicit photos of activity there were posted online. The incident has prompted many in the local LGBT community to adopt a lower profile.
 ??  ?? “These past few years, mainstream ideology became more aggressive and the LGBT community has been more marginalis­ed,” says Tang Yinghong, a professor who teaches sexual psychology in Chengdu.
“These past few years, mainstream ideology became more aggressive and the LGBT community has been more marginalis­ed,” says Tang Yinghong, a professor who teaches sexual psychology in Chengdu.
 ??  ?? ABOVE
Matthew, who requested that only his first name be used, runs Chengdu Rainbow, an NGO that focuses on issues in the LGBTQ community, in Chengdu.
ABOVE Matthew, who requested that only his first name be used, runs Chengdu Rainbow, an NGO that focuses on issues in the LGBTQ community, in Chengdu.
 ??  ?? At the HUNK club in Chengdu, the dancers dress modestly and patrons are low-key.
At the HUNK club in Chengdu, the dancers dress modestly and patrons are low-key.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand