Text
French
ID: <
10.7202/1084802ar>
·
DOI: <
10.7202/1084802ar>
Abstract
The discrimination experienced and perceived by the first generation LGBTQ + Moroccans and Moroccans in Montreal stems from historical, social and political conditions. The legislation in place in Morocco criminalising homosexual relations, and the majority interpretation of Islam condemning homosexuality affect migratory routes, as well as experiences in the country of origin and the host country, particularly within Moroccan and Muslim communities. Also, systemic racism and religious aversion, experienced and felt in LGBTQ + communities, lead to Islamophobic and racist discrimination. As a result, the LGBTQ + Moroccans and Morocaine LGBTQ +, combined with social imperatives both heterogeneous and homonormatic, find themselves in the intersection of multiple discrimination within Canadian and Quebec political and legal structures, as well as within associations and places of community solidarity. They are targeted at homophobic and homophobic homonormative homonormative homonormative injunctions, and they have no or different concepts and pressures from those in Morocco, making their migration and identity questions more complex. This article proposes to analyse the intersectional discrimination and identification negotiation strategies of first-generation LGBTQ + Moroccans and Moroccans in Montreal, discussed in semi-managed interviews in 2018. As a result of the simultaneous and interactive nature of legislative oppression and pressure from their various communities, coming-out becomes an illustration of the intersectionality of experienced and perceived discrimination.