(Berlin) [...] gay men and lesbians from Muslim families say they face extraordinary discrimination at home. A survey of roughly 1,000 young men and women in Berlin, released in September and widely cited in the German press, found much higher levels of homophobia among Turkish youth. [...]
"For us, for Muslims, it's extremely difficult. When you're gay, you're immediately cut off from the family," said Kader Balcik, a 22-year-old Turk from Hamburg. He had recently moved to Berlin not long after being cut off from his mother because he is bisexual. "A mother who wishes death for her son, what kind of mother is that?" he asked, his eyes momentarily filling with tears.
Hasan, a 21-year-old Arab man, sitting at a table in the club's quieter adjoining café, declined to give his last name, saying: "They would kill me. My brothers would kill me." Asked whether he meant this figuratively, he responded, "No, I mean they would kill me."
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"For us, for Muslims, it's extremely difficult. When you're gay, you're immediately cut off from the family," said Kader Balcik, a 22-year-old Turk from Hamburg. He had recently moved to Berlin not long after being cut off from his mother because he is bisexual. "A mother who wishes death for her son, what kind of mother is that?" he asked, his eyes momentarily filling with tears.
Hasan, a 21-year-old Arab man, sitting at a table in the club's quieter adjoining café, declined to give his last name, saying: "They would kill me. My brothers would kill me." Asked whether he meant this figuratively, he responded, "No, I mean they would kill me."
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