Saturday, June 6, 2009

LGBT rights -- and comments on Israeli-Palestinian conflct -- at Tel Aviv conference

Earlier this week, Tel Aviv University was the site of the 9th annual queer studies conference An Other Sex. I was honored to deliver a keynote on my book.

Israel has a distinctive legal regime within which to consider same-sex relationships. There is no civil marriage in Israel, only religious marriage. This keeps many straight couples from marrying because, for example, a Jew cannot marry a non-Jew. So there has been pressure for years for different-sex couples to not make marriage the dividing line between relationships that count and those that don't.

Israel recognizes the legal status of those "known in public" as spouses. It also allows couples to register foreign marriages (they say Cyprus does a thriving business marrying different-sex couples who can't marry in Israel). Because of this (after much litigation), Israel will register the marriages of same-sex couples who marry elsewhere and will recognize same-sex unmarried couples in ways that are similar to those accorded unmarried different-sex couples.

There is a push for civil marriage here -- but it would be for different-sex couples only. So this is not a good thing for lesbian and gay families.

Tel Aviv University law professor Aeyal Gross gave comments after my talk. He opposes the fight to same-sex marriage for many reasons. He believes that same-sex marriage stigmatizes those who don't marry and who have "less or more" than one partner. He believes it reinforces the privileging of marriage, creates pressure to marry, subordinates sexual liberty, and excludes those without a partner even more than today's construct.

In my book, I say that if marriage was not the dividing line between relationships the law counts and those it doesn't then marriage would be a real choice. (I say it is a choice in Canada because no couple has to marry there for legal consequences, even though both straight and gay couples can marry). Aeyal Gross questions whether marriage will really be a choice given the pressure it will produce. He supports ending state marriage. He says he has some sympathy for civil unions or civil partnerships.

I support renaming the official status for all couples "civil partnership." I did not think of this as the same as abolishing marriage, but as I said in a previous post, many American marriage equality activists object to this and consider it no different from abolishing marriage. I now think that Aeyal and I are not far apart and that we are both quite distant from the marriage equality party line about the imperative of keeping the label "marriage" as part of civil law for gay and straight couples.

In my talk at the conference, I read excerpts from the California marriage briefs filed by gay rights groups extolling the word "marriage." (For my post on this, read here). There were audible gasps of disbelief from the audience.

I have often heard that it is more accepted to criticize the Israeli government in Israel than it is in the US. I wouldn't know how to quantify either exactly, but criticism of the Israel government policy towards Palestinians was woven into remarks and questions at this queer theory conference. One speaker compared the resistance by the marginalized queers who rebelled at Stonewall to resistance against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories. Another spoke out against bills now pending in the Knesset. One would require as a condition of citizenship a "pledge of allegiance" to Israel as a Jewish state. Another would make it unlawful to observe what the state of Israel calls Israeli Independence Day as a day of commemoration of the Nkaba (translated "catastrophe") which is how the Palestinians view it. One audience member began a question to me about the politics of supporting surrogacy for gay men (where multiple oppresions may be involved) with a comparison of the question she was about to ask me to the question of whether a person who is a Jewish settler in the West Bank can be considered a feminist.

All in all, an amazing experience.

5 comments:

Unknown said...

Nancy,

The link to excerpts from CA right to marry briefs doesn't work. Please try to fix! I want to read them. Your trip sounds incredible. I want to hear more when you return home!
Linda

Ayo Oppenheimer said...

Nancy, thanks for sharing your experiences at the conference and your thoughts on the issues. This is a topic that I am very interested in personally and I've just completed two years of work on a film that explores religion and state issues in Israel through the lens of the marriage process. It released to the public just two weeks ago so we are just starting the marketing, but you may find it interesting. Feel free to check out www.facesthemovie.com and good luck to you!

Warmly,
Amy

Rachel AB said...

Linda: This link might work. It's to a previous post that includes a link to the briefs.

In case the link didn't work, here's the URL (you'll need to paste it together in a text editor):
http://beyondstraightandgaymarriage.blogspot.com/2009/03/yes-on-new-word-for-civil-marriage.html

Aeyal said...

Hi Nancy
It was great having you at the conference and thanks for the report. I agree our positions are not that far apart, and I think you describe them in a very accurate way, which is why I want to say that when you say "He [that is me... - AG] opposes the fight to same-sex marriage for many reasons" - that one line is actually not a precise description of my position. I question this fight and especially much of the rhetoric around it. I tend to support the abolishment of marriage as a state institution. But as long as it exists and as long as in some places there are differences in rights between civil partnerships and same-sex marriage (also it could eventually matter in US for federal and in other places for international recognition) I do not opppose this fight altogether. I think it's a complex strategic choice whether to engage in this fight if you can expand some rights. But I want to ask carefuly at which price and whose expense, to critcize much of the rhetoric around it, and to examine whether we cannot achieve similar rights without engaging in the glorification of marriage...

Nancy Polikoff said...

Thanks, all. I have fixed the links. The problem must have been the computer I was using in Israel when I made this post. Thanks for clarifying your position, Aeyal. Your work is amazing, and I always love your comments.