Robert Caplin-Rapport for Newsweek
A Great Escape: Over time, my parents accepted my life
MY TURN

Out of the Closet, at Gunpoint

I thought I'd never tell my Muslim parents that I'm gay. Then a terrifying encounter gave me no choice.

 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

SPONSORED BY
 

As a gay, Muslim teenager growing up in a posh area of Karachi, Pakistan, I struggled to hide from my family the fact that I was attracted to other men. I immersed myself in literature, and as a precocious ninth grader I produced and acted in George Bernard Shaw's farce "Passion, Poison and Petrifaction," a play whose title unconsciously expressed my nervous view of the Pakistani world outside my cocoon. Looking for an exit, I was a superachiever in a hurry. At 18, I earned a scholarship to Stanford University. I should have made a clean break then. But all through college I dated women, willing myself to be "normal." Not surprisingly, my attraction to men didn't wane.

In grad school, I was ready for adventure and decided to spend a summer back home researching rural-development projects. I worked with a local social worker, a handsome, bearded man who liked to flirt. We'd sit together under the sun discussing politics, while I observed his body under his diaphanous kurta shalwar. Knowing he was married, I didn't dare make a move.

One evening I drove to a park known for being Karachi's unofficial cruising spot for gay men. Within a few minutes I noticed a burly man with a heavy mustache in his late 30s gesturing toward me. My heart was pounding as he approached. "I have a place we can go," he said, and we started walking toward the park's exit, visions of a forbidden tryst flashing in my mind.

In my air-conditioned car he gave me driving directions. Looking around, he suddenly sneered, "This is a very nice, expensive car." I started getting nervous. He didn't touch me. He gave no signals.

We arrived at the entrance to a dingy house and entered the driveway. He locked the gate behind us, told me to wait in the car and disappeared into the house. I was sweating profusely now and wondered, "Can I still get out of this situation?" Five minutes later he came out, visibly angry now, sat in the car and pointed a gun at me. He said he was an undercover cop and that inside the house were several men waiting to rape me to teach me a lesson. "What is wrong with people like you?" he yelled maniacally. "You should like girls, or you will be treated like one."

My lust had transformed into immobilizing fear. He told me to drive again, and as we drove around for what seemed like hours, I had a vague sense that I needed to play his game and find a way to survive this ordeal. He demanded that I admit homosexuality was a sin, and I eventually complied. I also promised to meet him at a hotel the following day, where he would tell me how much money he wanted. He warned me that he had my car's license-plate number, and that he'd track me down if I didn't show.

Label

Newsweek Top Stories
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution

Using emotion to convince people to change.

Heaven Can Wait
Heaven Can Wait

A new book promises proof of eternal life.

The World's Biggest Foods
The World's Biggest Foods

Monster edibles from around America.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: thinker#1 @ 04/01/2009 11:05:29 PM

    My point exactly.

  • Posted By: Constitution Lover @ 03/30/2009 7:27:19 PM

    One a final note.

    "It is a sick attempt to avoid personal responsibility for one's life and decisions."

    Actually that seems to describe some forms of religion (especially some types of Christianity) far better than it can homosexuality.

    Consider the idea that a person can be a murderer, rapist, and torturer, but if they "accept Jesus as their personal savior Jesus" all is forgiven and they go to some place called heaven. Talk about avoiding personal responsibility for their own lives and decisions. If they really accepted responsibility they would openly qdmit thier sins, take their punishment and then ask their god to send them to eternal punishment. Instead many of them use their "conversion" to try to get off or get paroled.

  • Posted By: Constitution Lover @ 03/30/2009 7:21:30 PM

    "Homosexuality is an abuse of human sexuality and a sin against God and mankind."

    It is not a sin against anything.

    "Sex was designed by God to be a celebration of life within the marriage life long commitment to result in the continuance of the human race and for the pleasure of a faithful heterosexual married couple."

    YAWWN!! Sex was designed by nature for wide range of reasons. And marriage, like god, was created by man.

    "Homosexuality in the end is and is an addiction."

    Religion is an addiction (for some). Homosexuality is a natural state.

    "How else can you explain human beings engaging in behavior that can kill them or cripple them for life."

    Engaging in risky behavior has nothing to do specifically with homosexuality.

    "If homosexuality is so normal as the homosexual community wants the rest of the world to think why do they have to go to such outrageous lengths to demand it."

    Because so much of the rest of the world is like you and would use your beliefs to harm them and deny them basic human rights.

    "Why do the homosexuals and their supporters treat those who chose not to accept homosexuality in such a hateful manner. "

    They do not care if you like or approve of homosexuality. What they have problems with is when you try to use your views to deny them the equal rights that they are entitled to. Homosexuality in general in no way harms you. Same-sex marriages in no way harms you or society.

    "Without artificial means being used to produce life (babies) the natural consequences of the world turning to homosexuality is the end of the human race."

    But no one (except fools) makes the assumtion that the entire human race would become homosexual. The percentage of homosexual has apparently remained fairly consistent throughout time. somewhere between 7-10% of the population. Since it is not a choice but a biological process that percentage is not likely to change. Therefore there is no threat to the human species. In fact there is a chance that it is nature's way of trying to prevent overpopulatin that humanity has messed with through artificial insemination and religious idiocy of having too many children.

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse

My Take

Customize the NEWSWEEK homepage
to feature your favorite columnists.

Customize Now