The Your Stories section is all about you! Please take a minute to tell visitors of the ILGA website about what LGBTI life is like in reality. Please submit your personal story and share your experience!
YOUR STORIES
Share your experiences in AFGHANISTAN -
Let others know what it’s like to be LGBTI in your country! If an experience is meaningful for you, it will probably be meaningful for someone else. On whatever topic, whether good or bad, your story is how the world knows about your country and LGBTI life. By selecting tags that mark the topic your story, others can learn from your experience.
Note this is a public forum so take care when attaching any e-mail addresses or phone numbers. Nasty people may be viewing this site as well as friends! There is no need to be registered on the website, and your story will be completely anonymous.
Readers Experiences
This is what people are saying about life for LGBTI people in AFGHANISTAN...
showing stories 1-50
Mak
(user currently living in BELARUS)
posted for
intersex
readers
on 19/03/2013
When i read the story what came to mind mind was that this child was born probably an intersex person. This is why the doctor said the child was 70% boyish. This may be due to hormonal imbalance which is believed to be one of the causes of someone being born intersex.
It's sounds good when the rights of the child were observed. In my country there are so many intersex children and people but with little help in terms of medical services but also social and cultural fundamentalisms have been a hindrance in this.
I am a simple bisexual Afghan and I am under danger,because if my family other afghan people know about my gender feeling they will kill me. I am a educated person and i need a safe live as LGBT person. I need a human rights activist to direct and help me. I want to leave my country and live to that country which allow me to be free as bisexual.this is my email address if anyone wants to help me as human please contact me on : reallove240@yahoo.com
It's sounds good when the rights of the child were observed. In my country there are so many intersex children and people but with little help in terms of medical services but also social and cultural fundamentalisms have been a hindrance in this.