Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago-based gay-tour company’s trip to Ethiopia in doubt after threats

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO, STAFF REPORTER sesposito@suntimes.com | @slesposito

Rogers Park-based Toto Tours offers its mostly gay clientele trips to far-flung locales all across the globe: Sumatra, Bhutan, Macedonia — just to name a few.

But a “Treasures of Ethiopia” trip planned for late October is now in doubt after religious groups in the notoriousl­y antigay East African country recently got wind of it, sparking a firestorm on social media.

“I’m stunned,” said Toto owner Dan Ware, who has run the business out of his home since 1990.

The Toto website features a rainbowcol­ored globe and says, “Welcome to Toto Tours, where gay men, lesbians, their close friends and adult family members are invited to travel together to discover all the delights this world has to offer.”

Ware, 66, says he’s been inundated with emails and phone calls — many hateful — ever since an Ethiopian blogger posted a comment about Toto and the trip last month.

“They took offense at this and they figure, incorrectl­y, that we are coming there to make some sort of political statement — to advocate for gay rights in Ethiopia, to disrespect their culture and their religion,” Ware said. “Nothing could be further from the truth.”

Ware, who recently returned from a trip to Bulgaria and Romania, said he suspects the religious groups keyed in on a Toto social media post about the planned trip that promised to “rock you at the rock churches of Ethiopia” — a reference to the country’s famous rock-cut places of worship.

Angry emails quickly followed, including, said Ware, this one:

“Forget your planning to visit Ethiopia as a group of gays!!! You will never go back in ONE piece!!! All people are angry at you. Be careful.”

So far, five people have booked places on the 16-day, $7,900 tour, Ware said.

“Our clients are profession­als — they are lawyers, doctors, diplomats, people who are well-placed in the world,” Ware said. “They’ve seen a lot of the traditiona­l places and they want to explore more off the beaten track.”

In some 30 years of business, Ware said his groups have experience­d almost no antigay hostility.

“We are completely under the radar,” said Ware, who often accompanie­s clients on the trips. “None of our clients want to be broadcast as being gay, especially in the environmen­t where it’s not accepted.”

Ware said the status of the Ethiopia trip is up in the air. He has reached out to the U.S. State Department and the U.S. embassy in Addis Ababa. Ware said he reached a diplomat at the embassy Wednesday, who told him to take the online threats with “a grain of salt.”

During his time stationed in Ethiopia, the diplomat has never heard of any American LGBTQ visitors being attacked, Ware said he was told.

“It was very reassuring,” Ware said. On its website, the state department cautions travelers to “exercise increased caution when traveling in Ethiopia due to sporadic civil unrest and communicat­ions disruption­s.”

The Lonely Planet online travel guide cautions LGBT travelers: “In Ethiopia and the rest of the Horn, homosexual­ity is severely condemned — traditiona­lly, religiousl­y and legally — and remains a topic of absolute taboo. Don’t underestim­ate the strength of feeling.”

For now, the upcoming Ethiopia tour remains on the website.

“The tour is planned for October; I have to make a decision about it soon,” Ware said.

 ?? PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Dan Ware, owner of the Rogers Park-based Toto Tours — which serves a mostly gay clientele — is shown on a trip to Tunisia. An upcoming trip to Ethiopia is now in doubt.
PROVIDED PHOTO Dan Ware, owner of the Rogers Park-based Toto Tours — which serves a mostly gay clientele — is shown on a trip to Tunisia. An upcoming trip to Ethiopia is now in doubt.

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