Same-sex marriage now legal in South Africa
Story Highlights
•Civil Union Act makes South Africa fifth nation in world to legalize gay marriage
•Church hopes to perform first same-sex ceremony on Saturday
•Homosexuality still outlawed in much of sub-Saharan Africa
CAPE TOWN, South Africa
(AP) -- With the deputy president's signature on a new law, South
Africa on Thursday became the first country in Africa and only the
fifth in the world to legalize same-sex marriages.
The Civil
Union Act entered into force on the eve of a December 1 deadline set by
the Constitutional Court for the government to change its marriage
legislation to ensure full equality for gays and lesbians.
Gay
rights groups have welcomed the law, although they criticized
provisions allowing clergy and civil marriage officers to turn away gay
couples if their consciences prevented them from marrying them.
Deputy
President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka signed the law in her capacity as
acting president because President Thabo Mbeki is in Nigeria.
South
Africa recognized the rights of gay people in the constitution adopted
after apartheid ended in 1994, at a time when leaders were determined
to bury all kinds of legal discrimination a thing. The constitution,
the first in the world to prohibit discrimination on the basis of
sexual orientation, provides a powerful legal tool for gay rights
activists even though South Africa remains conservative on such issues.
The
governing African National Congress had to push the legislation through
despite reservations from some of its own members. Influential
traditional leaders said the legislation violated African cultural
norms. The Roman Catholic Church and Muslim groups -- and many other
religious organizations -- denounced it as violating the sanctity of
marriage between a man and a woman. The Anglican church said it was up
to individual ministers to decide whether to use the "opt out" clause,
while liberal churches like the Metropolitan Churches Community were in
favor.
The National Assembly passed the legislation earlier this
month and the National Council of Provinces approved it on Tuesday.
Mlambo-Ngcuka's signature was the final legal step.
"There will
be a huge response from same-sex couples who have waited such a long
time for their relationship to be recognized," predicted Melanie Judge
of the lesbian and gay project, OUT.
Janine Pressman, a pastor
with the Glorious Light Metropolitan Community Churches in the capital,
Pretoria, said she hoped to marry a couple on Saturday, provided the
paperwork could be rushed through.
Priests wanting to wed same
sex couples at a religious ceremony have to apply for permission from
the Home Affairs Ministry and possibly undergo exams to get their
license, ministry spokesman Jacky Mashapu said.
This could take two to three weeks, he said. But he added that the ministry wanted to speed through the applications.
Civil
unions, without a religious component, could be performed virtually on
the spot, subject to completion of the proper paperwork, he said.
"We are ready to go," Mashapu said.
The
Civil Union Act provides for the "voluntary union of two persons, which
is solemnized and registered by either a marriage or civil union."
Radio
talk shows and newspaper columns have highlighted opposition to
same-sex marriages in a country where gays and lesbians are victims of
violent attacks because of their sexual orientation.
South Africa
is only the fifth country in the world to legalize gay marriages. It is
the first in Africa, where homosexuality is illegal in Zimbabwe, Kenya,
Uganda, Nigeria, Tanzania, Ghana and most other sub-Saharan countries.
Judge,
from OUT, said the public reaction had "forced us to confront the
deep-seated prejudice and intolerance against gays and lesbians. It's a
day to day reality," she said.
"It's been quite a frightening
process to see the level of hatred that has been openly expressed
against this minority," she said.
Oddly, the NYT article to which Michael P. calls attention neglects to mention that the leading medical professionals responsible for DSM-IV continue to regard the gender-identity phenomenon as a "mental disorder." We can look forward to DSM-V; meanwhile, the Magisterium can be excused for not calling for, inter alia, the practice adopted at the Park Day School in Oakland, CA, viz., separating children by sneaker color so as to avoid separating them by gender. (Does the Park Day School's practice wrongly assume that are no statistically significant correlations between gender preference and choice of sneaker color)?
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition
| Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders > Introduction > Gender Identity Disorders > |
Gender Identity Disorder
Sections: Associated laboratory findings., Associated physical examination findings and general medical conditions..
Topics Discussed: gender identity disorder.
Excerpt: "There are two components of Gender Identity Disorder, both of which must be present to make the diagnosis. There must be evidence of a strong and persistent cross-gender identification, which is the desire to be, or the insistence that one is, of the other sex (Criterion A). This cross-gender identification must not merely be a desire for any perceived cultural advantages of being the other sex. There must also be evidence of persistent discomfort about one's assigned sex or a sense of inappropriateness in the gender role of that sex (Criterion B). The diagnosis is not made if the individual has a concurrent physical intersex condition (e.g., partial androgen insensitivity syndrome or congenital adrenal hyperplasia) (Criterion C). To make the diagnosis, there must be evidence of clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning (Criterion D).In boys, the cross-gender identification is manifested by a marked preoccupation with traditionally feminine activities. They may have a preference for dressing in girls' or women's clothes or may improvise such items from available materials when genuine articles are unavailable. Towels, aprons, and scarves are often used to represent long hair or skirts. There is a strong attraction for the stereotypical games and pastimes of girls. They particularly enjoy playing house, drawing pictures of beautiful girls and princesses, and watching television or videos of their favorite female characters. Stereotypical female-type dolls, such as Barbie, are often their favorite toys, and girls are their preferred playmates. When playing "house," these boys role-play female figures, most commonly "mother roles," and often are quite preoccupied with female fantasy figures. They avoid rough-and-tumble play and competitive sports and have little interest in cars and trucks or other nonaggressive but stereotypical boys' toys. They may express a wish to be a girl and assert that they will grow up to be a woman. They may insist on sitting to urinate and pretend not to have a penis by pushing it in between their legs. More rarely, boys with Gender Identity Disorder may state that they find their penis or testes disgusting, that they want to remove them, or that they have, or wish to have, a vagina...."