[This post is a reblog of post #43, the most visited of all the posts in this blog, originally published on January 20, 2013. The comments that followed are included. It does not appear in my book No Place for Normal: New York, because Mill City Press feared legal complications -- a concern that I think exaggerated, since I do not promote (or condemn) these relationships, but above all want to understand them. My friend Joe is now out of prison and doing well; he is on good terms with Allen, though they are now only friends.]
I myself have never experienced man/boy love, neither as the younger partner nor the older one, or felt any urge to do so. When, long ago, I would at times encounter a gay teenager who was obviously eager to connect, he was always too immature to interest me. So my attitude toward such relationships was vague, casual, and rather orthodox: if the boy was under the age of consent and therefore "jail bait," such a relationship was dangerous and best avoided. Yet man/boy love has been documented and even illustrated in many cultures, so graphically, in fact, that I wouldn't dare show some scenes from Pompeii, or certain Japanese and Chinese works, lest my blog be labeled a porn site. And in classical myth Zeus became so enamored of the beautiful young Trojan boy Ganymede that he whisked him off to Olympus to be the cupbearer of the gods. (How his wife Hera felt about this is not recorded.) But for me such love was even more remote than Olympus, so I didn’t think much about it.
What changed? In July 2000, having heard of his case on Grandpa Al Lewis’s WBAI program (see post #19), I wrote to an inmate in North Carolina named Joe and initiated a pen pal correspondence that continued for years. Joe, I learned, was serving 25 years in prison on 25 counts each of indecent liberties with a child and crime against nature, and could hope to be released sometime in 2014. “Crime against nature” – the very term angered me. Against what nature, whose nature, etc.? But be that as it may, Joe at my request gave me a streamlined account of his consensual three-year relationship with a young teenager named Allen (a fictional name) and how it led to his arrest.
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Shah Abbas and a wine boy. Shah Abbas ruled Persia 1587-1629. |
Fascinated by Joe’s story, I urged him to write his memoir, telling in detail the entire story from beginning to end. Though he had never written anything before, with my help he set out and over many months, sending me periodic installments, told his story in three sections: My Life before Allen, My Life with Allen, Locked Up. Because of his remarkable memory for detail and his skill in description, it reads like a novel: a gripping and very moving novel. Hopefully, someday he will self-publish it, so as to give his version of the story, totally at odds with the statements of the prosecutor at his sentencing hearing. (With great effort I obtained the official court record of the proceedings, so I know exactly what misstatements and falsehoods were uttered.) Clearly, this three-year man/boy relationship was doing no harm to anyone until other parties interfered, and the heavy-handed criminal justice system brought trouble to all concerned.
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Zeus embracing Ganymede, an engraving by the Italian artist Cherubino Alberti (1553-1615). |
(Some versions describe what Ganymede is holding in his right hand as a purse, suggesting prostitution, but Ganymede didn't need money; closer inspection reveals it to be the male genitals!)
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Joe’s story caused me to reconsider my attitude toward man/boy relationships and the notion of the pedophile and pedophilia, terms that are used – and misused – much too freely. Webster’s New Collegiate defines pedophilia as “sexual perversion in which children are the preferred sexual object.” In this context I take “children” to mean young persons who have not yet reached puberty. In the scandals regarding priests in the Catholic Church, the perpetrators were invariably referred to as pedophiles, though most of the cases involved teenagers. We lack a term for sexual attraction to adolescents. The word “ephebophilia” exists but has not passed into the general language – hence the misuse of “pedophile” and “pedophilia.” Joe was 26 and Allen was 13 when they met, but at 13 Allen was tall, rather broad-shouldered, and well past puberty, so for me this story does not involve pedophilia.
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Man/boy love in ancient Greece. An Attic vase of the 5th Century BCE, now in the Louvre. Ah, those Greeks! In pre-Christian times they got away with a lot, incorporating ephebophilia into their societies, on condition that the partners in time marry and beget offspring, so as to assure the future of the city state.
My interest in Joe’s story led me to two books treating the subject of man/boy relationships, one studying the problem in Denmark and the other in Holland, but both now available in English. The Danish one, originally published in 1986, offers interviews with a defense attorney, a judge, admitted pedophiles, and a number of boys involved in consensual relationships. One boy, who says he isn’t totally gay, asserts that it would be boring to be purely heterosexual. A boy of ten (the youngest of those interviewed), when asked how old a person should be before having sex, replies, “Zero years”; his mother, aware of the relationship and her son’s love for his older friend, refuses to interfere, and regrets that the relationship has to be hidden from the outside world. Another boy describes himself as bisexual, deriving great pleasure from sex with girls, though he says his best experiences were with his stepfather, when he could just surrender and let the stepfather take the lead. Finally, a boy of 16, now interested in girls, says of the older friend whom he started having sex with at age 13, “He understands me better than my own mother”; he expects that, even without sex, they will remain friends indefinitely. The aim of the study, the authors say, is to induce parents, teachers, and the various authorities to listen to what the boys say, and to understand their joy in the relationships and their need of an older friend. Just as the boys reach 15 or 16, their older friends lose interest in them sexually, and the boys usually begin having sex with girls. Significantly, the English translation’s title is Crime Without Victims. |
First published in 1981, Theo Sandfort’s Dutch study was based on a government-funded report examining the stories of twenty-five boys currently involved in a consensual man/boy relationship, all but one of whom considered the relationship a decidedly positive experience. When, before the AIDS epidemic appeared, a limited English edition reached these enlightened shores, it was reviewed by a pediatric psychiatrist in Contemporary Psychology (vol. 30, no. 1, 1985), who dismissed it as the rationalizing of a criminal activity, tainted both because it avoided the usual labels of "victims" and "perpetrators," and because it was sponsored in part by an organized group of pedophiles (which was news to the Dutch government!). Circulating here at the same time was the accusation (never substantiated) that a tidal wave of "kiddie porn" was flowing across the Atlantic from Amsterdam; those permissive Dutch were trying to corrupt our youth and undermine the moral fabric of the nation! There were other negative reviews of Sandfort’s work as well, all but dooming the boys and their partners to fire and brimstone, and Sandfort, the voyeuristic author, to a new persona as a pillar of salt. Obviously, even with an influx of porn, the relatively tolerant attitude toward sex that prevails in secular Holland has not corrupted our fair land.
And what of the 25 boys themselves, age 10 to 16, of whom 11 were clearly beyond puberty? When interviewed, they usually said that they met their older partner through family or friends; certainly they were not stalked. And after the first encounter, which rarely involved sex, it was the boys who sought to renew contact and develop a friendship. The ensuing friendship did involve pleasurable sex, but even more important were shared activities like swimming, movies, or visits to an amusement park. At their partner’s home the boys were more relaxed and enjoyed more freedom than at their own home, even when the boys had good relations with their parents. Trust and loyalty developed, and the ability to talk freely about anything: as an American teenager in a similar relationship once said to Oprah, "I can tell him anything and not feel judged!" While the parents usually knew about these friendships, they didn’t know about the sex, which they would think “really bad” or “not nice” or “dirty” – attitudes that the boys considered old-fashioned and stupid. A common thread in these stories was the boys’ determination to live their own lives, regardless of the opinions of others. The study concluded that, for boys in pedophile relationships, the present laws in Holland posed far more of a threat than a protection, and urged the passage of more enlightened legislation.
In the light of such studies, which reinforce the lessons of Joe’s story, I revised my attitude toward consensual man/boy relationships. Of course child molestation exists: three friends of mine were molested as children and bear the resulting emotional scars to this day, but these were nonconsensual encounters. I now view consensual man/boy relationships as legitimate and constructive, if the boy is past puberty and able to give knowing consent. This does not mean that I go along wholeheartedly with the arguments of the North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA),
which beats the drums for complete tolerance of these friendships, regardless of the age of the boy. Certainly I agree with their plea for greater tolerance and understanding, and their wish to free all men imprisoned for having had consensual sexual relationships with minors. But they want no age of consent at all, which at this point I find questionable; arbitrary as it is, the age of consent -- 15 or 16 in most states, but 17 in New York -- should be lowered but not abolished. Yet even here I confess that NAMBLA's arguments against any age of consent at all are powerful, since such stipulations are not only arbitrary but subject to prosecutorial abuse. NAMBLA's is a lonely path, shunned and even condemned by mainstream gay organizations, who don’t want their campaign for gay rights to be contaminated with anything that might be construed as child molestation. Pedophiles are only a tiny minority of the gay population and suffer prejudice and misunderstanding accordingly. I am not of them, but I can sympathize. Which puts me in a strange middle place, tolerant, yet tolerant with a few reservations. But since when was life not complicated?
Source note: The two books mentioned earlier are:
Crime Without Victims, ed. the "Trobriands" collective of authors, trans. E. Brongersma, Amsterdam: Global Academic Publishers, 1993.
Theo Sandfort, Boys on Their Contacts with Men, Elmhurst, NY: Global Academic Publishers, 1987.
[Wanting feedback, and permission to use a photo on their website, I queried NAMBLA by e-mail. Their response, and subsequent comments in my blog, follow. Apologies for any cramped print, over which I have no control.]
Hello, Mr. Browder,
Thanks for your message, and for your interest in our organization. It has taken me too long to respond, and I must apologize.... [Their editorial staff] asked me -- to ask you -- that you wouldn't misrepresent us (as others have done, too often).
Once I read your blog, my doubts were gone. You are a shrewd and generous commentator on our society and its foibles. Thanks for writing on this subject! And, feel free to use anything on our website as you see fit.
Sincerely,
Arnold Schoen
© 2013 Clifford Browder
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