Matthea Little Smith - Smith is an African American and a lesbian and the daughter of Minnesota civil rights pioneer Matthew Little.
Now's the time to make justice a reality to all of God's children.' Now that's what Martin Luther King said. He didn't say 'All of God's children who are not gay.
 
subscribe Email:

 

zanzibar to block singer's birthday bash

Last Updated: August 26, 2006

Page: 1


By Issa Maalim (Sapa-AFP)

August 26, 2006: Outraged Zanzibari Muslims on Friday sought to ban a 60th birthday party for the late Zanzibar-born rock star Freddie Mercury, complaining the flamboyant singer's lifestyle offended Islam.

In a strongly worded letter to the semi-autonomous Tanzanian archipelago's culture ministry, a group of conservative Muslims said plans to honour the lead singer of the supergroup Queen at a gala bash next month must be stopped.

"There are people claiming that Freddie Mercury is a Zanzibari but he grew up outside
Zanzibar and then changed his name," the islands' association for Islamic Mobilisation and Propagation (UAMSHO) said in the letter.


"Associating Mercury with
Zanzibar degrades our island as a place of Islam," UAMSHO chief Abdallah Said Ali wrote, adding that the singer was known to have been gay, died of AIDS and had lived a wild life many Muslims would condemn.

"Allowing such a function for a person known outside
Zanzibar as a homosexual tarnishes the name of Zanzibar," he said in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by AFP. "Let us protect our good culture."

The complaint follows the appearance throughout
Zanzibar in recent weeks of posters advertising a huge beach party in the islands' capital to mark what would have been Mercury's 60th birthday.

Restaurateur Simai Mohamed Saidi, who is organising the event and runs a Freddie Mercury theme restaurant and club named "Mercury's" on the waterfront, said he would go ahead with the party on September 2 despite the complaint.

He said he would launch a counter-drive and ask officials to start promoting Mercury's link with
Zanzibar to promote tourism.

"I plan to ask the authorities to advocate Mercury because he was an artist who advertised
Zanzibar abroad," Saidi told AFP.

There was no immediate response to the dispute from the government, which has long tip-toed between secular constitutional ideals, the demands of a booming tourist industry and the wishes of conservative Muslims.

Almost 99 percent of the million-strong population of the sun-drenched
Indian Ocean islands - known for their idyllic palm-fringed beaches and spice- and slave-trading past - are Muslim, though most are moderate.

Few on Zanzibar seem even remotely aware of Queen or Freddie Mercury, who was born Farrokh Bulsara on the main island of Unguja to Persian parents employed by British colonial authorities, on September 5, 1946.

Although he was educated in
India and moved with his family to Britain in 1964, Mercury, who died in 1991, remains perhaps Zanzibar's most famous son to many westerners and rock music fans. - Sapa-AFP

 



[Print Version] [Send to Friend]

Previous Stories
edwin cameron speech at the launch of balancing act
A book launch is a celebration - of a process of creation and birth and new life for an important product. We gather to congratulate the parents, the helpers, and the admiring family.  [more]

the balancing act of young lesbian people celebrated at a function hosted by gala
June 14, 2005: A resource book aimed at the community and schools that uses life experiences of young gay and lesbian people is launched by the Gay and Lesbian Archives of South Africa.  [more]
ARCHIVES >>
 

Home  |  Who We Are  |  Search  |  Donations  |  How to Get Involved  |  Contact Us  | Our Partners