There will be NO direct flights from Kenya to Harlem

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Kenya bans 'blasphemous' film about gay lovers

23/09/2021 -

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Murimi told AFP last October that he did not expect the documentary to fare well with Kenyan censors Tolga AKMEN AFP

Nairobi (AFP)

Kenyan authorities on Thursday banned a documentary about two gay lovers, calling it "unacceptable and an affront to (the) culture and identity" of a deeply Christian country which has long criminalised homosexuality.

Directed by a Kenyan filmmaker, "I Am Samuel" depicts a romantic relationship between two men living in Nairobi and has aroused the ire of the country's censors for promoting "same-sex marriage as an acceptable way of life".

The Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB) said the documentary sought to propagate "values that are in dissonance with our constitution, culture values and norms".

"Worse still, the production is demeaning of Christianity as two gay men in the film purport to conduct a religious marriage invoking the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit," KFCB boss Christopher Wambua said in a statement, declaring it "blasphemous".

"Any attempt to exhibit, distribute, broadcast or possess the restricted film within the Republic of Kenya shall, therefore, be met with the full force of the law."

Homosexuality is taboo across much of Africa, and gays often face discrimination or persecution.

Attempts to overturn British colonial-era laws banning homosexuality in Kenya have proven unsuccessful, and gay sex remains a punishable crime with penalties that include imprisonment of up to 14 years.

"I Am Samuel" is the second gay-themed film to be banned in Kenya, following a 2018 decision to stop cinemas from showing "Rafiki", a lesbian love story which became the first Kenyan movie to premiere at the Cannes film festival.

The ban on "Rafiki" ("friend" in Swahili) was later overturned by a court, and the film opened to sold-out audiences in Nairobi.

"I Am Samuel" director Peter Murimi told AFP in an interview last October that he did not expect the documentary to fare well with Kenyan censors.

He described the film as "very nuanced, it's very balanced, it's a story about a family that is struggling with this issue, having a gay son."

"So we'll just try our best and hopefully Kenyans will see it and that's what we want," he said.

The documentary, which has been shown at several film festivals and is available to rent online, also enjoys support from "Rafiki" director Wanuri Kahiu.

"We change people through conversation, not through censorship," she tweeted in response to news of the ban, quoting hip-hop star Jay Z
 
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With Africans and Caribbeans, is anti-gay sentiment about religion or would those feelings exist even if everyone was atheist?

Can't really tell was drives it.

Figure the Caribbeans had to deal with slave masters "buck breaking" shyt so they might feel some type of way about anything homosexual.
 

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With Africans and Caribbeans, is anti-gay sentiment about religion or would those feelings exist even if everyone was atheist?

Can't really tell was drives it.

Figure the Caribbeans had to deal with slave masters "buck breaking" shyt so they might feel some type of way about anything homosexual.
I posted an old thread about the public response to this topic in Haiti

No Alphabet Soup in my Soup Joumou

In my opinion, the religions adopted by Africans on the continent and in the diaspora incorporated elements of their original indigenous cultural beliefs. The academic term is syncretism. I believe aversion to homosexuality would have been present in most of those belief systems and cultures....pre Christianity, and pre-Islam


B-breaking was a myth, pretty much. The term was coined and the stories were exaggerated to sell content. We've been calling BS on it for going on 3 years now.

Certain there were instances of rape and sexual exploitation of men and boys throughout history of slave colonies, but again...stories packaged and exaggerated to sell content.

Coli historian xoxodede , and others would confirm.
 
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