Lebanese mag causes outrage in Middle East!
In the run-up to its launch next week, the glossy quarterly Jasad ("body" in Arabic) has been generating plenty of curiosity and hostility as it prepares to take on some of the most powerful taboos in Arab culture.
Issue one of the Lebanese title includes articles on self-mutilation and cannibalism as well as stories on sexual themes by authors from Egypt, Morocco, Syria and Palestine. Pseudonyms are not permitted. Regular features will include Body-Talk, Voyeur's Corner and My First Time.
The quarterly, licensed as required by the Lebanese government, is the brainchild of the writer and poet Joumana Haddad, whose day job is culture editor of Beirut's famed An-Nahar newspaper.
"The body is a quintessential part of Arab culture that has been veiled," Haddad told the Guardian. "I'm not trying to introduce something alien. We have wonderful erotic texts in Arabic like the Scented Garden or the non-censored texts of a Thousand and One Nights. These are all part of our heritage and we have come to deny it."
In a region where the majority are Muslims, Arabic is revered as the language of the Qur'an and the trend is for bodies to be covered up rather than exposed - let alone in all their intimacy - this daring experiment has triggered both anger and excitement.
Officials of Hizbullah, the powerful Lebanese Shia movement, tried to close Jasad's stand at this week's Beirut book fair. One outraged visitor ripped down a poster, complaining that the subject matter was "haram" - forbidden. Visitors to the website of the popular al-Arabiya TV have attacked it. "Stop promoting this blatant vulgarity and obscenity," was one furious comment. But another said: "Amazing magazine! Oh Lord, please let it be distributed in Jordan!" A Saudi man pledged to buy 50,000 copies and distribute them free "to open people's minds".
The Jasad website features a keyhole with erotic pictures, statues and other provocative images sliding past tantalisingly behind it. The cover of the first issue pictures a naked woman sheathed in bright crimson silk fabric like a flower.
Haddad is firm that while Jasad is an "adult publication" that should not be sold to minors, it is "artistic and cultural", is far from pornography- and represents a return to authenticity. "Some of the things that people wrote in Arabic a long time ago would make the Marquis de Sade blush," she said, laughing. "Now even the word 'breast' in Arabic would be shocking in certain circles. The language has gone backwards because of the influence of religion in daily life. This is about the reappropriation of our language. It's been stolen along the way. We have rotten political systems that increase the power of religion."
The real issue, she argues, is about personal liberation. "People ... want something but can't talk about it in public ... The whole education system teaches us to be hypocritical."
Only in the "oasis" of Lebanon - where pornography is banned but magazines and videos are sold and lax laws allow a porn film industry to function - would it be possible to legally publish a magazine such as Jasad. Yet it is still not easy.
"Muslims will go further in expressing their disapproval," predicted Haddad, a lapsed Greek Orthodox Christian. "But Christians disapprove too, and some of them are very traditional.
"I don't mind having people thinking differently from me. I respect the right of people not to accept these things, but I don't accept it when they try to stop me doing what I want to do. This is not a political project. The magazine is about love for the culture of the body. It's not a cause - but it does hope to break taboos."
Do they sell the Lebanese edition of the Playboy magazine, since is all related to the culture of the body?
The Red_Pope is the next goodwill Ambassador to the UN.
Must admit, the magazine website tends to portray itself towards erotica ..
"Voyeur's Corner" - that sounds pretty perverted even for one of the UK lad mags.
"culture of the body.. " .. interesting!
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Emad =>
Jasad means chest or breast not body. Anyways, its not surprising :P.
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(Lebanon A piece of Heaven on Earth)