There Are No Homosexuals in Iran











Born in Switzerland in a family of Iranian origins, photographer Laurence Rasti has always been interested in identity issues and how culture influences the life and personality of every individual.
For his latest work Il n’y a pas des homosexuels en Iran (tr. There are no homosexuals in Iran), Laurence decided to explore the conditions of Iranian homosexuals. Iran is one of eight countries in the world where homosexuality is still punishable by death. The only ‘option’ gays in Iran have is to change their gender: transsexuals are tolerated by the government, and this is only because gender reassignment is seen as the cure to a medical problem. In fact, the state generously contributes to the costs of sex change operations, which are performed at the highest rate than any other country, except for Thailand.
Since last March, Laurence has been visiting a small Turkish town called Denizli, where many Iranian gays take refuge before moving on to a more liberal country and live their lives as homosexuals in the day of the light. “An individual is defined by the notion of identity. When he cannot live this identity freely in his own country, he has no other choice but fleeing,” says Laurence.
Keep looking...

Bollywood Talkies — Vanessa Vettorello Photographs Mumbai’s Big and Small Cinemas

Ian C. Bates Got on the Road across America Following the Routes of the Meadowlark Birds

Larry Gorman’s Unrelated Images Are About How He Felt When He Took Them, Not What They Show

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Calls for Entries Closing in May 2018

Gap in the Hedge — Dan Wood Retraces the Journey He Used to Often Take as a Child

Photographer Vedad Divovic Has Set Out to Take Portraits of His Mother for Years to Come

Liminal — Francesca Cesari’s Portraits Explore The Transition from Childhood to Adolescence
