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Details of SA's highly successful gay & lesbian film festival. Cape Town Hotels Book a Cape Town Hotel South Africa's Gay Directory South African directory presents links to gay owned and gay friendly businesses, including clubs, restaurants, shops and virtual personal ads. Q, Queer Resource Online Virtual resource guide for gays and lesbians in South Africa provides travel advice, news, chat rooms and personal ads. Gay South Africa Interactive Resource offers a directory of links for the gay, lesbian and bisexual communities. Find categories for entertainment, personal ads and news. GALA - Gay and Lesbian Archives of South Africa Aims to establish the previously untold history of gay and lesbian South Africans. Find collections at the Wits Univ. Library and the SAHA. Gayfriends, South Africa Make gay friends through this interactive forum, message board and IRC host. Includes member profiles and monthly event announcements. Gay South Africa - Business Directory Search function allows users to find gay clubs and gay-friendly businesses in South African metropolitan areas. Lesbians in South Africa Find out more about this group that was formed to provide the lesbian community with a place where they can communicate. Lesbian Life Explore lesbian living in a "straight" world. Read about issues such as parenting, employment , history and health. Gay Guide South Africa Organized by province, this travel resource lists gay-friendly accommodation and entertainment venues. Gaydar.co.za Personals and community network offers text, voice and webcam communication, as well as news, chat and classifieds for gay people worldwide. Gay.com: South Africa Access write up with specific information for gay and lesbian travellers. Includes links for related information. South African Lesbian and Gay Equality Project Human rights group lobbies against dicrimatory practices by goverment and the private sector towards gays and lesbians. Gay-MART - South Africa Browse this travel guide for information for gay and lesbian travellers. Check information for other regions around the world. Gay Universe Profiles Locate a partner in Johannesburg. Browse personal details, likes and dislikes, and send email. International Lesbian and Gay Association Browse through this international organisation's survey on the country. Includes some useful links and data on the rest of the world. Gay & Lesbian Library Johannesburg resource centre offering videos, fun fiction and serious non-fiction titles for loan as well as posters. Find contact details. Gay Youth South Africa Join the chat room, read up about coming out, follow links, view images, and read music reviews. Gay South Africa Locate accommodation, find the local hot spots, browse the business listing, read the news, and get a job. Lesbian & Gay Equality Project Lobbies against discriminatory practices by government and the private sector in South Africa on the basis of sexual orientation, gender and marital status. South African Lesbian and Gay Equality Project Human rights group lobbies against dicrimatory practices by goverment and the private sector towards gays and lesbians. Gay Net Cape Town Resource for homosexual visitors lists lodgings, entertainment venues and art galleries, and offers a selection of travel advice. Out in South Africa Gay and Lesbian Film Festival Check out the films and filmmakers featured in Out in South Africa's 1997 and 1998 film festival. Includes organisation contacts and background. Singles in Johannesburg Matchmaking service offers personal ad postings and free ad browsing for gay or straight men and women in Johannesburg. Rainbowtrade.co.za Shopping portal featuring gay and lesbian themed merchandise such as tshirts, key rings, stickers, jewellery, flags and postcards. CJ's Alternative Night Club Randburg establishment caters to gay customers. Find an entertainment overview, a visitor map and contact information. African Man Holidays Company arranges tours and accommodation for gay travellers. With contact information. Behind the Mask Site dealing with lesbian and gay affairs and issues across South Africa. Read personal stories and profiles and find advice and references. |
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Cape Town: gay paradise found : By Shaun De Waal Source: SouthAfrica.infoThe all-in-one official guide and web portal to South Africa. The gay traveller was born in the late 19th century, as homosexual European men sought places where there was a greater freedom for the expression of their desires and what would nowadays be called their "lifestyle". Some countries were more liberal than others, and usually the movement was towards the Mediterranean countries, but increasingly their destinations were outside Europe, often north Africa. Just over a century ago, for instance, two of the world's greatest gay writers, Oscar Wilde and Andre Gide, bumped into each other in Morocco, where Wilde persuaded the more timid Gide to pursue his interest in a lovely Arab youth. Later, writers such as William Burroughs and Paul Bowles would find refuge in the same area. Today, the gay traveller has become a noted category to which travel agencies and tourist institutions cater specifically. And Cape Town has become one of the gay tourist's favoured destinations, recommended in guides such as the long-standing Spartacus Guide and on gay travel web sites such as PlanetOut Travel and GayGuide.net Protection
from discrimination For the gay traveller, however, it is perhaps South Africa's post-apartheid Constitution that tips the balance in our favour. Adopted in 1996 after lengthy discussion, debate and fine-tuning, the Constitution offers protection from discrimination on the grounds of race, gender or sexual orientation. It is the first Constitution in the world to do so, and is justly famous for this reason. This new freedom forms a stark contrast, of course, to South Africa's history, in which homosexuals were legally restricted and persecuted. Laws against homosexual activity were on the statute books alongside the race laws that restricted black/white interaction and limited opportunities for black people. In the 1960s, for instance, the state promulgated the "Three Men at a Party" Law in the wake of a police bust of a gay party in Forest Town, Johannesburg. This slightly laughable law forbade gatherings of three or more men for what the state defined as purposes of mutual stimulation. Such laws, including the common law forbidding "sodomy", a legal category that used to cover more than is understood today by the term, were swept away by the new Constitution and subsequent legal challenges to old laws. Convictions
and imprisonment In the 1700s, when the Cape was a part of the Dutch East India Company's domain, men convicted of same-sex sexual transgressions were imprisoned on the island. Punishments for the exercise of "dirty passions", when the crime was deemed less heinous than full "sodomy", were usually flogging, hard labour, and/or banishment to the Netherlands. This caused some problems, however, because often the punishment meted out in the Netherlands was exile to the colonies. One Francois David Le Pron, 14 years old in 1765, was put ashore and left in Cape Town by his captain for such offences. A little later, he was convicted in Cape Town of making sexual advances to another man, whipped, and sent back to the Netherlands. In severe cases, such as that of Nicolaas Modde, the sentence was imprisonment on Robben Island and was often followed by execution. Modde was found to have engaged in sodomy with two slaves while imprisoned on the island. The three men confessed to their crimes before the Court of Justice (torture was often used to extract such confessions) and they were sentenced to death. This sentence was carried out by drowning: the three men were bound together, loaded with weights, and thrown into Table Bay. Vibrant nightlife Certainly, Cape Town nightlife gives the impression that this is a very gay-friendly city. Aside from the cluster of gay clubs and bars in the De Waterkant area, the vast majority of Cape Town's nightspots (and there are many of them) offer relaxed spaces in which gay and straight clientele can mix freely and easily in a stylish atmosphere. Many businesses, though not designed to cater to an exclusively gay market, are gay-owned and/or gay-run; an example would be Lola's, the charmingly bohemian vegetarian restaurant in Long Street. Some venues do, however, cater very specifically for gay clients. The De Waterkant area mentioned above includes the long-standing Bronx Bar and the nightclub Angels, as well as the newer club 55, all popular venues. The influx of gay tourists to Cape Town has also meant that several guest houses have set themselves up to meet the needs of the tourist looking for exclusively gay (male) accommodation. The Amsterdam Guest House is one such guest house. Its owner came to Cape Town originally as a tourist and was so taken with the city that he stayed and started the guest house, with the idea that it would be good to have such a venue dedicated to gay men. Now in its fourth year of existence, Amsterdam Guest House is always full over the summer season, taking in visitors from all over the world. Its international clientele, I was told, comes from Britain, Holland, Germany and the United States, though South African travellers also take advantage of its amenities, especially off-season. When full, the Amsterdam accommodates 18 people in nine rooms, charging about R500 per person per night in high season. 65 Kloof Street is another such guest house, also founded by a foreigner entranced with the city of Cape Town. Its prices are slightly higher than that of the Amsterdam, and it accommodates roughly the same amount of people, which may not seem a lot, but guests are guaranteed to get personal attention. Obviously, the idea of an exclusively gay guest house has been well-received by gay travellers, many of whom are pleased to be in an environment that caters specifically to their needs. At 65 Kloof Street, you can tan naked by the pool without arousing opprobrium, and the proprietors will provide information about gay venues and events. Mother City
Queer Project Some of Cape Town's much-lauded beaches, among the prettiest in the world, have evolved into gay enclaves. "Third beach" at Clifton is not an exclusively gay beach, but it is the one where a large number of gay men congregate during the summer season. For those keen to cast their eyes over some attractive nearly-naked bodies, this is the place to go. Those who want to see those bodies entirely naked will have to make the trip to Sandy Bay, alongside Llandudno, further down the coast. Sandy Bay is one of the world's most famous nudist beaches, and the far, rocky end of this large stretch of sand and sea is its gayest part. The low scrub and trees on the slopes above the beach offer shelter to those who want a bit of shade - or just privacy. The city's tourism authority has put its weight behind attracting gay tourists to the city. "Cape Town is the gay capital of Africa and we hope that some day it will become the gay capital of the world," Sheryl Ozinsky, manager of Cape Town Tourism, has been quoted as saying. Guides such as the Cape Gay Guide booklet offers gay travellers information on where to go and what to do. KLOOF GUEST HOUSE |