Chattanooga Times Free Press

A transgende­r paradox, and platform, in the Philippine­s

- BY AURORA ALMENDRALN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

MARIA RESPONDO, Philippine­s — Angel Cabaluna dusted makeup onto her thighs, styled her hair in loose curls and applied smoky eye shadow that glittered on her lids.

As this hamlet of cornfields and concrete houses prepared for festivitie­s honoring its patron saint, and as some people gathered in prayer, Cabaluna, 20, was primping to compete in an annual transgende­r beauty pageant.

“This is our passion,” she later said.

Dominated by conservati­ve morals taught by the Roman Catholic Church, the Philippine­s is also one of Southeast Asia’s most tolerant countries toward gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgende­r people. And lawmakers are taking steps to ensure national legal protection­s that would penalize discrimina­tion against them.

At the pageant, children sat cross-legged in the dirt, crowded close to the spindly stage where the contestant­s spun and danced in red feather headdresse­s, gold brocade and clouds of tulle. The crowd laughed and cheered as they delivered flowery speeches, weaving jokes with witty rhymes, beauty-queen platitudes and proclamati­ons on gender equality.

In a nearby chapel, the pageant’s blaring pop songs mixed with the steady rhythm of churchgoer­s reciting the rosary.

About 80 percent of Filipinos are Roman Catholic, and the church’s teachings often dominate public life in the Philippine­s. Still, Cabaluna, who considers herself very religious, said: “LGBT are now accepted. We are very welcome.”

While there are no laws criminaliz­ing homosexual­ity in the Philippine­s, there are no laws specifical­ly protecting gay or transgende­r people, either.

Geraldine Roman, the country’s first openly transgende­r member of Congress, is spearheadi­ng efforts to broaden legal protection­s in the Philippine­s.

For nearly 20 years, conservati­ve politician­s, backed by Catholic and evangelica­l groups, have thwarted anti-discrimina­tion measures, arguing they would infringe on people’s right to religious expression.

But in September, with Roman at the helm, a bill prohibitin­g bias on the basis of sexual orientatio­n, gender identity or expression passed the House of Representa­tives unanimousl­y.

The speaker of the House, Pantaleon Alvarez, followed the success by introducin­g a civil partnershi­p bill that seeks to give gay and transgende­r couples the same legal rights as married ones.

“They have the right to support each other,” Alvarez said. “It’s the duty and obligation of the government to protect them.”

A survey published by the Pew Research Center in 2014 found that 73 percent of Filipinos said gay people and lesbians should be accepted by society. By comparison, near neighbors Indonesia and Malaysia polled at 3 and 9 percent.

Attitudes in the Philippine­s were comparable to countries such as Britain and Italy, and ahead of the United States, where acceptance is at 60 percent. The survey found tolerance is correlated with rich, secular societies.

Cabaluna, an accounting student, feels accepted by her family and said gay and transgende­r people are “rampant” at her university. And while she finds the pageants thrilling, she also sees them as a platform for advancing gender equality.

At church, “we are allowed to wear girls’ clothes,” Cabaluna said. She has heard priests extol the same advice her mother told her: Regardless of your gender, what matters is being a good person before God and family.

Still, the widespread tolerance hides deep veins of disapprova­l.

The Rev. Renante Rabanes, who offered the Mass at the festivitie­s for St. Vincent, the hamlet’s patron saint, said: “Transgende­rs are against the church. They are destroying what God gave them.”

That night, Cabaluna was crowned queen of Maria Respondo, in a pageant far better attended than the Mass.

Jan Gabriel Melendrez Castañeda, an advocate on behalf of gay and transgende­r people in Southeast Asia as part of several organizati­ons, said, “Filipinos are used to contradict­ions.”

Castañeda said that unlike other countries in the region, such advocacy groups can operate legally and relatively safely here.

Still, 41 transgende­r people were killed in the Philippine­s between 2008 and 2016, the highest rate in Southeast Asia, according to the Trans Murder Monitoring Project of the organizati­on Transgende­r Europe. A study published in The Philippine Journal of Psychology in 2014 found that gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgende­r Filipinos were twice as likely to contemplat­e suicide as their heterosexu­al peers.

President Rodrigo Duterte said while campaignin­g in 2016 that he supported same-sex marriage, and he said he has relatives who are gay.

“Definitely, the gays were created by God,” Duterte said on the campaign trail.

As a teenager he examined his own sexuality, he said: “When I was in high school, I did not know if I wanted to be a girl or a boy.”

Duterte’s supportive statements have not translated into changes to laws yet, though. Roman, the transgende­r legislator who is a member of Duterte’s political party, has expressed frustratio­n that the anti-discrimina­tion bill has not received more backing from him. She said passage would need “more political will.”

“Many politician­s in this country speak in favor of LGBT rights when election time approaches,” Roman said. “But when push comes to shove, they don’t show the love.”

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