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‘We decided not to hide’ The war and anti-LGBTQ+ laws forced much of Russia’s queer community to leave, many choosing to resettle in Turkey

Source: Meduza

After the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, much of Russia’s queer community chose to move abroad. While life had been difficult even before the invasion, the complete ban on what the authorities call “LGBT propaganda,” introduced in 2022, made life in conservative Russian society even harder. Photographer Sergei Stroitelev talked to queer people who left Russia for Turkey, capturing their new lives, their feelings about moving abroad, and their plans for the future.

Varya and Ira

Both are 23 years old

We met in Kazan in 2021, and within a few months we were talking about getting married. This was impossible in Russia, so we just organized a party with our friends and took the same surname.

Ira:

My mom never accepted me. When I came out to her, she thought I’d “have my fun and be done with it.” She still hasn’t fully accepted me. It hurt my mental health and led me to suicidal thoughts and self-harm.

Varya:

My father called me an idiot and said the LGBTQ agenda is financed by the West to corrupt Russia. When my mom saw Ira, she said she’d make a great husband — if only she were a man. But Ira is a woman, so she wasn’t suitable.

As soon as the war broke out, we started to think about leaving. Many of our friends had already left Russia, but we kept putting it off. The law [introduced in November 2022] increasing the punishment for “LGBTQ+ propaganda” was what finally tipped us over the edge. That was when we decided to move to Turkey.

When we first moved to Antalya, we were worried about getting cornered in an alley — but that’s probably just the scars leftover from life in Russia. We’re more at ease now. We walk around our neighborhood holding hands. We have an LGBTQ+ flag hanging in our window. It’s probably even visible from the mosque across the street.

Occasionally, I get overwhelmed with longing for Russia — but that feeling passes. There’s too much disturbing news coming out of Ukraine now. And we have to deal with everyday tasks like finding a job.

Anya

26 years old

While isolating in 2021, I began to self-reflect and read articles about non-binary and transgender identities. It was a relief to realize that there was a name for how I felt.

In Kazan, I led a support group and roundtables on LGBTQ+ issues at a local NGO. My social circle was relatively artsy, everyone there was very close and accepting. I also designed sportswear at a clothing factory. Once, one of my co-workers said to my face that “gays should be burned.” Older women I’d come by on the street were often confused about my gender and say, “What are you?”

My parents don’t accept me. My mother once saw I’d listed my pronouns as “he/she” on social media. She said to me, “why don’t you add ‘it’ to the list?” I don’t talk to my father. He’s a hard drinker and a drug addict. He’s extremely homophobic.

When the war started, all my other concerns felt like nonsense. The war came to me as a tragedy. I was crying constantly and started taking antidepressants. I decided to move to Turkey in April [2022]. I settled in Antalya.

Unfortunately, Turkey doesn’t have a queer community. My non-binary identity has started to fade and I’ve begun to doubt myself. Most Turkish people see me as a girl. While it’s not the safest country for queer people, most don’t really care — maybe it’s because I’m a foreigner.

I’m very glad I wasn’t in Russia when the new law banning “LGBTQ+ propaganda” was passed. Even from afar, it was hard for me.

Politically speaking, I feel more free here. Emotionally, not so much.

Fyodor and Igor

24 and 23 years old

Fyodor:

We met at a university in St. Petersburg. I came from Kamchatka and Igor came from Saratov. After eight months, we decided to move in together. That’s when I started a blog where I’d post everything about our relationship.

Igor:

Even though we lived in a big city, at the end of the day it was still Russia. Once, on my way home after a night out, I was wearing a bit of makeup and I was a bit drunk. Two guys came up to me and started to harass me. They called me a faggot and beat me up.

We started talking about leaving Russia in the fall of 2021. We’d taken a video of us kissing in front of the Church of the Saviour on Spilled Blood and received a lot of homophobic comments in response. What’s more, the authorities started concocting a criminal case against us for “offending against religious feeling.” Although it was scary, we still decided to stay in Russia — we wanted to keep fighting and to prove that we were in the right.

The war was the last straw. We moved to Istanbul in early January 2023.

We don’t feel completely safe here. Turkey is a Muslim country, and we try not to show our feelings publicly. We don’t intend on staying — we’re planning to move to Argentina, where it’s more LGBT-friendly.

At the time of publication, Fyodor and Igor had already moved to Argentina.

Itil Tyomnaya

33 years old

I joined the Russian LGBT network as a bisexual in 2013. A year later, the whole Mayak movement, which protects people in the LGBTQ+ community and women experiencing violence, emerged from the small branch in Vladivostok where I was registered.

In 2016, law enforcement workers from the Interior Ministry started coming to our events. They’d always say they’d received a call about some children being exposed to pornography. Dealing with law enforcement is always really unpleasant. For example, when I was 19, a police officer threatened to plant drugs on me and forced me to perform oral sex on him.

When the war started, they came and raided my place. After that, I tried not to sleep at my home address, so that they wouldn’t frighten my mother.

Even then, I didn’t leave. I would think to myself, I live in Russia, it’s up to me to make it a better place. But I knew I had to leave after they announced the new law against “LGBTQ+ propaganda.”

When I first arrived in Turkey, I just stayed home. I needed to just exhale and think about what to do next. It wasn’t the stress. I just needed to recharge. I applied for a humanitarian visa to Germany and am now waiting for a response.

Itil has been declared a “foreign agent” in Russia. She now lives in Germany.

Mercy and Yan

19 and 25 years old

Mercy:

My non-binary identity came about pretty early, when I was a teenager. I realized that I didn’t fit either the male or the female gender. In school, Yan and I were bullied, called “dykes” and “creatures,” and constantly threatened with physical violence. It hurt me deeply.

My family reacted very positively to our relationship. My mother never tried to change me, and she often refers to me using masculine pronouns. My grandfather’s also great. Despite his age, he showed that he supports me and always shook hands with Yan. That’s a really important sign of acceptance. My grandmother is a doctor, and she told Yan that a [medical] transition could be good for him.

Yan:

In sixth and seventh grade, I started to wear boy’s clothing, get short haircuts, and bind my chest. That’s when Mercy and I grew close.

My mother always called me by my birth name. Once, when she found my shorts, she threw them away thinking they were men’s underwear. It’s possible that my mother was trying to show her concern, but it made me so worried that it occasionally became hard to breathe.

In university, the bullying continued — by homophobic teachers. They made fun of Mercy because of her pink hair.

It had all been going on for a while, making us think about leaving. And then the damn war started. We knew right away it was a catastrophe, that this disaster would drag on for a long time, and that Russian society would only become worse, especially for minorities. And hell, half of my relatives are Ukrainian!

We left on March 8. We got tickets for the first flight we could and ended up in a tiny town on the Turkish coast. We’ve lived here for almost a year, with a feeling of helpless anger from hearing all the news and with the feeling that this nightmare has become the new normal.

We’re fine. Here, in Manavgat, it’s empty and quiet. Only the sea makes a sound. No one stares at us, even when we’re holding hands. It’s probably because we’re visitors.

Vlad

20 years old

I studied at a cadet school in Krasnoyarsk. I don’t think it’s worth explaining what kind of values they instilled in us. I can clearly remember how happy I was when Russia annexed Crimea. Now it’s shameful to even think about it. Obviously, I didn’t tell anyone about my sexual orientation.

After graduating, I decided to study at the Higher School of Economics. What followed was the age-old story of a small town guy moving to Moscow. It was scary, but I got lucky: my friend from cadet school was accepted to the same university and we moved together.

I came out in Moscow, in the fall of 2020. I didn’t post about it anywhere. I just told my friend from Krasnoyarsk and felt better afterwards.

The war turned everything upside down. I was scared of a possible mobilization and that the borders would close, since I’d be called up in the first rounds. I couldn’t imagine myself on the frontlines, committing war crimes.

In April 2022, I decided to move to Turkey. I didn’t need a visa and I knew quite a few people who’d already moved there. I don’t feel too marginalized here. My friends helped me find a place to live and have given me a sense of stability. I like Istanbul. It’s fairly free here, especially for foreigners.

I’m still studying at the university, but officially I’m on academic leave. In the summer of 2022, when I went to Moscow to finish the semester, I was interrogated at the border for two hours. 

When I first left, I thought that maybe I’d wait for a month and then come back. But the war still goes on.

Oleg

33 years old

I didn’t come out as gay – I was outed by my relatives, who told my mother when I was 17. 

A relative came to visit me in St. Petersburg, and at one point we started discussing girls. I said, “I’m not that interested.” He told my whole family about that. I had a very awkward conversation with my mother — nothing negative, she just said she wanted grandchildren.

By the time I was 19, I fully identified as gay. I never hid it, but I also didn’t go around waving a rainbow flag. It seemed to me things like that just scared homophobic Russian society.

When the war started, I realized I had to leave. It was obvious that everything was heading south. At first I thought about going to Astana for a couple of weeks while the situation unfolded. Then my flight got canceled, which really scared me. In the end, I decided to fly to Istanbul.

My boyfriend Konstantin was especially worried, asking me why I thought it would be better [in Turkey]. I didn’t know if it would be, but I was sure it would at least be calmer than in Russia.

In Turkey, I received a residence permit letting me rent a place. I organized a small chat for queer people and queer allies. I’m more or less on autopilot now. My boyfriend and I are trying to figure out how to keep up a long-distance relationship, but it’s hard. We’ve been able to see each other once since I left.

Misha and Marina

27 and 23 years old

Marina:

When I was 12, I realized I was a lesbian. I felt like I was the only one. At first I told my best friend, who supported me. I told my mother in 2018, when I was in my first relationship. Her only question was, “What about having children?” We didn’t talk for a week. Then, she called me and told me she still loved me, but she couldn’t understand my choice.

Misha:

I fully came out after I moved to St. Petersburg. I downloaded Tinder and met a queer person, who introduced me to Marina. That was around the same time I told my mom. She responded: “I must have done something wrong raising you.”

Eventually, she came to visit me and we talked about gender and non-binary identity in more detail. She said I must be this way because of the sexual violence I experienced from my relatives, which I’d told her about some time ago. I don’t know if she understands now that it’s not the case.

We’ve decided not to hide. Getting called hateful slurs and receiving dirty looks has become an everyday occurrence.

Marina:

On February 24, 2022, I was in my hometown of Brest. [When the full-scale invasion of Ukraine started], we thought it was some kind of nightmare. I didn’t want to talk. I didn’t want anything.

Misha:

We returned to St. Petersburg. We were really scared by the fact that people were staying silent. Rather impulsively, I tattooed “no to war” on my hand.

In the midst of all this horror, we prepared to leave. I was working remotely for an Estonian company, which promised to support its employees and I prepared to receive a residence permit. At work, they told me that I should move to a country with an Estonian consulate so I’d be able to receive my residence permit there. We settled on Turkey.

The first four months were tough. I couldn’t shake the feeling of guilt that I’d left, like a coward, instead of going to protest. Then, one day, the Estonian company I worked for fired me. I’d previously experienced homophobic and dehumanizing comments that ruined my professional relationships there. It was all very difficult, but Marina and I supported each other.

We haven’t encountered overt homophobia from locals in Turkey. Just from surprised Russian-speakers when we hug on the beach. Honestly, there really isn’t much of an LGBT community here — but that’s a minor issue. We live in hope that the war will end soon. That’s what keeps us going.

More on the law banning LGBTQ+ ‘propaganda’

For whom how Russia bans LGBTQ+ ‘propaganda,’ the ‘imposition of information’ about homosexuality and ‘sex reassignment.’ Here’s the law broken down.

More on the law banning LGBTQ+ ‘propaganda’

For whom how Russia bans LGBTQ+ ‘propaganda,’ the ‘imposition of information’ about homosexuality and ‘sex reassignment.’ Here’s the law broken down.

Photography and story by Sergei Stroitelev

Abridged translation by Sasha Slobodov

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