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Drag queens raise holy hell in Jerusalem's only gay bar

A drag queen comedy troupe is taking aim at everything from the Israeli army to the bedroom activities of ultra-Orthodox Jews
Israeli drag queen Yossale smokes a cigarette before performing at the Video bar in Jerusalem's Old City (AFP)
By AFP

In conservative Jerusalem, the last thing you might expect to find in the cramped back of a bar is a clutch of amateur drag queens railing against political and religious taboos.

But there they are, balancing on needle-like high heels and heavily made up, spouting unholy views in the holiest of cities, a place revered by three of the world's major religions.

Anything goes with Allah Nash, a group whose name plays upon the Hebrew for cross-dressing and the Arabic for God.

Fair game abounds, from laughing at the Israeli army and the Palestinians, mocking Jewish prayers and the sexual practices of the ultra-Orthodox, even impersonating Jewish American gay icon Barbra Streisand but with a yellow star pinned on her dress, recalling the evils of Nazism.

Yossale is our hostess for the evening. The young man in a blonde wig, short sparkly dress and legs that go on forever singles out a member of the audience.

"He's cute enough to be introduced to the rabbi!"

The Video is now the only gay bar in town, just a few hundred metres from the walls of the Old City that shelter Christianity's Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Islam's al-Aqsa Mosque compound and Judaism's Western Wall.

Both locals and those just passing through come to see the Allah Nash show that has been playing periodically every two years. How often it is put on, depends on the availability and motivation of the artists who grapple with living in a city where religious and social inhibitions are widespread.

Band of sisters

The threesome that performed during our visit - Yossale, Fatma and Supernova - each in turn play the role of bad girl as they swear, spit, knock back the booze and tease members of the audience.

At a previous show, two high-kicking drag queens in uniform hosed spectators with plastic machine guns as martial music played in the background.

"I love very black humour and seeing the appalled looks on people's faces as they wonder how far we will go," says Fatma, who is actually a curvaceous 23-year-old apprentice comedian called Michael.

"I love to generate political and religious tension on stage. We have to do something funny, we have no choice - either we laugh or we cry."

"I'm also an extremist in a city that's full of them. Above all else, I adore toying with people's moral boundaries."

He grew up in Jerusalem in one of the strictest of Jewish religious backgrounds - the Lithuanian branch of the Ashkenazi ultra-Orthodox, who wear long kaftans and fur hats – but says that he never felt religious.

Israeli drag queen Yossale speaks with family members at home in Jerusalem before performing at Video (AFP)

Yossale was also raised in an Orthodox Jewish household, but after coming out the two young men cut ties with both their religion and their relatives.

As for the third member of this band of sisters, taking such a step would be unthinkable.

Supernova is an Israeli Bedouin currently doing his national service at a base near the Palestinian political capital of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.

A clinging ball gown shows off his muscular physique to perfection.

Haunted by tradition

But the mere thought of a family member or military commander finding out that he's a homosexual haunts Supernova.

Under one satin glove lurks an engagement ring, a constant reminder that he will soon be married off to a young Muslim woman from the same community.

Israeli drag queen Yossale changes outfits in a dressing-room during a performance (AFP)

Israel has a flourishing gay scene although this is largely confined to its commercial capital Tel Aviv. But just 40 kilometres away in Jerusalem, homosexuals live another life altogether.

Cross-dressers in the ancient city used to have another hangout in the early 2000s in the form of the Shushan, but it was burned down in an arson attack in 2005 and was never rebuilt.

In July last year, ultra-Orthodox Jew Yishai Schlissel also waded into a Gay Pride parade in Jerusalem with a knife and stabbed and killed a 16-year-old girl.

Despite the threats a drag queen may expect to face on the streets of Jerusalem, Yossi says he is undeterred. He leaves the bar wearing a faux leopard-skin coat above his mini-skirt.

"So what's the worst that can happen? The taxi driver makes a pass at me?" he laughed. 

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