Male Belly Dancing Makes Comeback in Egypt, Defying Suppression
Jan. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Farid Mesbaah, male belly dancer,
hopped on a car in Cairo's Shobra district and strutted his
stuff.
He clanged metal castanets, magically converted his hips
into pistons and twirled his head around like a centrifuge. The
crowd at tables lining a dirt alley clapped rhythmically. Young
men in jeans jumped up to wiggle along.
Mesbaah was performing at the opening of the Old-Time Moon
Cafe, a gig that -- along with weddings, birthdays, night clubs
and circumcisions -- is typical for belly dancers. Untypical, at
least in recent years, are performances by men.
Male belly dancing, a centuries-old Egyptian tradition, is
making a comeback -- against the odds, considering its periodic
suppression by government and religious officials. The problem
for Mesbaah is that his craft has long been associated with
homosexuality -- a taboo in Egypt.
``I just like to dance,'' says Mesbaah, who has seven
children. ``It's very sensual. I've been doing it since I was
little.''
Mesbaah is shimmying in a society that has long struggled
with ever-changing limits of social tolerance. A carved relief
at a pharaonic-era tomb near Cairo shows today's dance
prohibitions were yesterday's norm. It depicts a chorus line of
men at a religious festival; each wears a sash knotted on his
left hip, a fashion for dancing men and women that lingers
today.
Ghawazee Banned
Male performers were once considered more reputable than
females. In his book ``The Manners and Customs of the Modern
Egyptians,'' Edward William Lane, an Englishman and prominent
Arabic scholar who lived in 19th-century Cairo, observed that
male dancers were preferred by Cairenes who thought women
``ought not to expose themselves.'' From 1834 to 1849, women
dancers, known as ghawazee, were banned from the city.
Rakia Hassan, 62, a retired dancer, recalls that in her
childhood, males peddled their skills along with women on
Muhammed Ali Street, then a one-stop shop for belly-dancer
hires.
``It became a business like any other, and men were part of
it,'' she says. ``You know, Egyptians love to dance -- boys,
girls, whatever -- so it was not unusual. However, Islamic trend
has made it more difficult for the men.''
Monarchical Decadence
During the reign of Gamal Abdul Nasser, male belly dancing
all but disappeared because it smacked of monarchical decadence.
Nasser took over Egypt in 1954, two years after King Farouk was
overthrown by military officers.
No one knows the number of male -- or for that matter,
female -- dancers now. There is no belly-dance association, an
indication of the profession's seedy reputation. (Belly dance is
a Western term invented by the French; Egyptians call it simply
Oriental or ``homegrown'' dance.)
Male dancing, along with officially proscribed activities
such as open prostitution and smoking hashish, goes on in some
nightclubs. Mahmoud Karim, 20, who dances in discos along
Pyramids Street, says he pretends to be an enthusiastic customer
but actually gets paid by clubs to perform.
``Just in case someone objects, the owner says I'm an
amateur,'' he says.
Tolerance for male dance doesn't mean tolerance for
homosexuality -- even among the dancers, who have been known for
at least 150 years by an Arabic word, khawal, that's become
insulting slang for gay men.
Dance-Hall Raid
Gay life is dangerous in Cairo, where plainclothes police
are on the lookout for hustlers on the streets. In 2001, police
raided the Queen Boat, a floating dance hall, and arrested 52
men for ``debauchery'' and ``perverting religion.''
``I'm careful not to look like I'm seducing customers,''
Karim says.
Tito Seif, a well-known belly dancer whose performances are
available for viewing on YouTube, dances only in the galabiyah,
a slack caftan, never in anything revealing.
``I don't believe that a male belly dancer should imitate a
woman,'' says Seif, 35. ``We should not forget we are men and
dance in a manly way.''
He says he will leave Egypt to dance abroad because the
current crop of male dancers ``is giving us a bad reputation.''
Samia Allouba, 45, a belly-dance instructor, admires male
dancers -- to a point. ``Definitely, they can move,'' she says.
``As long as they don't try to imitate women. That I find
disgusting.''
`More With Our Muscles'
Mesbaah jokes that women dancers are jealous of the men.
``We can do more with our muscles,'' he says. He turned his
passion into a profession 10 years ago after ending a career as
a metal worker.
When performing, he is on the lookout for possible
hostility. ``If I think the audience is unfriendly, I just
leave,'' he says.
He dresses in loose black trousers and T-shirt; no
pantaloons, vests or skirts recalling the khawal past. The only
accessory linking him to belly-dance dress is the waist scarf.
His family accepts his profession, except for an older
brother who, Mesbaah says, is a devout Muslim and has stopped
talking to him.
``Some people think it's forbidden, but we Egyptians like
to have fun,'' he says.
Still, Mesbaah says he has refused to dance on film because
it might hurt the marriage chances of his three daughters. He
also doesn't want any of his four sons to follow in his steps.
``I'd like them to do something else,'' he says. ``Be
better than me.''
To contact the reporter on this story:
Daniel Williams in Cairo at
dwilliams41@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: January 1, 2008 18:52 EST