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Inside The World Of Istanbul's Male Belly Dancers

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  • Inside The World Of Istanbul's Male Belly Dancers

    INSIDE THE WORLD OF ISTANBUL'S MALE BELLY DANCERS

    The nation's shifting views toward homosexuality have opened the
    market for a centuries-old tradition

    By Tara Isabella Burton SMITHSONIAN.COM DECEMBER 9, 2014 10:05AM

    When Segah dances, everybody cheers. His hips slope then shake;
    the muscles on his stomach vibrate with the coin belt across his loins.

    The drumbeat speeds up. The glitter on his chest and the gold band
    around his neck catch the spotlight, reflecting its glare back to the
    hundreds of audience members - men and women alike - craning their
    necks to the stage.

    The lights dim. He blows a kiss. He puts his hand on his heart. He
    bows.

    Here at Chanta Music, a gaudy, velvet-lined nightclub off Istanbul's
    high-octane Istiklal Street, belly dancing - and the adulation its
    admirers confer - is not limited to women. Segah - who performs under
    his first name only - is a self-described zenne, one of several male
    dancers in Turkey's largest city to earn his living performing what
    Turks refer to as "Oriental dance," adopting traditionally female
    costume, roles and postures and adapting them to the tastes of an
    urban, socially liberal audience.

    Male belly dancing is hardly a new phenomenon in Turkey. Most zenne
    dancers date the practice back to the Sultan's court in the final
    centuries of the Ottoman Empire, when women were largely prohibited
    from performing onstage. Much as how boys would play women's parts
    in Elizabethan Shakespeare, young men - generally ethnic Greeks,
    Armenians, or Romani, drawn, often unwillingly, from the Empire's
    non-Muslim population - would be trained as dancers, adopt androgynous
    or feminine attire and makeup, and - in many cases - moonlight as
    paid courtesans to noblemen.

    In traditional Ottoman practice, the terminology of "gay" and
    "straight" was largely absence from discourse, as explained by scholar
    Serkan Gorkemli. Sexuality was more customarily defined as a matter
    of status/rank and sexual role. A higher-ranking nobleman would
    as a matter of course define himself as an active or penetrative
    sexual partner, one who would under other circumstances sleep with
    women; a zenne dancer would be expected to take on a more so-caled
    "feminine" sexual and social role. Regardless of whether or not sexual
    relations between dancers and their spectators took place, however,
    zenne dancing (and the watching thereof) was considered part of
    "mainstream" masculine culture..

    But after the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the rise of the secularist
    Ataturk government - which saw it as its mission to "Westernize"
    Turkey - zenne dancing, and its often-complicated sexual politics,
    fell out of favor.

    And so zenne lingered, mostly surviving in rural areas, including
    Turkey's more religiously conservative Eastern provinces of Turkey.

    There, zennes frequently perform (without a sexual element) for
    straight-identified male audiences says filmmaker Mehmet Binay,
    whose 2012 feature Zenne Dancer explores the friendship between an
    Istanbul zenne dancer, a German photographer, and a gay "bear" from
    the conservative Urfa province.

    "[In the East, zenne dancing] would not happen in a restaurant, would
    not happen in a wedding. It would happen in a closed house, [with]
    ten, 12 men sitting around drinking and [watching] a male dancer,"
    says Binay. Participating in traditional Eastern dance, he says,
    was something done by men and women alike. "We all belly dance at
    some point - even straight men - at least, we used to."

    Back when Binay and his collaborator Caner Alper started researching
    zenne in 2006, they saw it as a "vanishing culture" - found only in
    rural areas and in a few underground gay clubs in Istanbul.

    "We are very much under the influence of Western entertainment and
    culture and show business," says Binay. "Oriental" dance is no longer
    as popular in Turkey as it once was. Even among Istanbul's sizable gay
    community, for whom zenne dancing might have particular resonance,
    "people would rather watch drag shows or go-go boys. Male belly
    dancing was something [from] the past."

    But in the past half-decade, zenne dancing in Istanbul has gone
    mainstream: bolstered by the media attention paid to Binay and Alper's
    film as well as the success of gay crossover clubs like Chanta: which
    cater their zenne shows to a largely heterosexual, female clientele.

    "Zenne dancers were on the verge of extinction," says Alper, "but
    now they're back again. When we used to Google zenne, we'd find a
    few people - now there are like hundreds. Then, [the word zenne]
    was an insult, now it's..."

    "Fashionable," Binay chimes in.

    "Yes, fashionable. The sort of male belly dancing we see in
    contemporary clubs has actually evolved. It's no longer just Oriental
    belly dancing. It's become something else."

    The increased popularity of zenne dancing has been a boon for dancers
    like Segah, who has been performing at Chanta for two years, and been
    featured on television programs across Turkey and in Cyprus.

    Like many zenne dancers, Segah learned his art in a family setting,
    rather than from a formal teacher. "[Growing up], whenever my sister
    was doing housework she'd have music on in the background and she'd
    be dancing. Dancing was part of our daily routine."

    His mother was a cabaret singer, and when he went to Istanbul
    nightclubs to watch her, he'd often witness female belly dancers
    performing. "I always imagined myself dancing like them - wondering
    what it would be like to dance like that," he says. When he was 15 or
    16, a friend encouraged him to start dancing publicly, but the only
    work he could find was in a seedy gay nightclub in Istanbul's Aksaray
    district. "I was dancing with nothing but a coin belt on," he says,
    "but once they paid me, I used that money to buy my first costume."

    Like many gay Turkish men, Segah found a degree of freedom in Istanbul
    - with its active, out gay community - that does not necessarily
    exist outside the city. While the Turkish government does not
    criminalize homosexuality - nor does it provide LGBT individuals with
    any formal protection from discrimination - cultural attitudes toward
    homosexuality are largely negative; according to a 2011 poll conducted
    as part of the World Values Survey, a full 84 percent of Turks
    identified gays and lesbians among their least desirable neighbors.

    Such disdain can all too frequently spill over into violence; Binay
    and Alper's film Zenne Dancer deals with a slightly fictionalized
    version of one of Turkey's most publicized cases: the 2007 "honor
    killing" of Ahmet Yildiz - a close friend of with both filmmakers -
    believed to have been carried out by his father.

    And although Istanbul in particular has becoming increasingly welcoming
    to gays - Istanbul's annual Gay Pride parade is the largest in any
    majority-Muslim country -- the rising thread of Islamism in the
    Turkish government is slowing progress for LGBT rights. In 2013,
    Turkey's prime minister at the time, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, criticizing
    the adoption of a Turko-Dutch boy by a Dutch lesbian couple, publicly
    called homosexuality a "sexual preference, which is contrary to the
    culture of Islam."

    The Turkish military's approach to homosexuality reflects this cultural
    ambivalence. Out gay men are considered exempt from mandatory military
    service on the grounds of mental illness. In practice, they are often
    forced to provide degrading pornographic images of themselves or be
    subject to a rectal examination to "prove" their homosexuality.

    Segah himself served in the military for eight months. He'd intended
    to get an exemption, he says, but he was not comfortable being out to
    his father, who accompanied him to the military recruitment office,
    and so remained in the military for eight months before being able
    to quietly secure his release. "I didn't mind," he says. "I had more
    lovers there than anywhere else."

    Now, Segah performs nightly at Chanta, as well as at private functions
    like bachelorette parties, appearing on television next to some of
    Turkey's biggest stars.

    Still, Segah's family has been less than welcoming of his career. When
    they first found out about his zenne dancing - by seeing him on
    television - they called him up immediately and begged him to stop,
    telling him his work was "morally shameful." "I'm from a traditional
    Turkish family," Segah says, "I'm basically cross-dressing - imagine
    my father and my father's friends seeing me in this cross-dressing
    costume and dancing like like? It's not really easy to accept."

    While his family has grudgingly accepted his career choice, they've
    never been to see him perform. His brother came to Chanta once to
    watch Segah's opening act - a singer he admired - but Segah sent him
    away before his performance.

    And, says Segah, he's never formally come out to his parents. "They
    realize [that I'm gay]", he says but it's not something they ever
    openly talk about.

    Within liberal Istanbul, however, Segah's negative experiences have
    been minimal. He recalls only once being heckled with slurs by a
    homophobic audience member.

    "I heard it and turned and said, 'Thank you, sir,'" Segah laughs. "He
    was so surprised - he tipped me almost 200 lira!"

    Segah takes pride in his ability to push audience members out of their
    comfort zones. Unlike the traditional Ottoman zenne, he says, whose
    stylized movements were slower, stiffer, than that of their female
    contemporaries, Segah prefers to perform exactly the same movements as
    female belly-dancers. "Mostly, zenne don't get to affect people. But
    when I dance, I create a kind of 'gender confusion'. I am a man -
    with a beard! - but I'm dancing just like a woman [would]. And that
    really shocks people. They're shocked into enjoying it."

    Read more:
    http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/inside-world-istanbuls-male-belly-dancers-180953539/#EcISCmSbWlc1OzGe.99




    From: A. Papazian
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