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Letter from Phnom Penh: Gay Marriage Accepted Here
The partners of gay diplomats often struggle to gain long-term
diplomatic visas to live with their spouse abroad. But a Cambodian
king's musings on S.F.'s same-sex weddings gave one gay couple the
opportunity they needed.
By Cyril Chin-Kidess, Pacific News Service
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - Nov. 18, 2004 - Anyone disheartened by the way
many U.S. leaders cast gay marriage as a "threat" to moral values should
remember that there is a world beyond the reach of America's courts and
legislatures, where gays and lesbians and their unions are acknowledged
and accepted, often without great fanfare. Take my story, for instance.
Although I grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, I've lived abroad for
the last 10 years and have been with my partner, Theo, for eight years.
Theo is a German diplomat, so we move around a lot. At the beginning of
this year, Theo was offered a posting to Phnom Penh. He accepted on the
condition that the German foreign ministry find a way for me to
accompany him.
While Germany legally recognizes same-sex unions and the German foreign
ministry supports our partnership, the Cambodian government does not,
nor would it grant me the same long-stay diplomatic visa typically
issued to a diplomat's spouse. I could, of course, have tried to find a
job in Cambodia and apply for a work permit. But if I wanted to live in
Cambodia solely on the grounds of my relationship with Theo, I would
have to go in and out of the country on a monthly tourist visa, become a
student or go under the guise of Theo's domestic help -- a common
scenario for gay diplomats and their partners worldwide, including those
posted to the United States.
I was fortunate enough to find an alternate way.
The recently retired King of Cambodia, His Majesty King Norodom
Sihanouk, has led a fascinating life. From his coronation in 1941, to
achieving independence from France in 1953, to recently ensuring the
continuation of the monarchy with the election of his son, Prince
Norodom Sihamoni, as his successor, King Sihanouk has been pivotal in
the history of modern Cambodia. In between ruling, abdicating, being
prime minister and head of state (as well as a musician, a film director
and an actor), living in exile, being imprisoned by the Khmer Rouge and
becoming king again in 1993, King Sihanouk always demonstrated a
resilient compassion for his country and people.
King Sihanouk also takes a keen interest in world events. One such event
was San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom's decision to have San Francisco
issue marriage licenses on a non-discriminatory basis. On Feb. 20, after
seeing televised images of some of the gay weddings in San Francisco,
King Sihanouk commented on his Web site, www.norodomsihanouk.info, that
as a "liberal democracy" Cambodia should allow "marriage between man and
man...or between woman and woman." On Feb. 26, King Sihanouk followed up
with a letter in which he disagreed that God absolutely opposes "gays";
rather, he wrote, "God, like Buddha, is compassion, indulgence,
non-discrimination."
In March, unable to resist the opportunity presented by King Sihanouk's
comments, I wrote to him for help. Remarkably, King Sihanouk personally
replied a few days later, "You are welcome to the Kingdom of Cambodia."
With that, Theo and I moved to Cambodia at the end of July, and a month
later I received a three-year Cambodian visa in my German diplomatic
passport.
Having lived and travelled in many countries where gay marriages or
unions are officially recognized and where most people simply don't care
whether you are gay or straight, I find it hard to believe that everyday
Americans are any different at heart. As far as I am concerned, Mayor
Newsom and King Sihanouk put the issue simply and got it right. Theo and
I are indebted to them, and we hope that others will find the compassion
and courage to follow their example.
Unfortunately, gay marriage has become a highly charged rallying cry for
those desiring to push forward a much broader and divisive political
agenda for the country. Perhaps the way forward is to stop focusing on
the emotive word "marriage" and press ahead for meaningful civil unions.
Then leave it to the American people, if for no other reason than simply
out of convenience, to start using the words "married" and "marriage" in
everyday discourse. Technically, Theo and I entered into a "Lebenspartnerschaft,"
or life partnership, under German law, but everyone we know just says
that we're married -- or worse, that we're an old married couple.
Meanwhile, as Germans see that their cities have not turned into stone
and become more at ease with "gay marriage," the legal differences
between civil unions and marriage are slowly being chipped away.
PNS contributor Cyril Chin-Kidess is an Asian
American lawyer from the San Francisco Bay Area. He is currently doing
pro bono work in Cambodia for the Secretariat of the Royal Government
Task Force in charge of setting up the Khmer Rouge war crimes tribunal.
His partner, Theo Kidess, is the Deputy Head of Mission at the German
Embassy in Phnom Penh.
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