Bakla

Bakla

Bakla

Filipino word for effeminate individuals assigned male at birth


In the Philippines, a baklâ (literal: Gay, transgender, Poy)(Tagalog and Cebuano) (pronounced [bɐkˈlaʔ]), bayot (Cebuano) or agî (Hiligaynon) is a person who was assigned male at birth and has adopted a gender expression that is feminine.[1] They are often considered a third gender.[2] Many bakla are exclusively attracted to men[3] and some identify as women.[4] The polar opposite of the term in Philippine culture is tomboy (natively the lakin-on or binalaki), which refers to women with a masculine gender expression (usually, but not always, lesbian).[5] The term is commonly incorrectly applied to trans women.[6]

Quick Facts Pronunciation, Meaning ...

Bakla are socially and economically integrated into Filipino society, having been accepted by society prior to Western colonization, many of which were held in high regard and performed the role of spiritual leaders known as babaylan, katalonan, and other shamans in the indigenous Philippine folk religions. In modern times, a minority group of Filipinos disapprove or reject the baklas, usually on religious grounds allegedly from Christian or Muslim beliefs. The stereotype of a baklâ is a parlorista—a flamboyant, camp cross-dresser who works in a beauty salon; in reality, the bakla thrives in numerous sectors of society, from the lower to the upper levels.[7][8][9]

Etymology

In modern Filipino and Cebuano, the term "baklâ" is usually used to mean either "effeminate man" or "homosexual".[10][11] Martin F. Manalansan, a Filipino anthropologist, has identified two possible origins of the term. One is that it may have been a portmanteau of the words babae ("woman"), and lalaki, meaning ("man"). The other is that it is derived from the word for the pre-colonial shamaness in most Filipino ethnic groups, the babaylan.[12][13]

However, the word itself has been used for centuries, albeit in different contexts. In Old Tagalog, bacla meant "uncertainty" or "indecisiveness".[12] Effeminate homosexual men were instead called binabaé ("like a woman") or bayogin (also spelled bayugin or bayoguin, "infertile"), during the Spanish colonial period.[14]

The Tagalog poet Francisco Balagtas used the word bacla in reference to "a temporary lack of resolve", as seen in his popular works Florante at Laura and Orosman at Zafira.[15] This archaic usage is also seen in the 17th-century Tagalog religious epic Casaysayan nang Pasiong Mahal ni Jesucristong Panginoon Natin na Sucat Ipag-alab nang Puso nang Sinomang Babasa ("Story of the Passion of Jesus Christ Our Lord that Surely Shall Ignite the Heart of Whosoever Readeth"), which is chanted during Holy Week. The passage narrating the Agony in the Garden has a verse that reads "Si Cristo'y nabacla" ("Christ was confused").[16]

By the advent of World War II, the term baklâ had evolved to mean "fearful" or "weakened" in Tagalog, and became a derogatory term for effeminate men.[15] A common euphemism for baklâ during this period was pusong babae (literally "female-hearted"). It was not until the 1990s when more positive discourse on queer and gay identities became more mainstream that baklâ lost its original derogatory connotation.[12][17]

Other native terms for bakla also exist in other languages of the Philippines, some of them now considered archaic. They are also called bayot, binabáye, bayen-on (or babayen-on), or dalopapa in Cebuano; agî in Hiligaynon/Ilonggo; dampog or bayot in Waray;[18][19] bantut or binabae in Tausug; bantut or dnda-dnda in Sinama;[20][21] and labia in Subanen.[22]

In addition, there are numerous modern neologisms for bakla, especially within swardspeak, with varying levels of acceptance. These include terms like badáf, badíng, beki, judíng, shokì, shoklâ, sward, and vaklúsh, among many others.[23][24]

Definition

Baklâ is a gender identity characterized by the adoption of a feminine gender expression by men. This includes feminine mannerisms and speech, use of make-up, cross-dressing, and long hairstyles; all are referred to with the umbrella term kabaklaán (effeminacy). However, baklâ is not tied to sexuality and is not a sexual orientation, thus it is not a direct equivalent of the English term "gay". Baklâ are usually homosexual men, but on rare occasions, they can also be heterosexual or bisexual men.[15][25][26][27]

Because the term baklâ specifically denotes effeminacy, it is traditionally not applied to masculine gay men. However, due to increasing globalization and influence from the Western categories of sexual orientation, baklâ has become incorrectly equated with the gay identity and used generally for homosexual men, regardless of the individual's masculinity or femininity in presentation.[15][17]

Baklâ are often considered the natural "third gender" in Filipino culture.[15][2] This is illustrated in the children's rhyme that begins by listing four distinct genders: "girl, boy, baklâ, tomboy."[17][27] Like in English, the term tomboy (archaic lakin-on or binalaki) refers to masculine (usually lesbian) women, and is understood as the polar opposite of the baklâ.[5]

Baklâ is also commonly used as a term for trans women,[28] though this is incorrect and discouraged. This is largely due to the absence of modern local terms for transgender people, as well as the general public ignorance of the differences between homosexuality and transsexuality. Some organizations have pushed for the adoption of new terminology that distinguishes transgender people from the baklâ, to prevent the common derogatory misconception that trans women and trans men are simply baklâ and tomboy that have undergone sex reassignment surgery. One such proposal in 2008 by the Society of Transsexual Women of the Philippines (STRAP) is transpinay (for trans women) and transpinoy (for trans men), both derived from the Filipino endonym "pinoy". But it has yet to gain widespread acceptance.[29][30][6][31][32][33][34]

The difficulty of correlating definitions with western terminology is because of the fundamental difference in the cultural views on homosexuality.[9] According to Filipino academic J. Neil Garcia, the baklâ would fall under the inversion pattern of homosexuality identified by American psychobiologist James D. Weinrich. This is the cultural view where homosexuality is seen as an inversion of the gender and sex binary. In Philippine context, this would be the binary of the loób (the inner self or spirit, lit. "inside") and labás (the physical form, lit. "outside"). Thus it is similar to the South Asian hijra and the Native American two-spirit. This is contrasted to the other two patterns of homosexuality worldwide, namely age-biased patterns (like pederasty in Ancient Greece) and role-playing patterns (like in certain Middle Eastern and Latin American cultures).[15][35]

History

Itneg potters; the one on the right is a bayok in female attire (c.1922)[36]

Homosexual relations in both sexes were common and bore no stigma in pre-colonial Philippines. There are numerous accounts of feminized men in early Spanish records.[37] They were described as being dressed as women, worked in traditionally female roles, and were treated as women by the community. They were considered as comparable to biological women aside from their incapability to give birth to children.[38][39] They were even recorded as being married to men.[15][22][39] Some also married women, though this did not preclude homosexual relationships.[37] Generally, these effeminate men were known as bayog (also bayok or bayogin; spelled bayoc or bayoquin in Spanish) in Luzon, and asog in the Visayas islands, both with meanings denoting "infertility" or "impotence".[40]

Due to their association to the feminine, they were regarded as having greater powers of intercession with the anito (ancestral and nature spirits) and thus commonly became shamans (babaylan, a traditionally female role in Philippine cultures).[37] This is not unique to the Philippines and was also common in pre-colonial societies in the rest of Island Southeast Asia; like the bissu of the Bugis people, the warok of the Javanese people, and the manang bali of the Iban people.[41]

Shamans were highly respected members of the community as ritual specialists: healing the sick, keeping oral histories, performing sorcery, and serving as spirit mediums for communicating with ancestral and nature spirits. They were second only to the nobility in the social hierarchy, and could function as a community's interim leader (similar to a regent or interrex) in the absence of the datu.[42][43][44]

In Historia de las islas e indios de Bisayas (1668), the Spanish historian and missionary Francisco Ignacio Alcina records that the asog became shamans by virtue of being themselves. Unlike female shamans, they neither needed to be chosen nor did they undergo initiation rites. However, not all asog trained to become shamans.[15][22] Castano (1895) states that the people of Bicol would hold a thanksgiving ritual called atang that was "presided" by an "effeminate" priest called an asog. His female counterpart, called a baliana, assisted him and led women in singing the soraki in honor of Gugurang, the supreme deity of Bikol mythology.[45] Regardless, the majority of shamans in most Philippine precolonial cultures were female.[40]

During the three centuries of Spanish colonization (1565–1898), the Catholic Church introduced harsh measures to suppress both female and asog shamans. In realms and polities absorbed by the Spanish Empire, shamans were maligned and falsely accused as witches and "priests of the devil", and were persecuted violently by the Spanish clergy. The previously high status of the babaylan was thus lost. The role of women and the relative gender egalitarianism of Philippine animistic cultures, in general, became more subdued under the patriarchal culture of the Spanish.[46][47]

The most strongly affected by this religious shift to Abrahamic religions were the feminized male asog shamans. During the 17th to 18th centuries, Spanish administrators in the Philippines burned people convicted of homosexual relations at the stake and confiscated their possessions, in accordance to a decree by the president of the Real Audiencia, Pedro Hurtado Desquibel. Several instances of such punishments were recorded by the Spanish priest Juan Francisco de San Antonio in his Chronicas de la Apostolica Provincia de San Gregorio (1738–1744).[15][48]

Asog shamans were leaders of several revolts against Spanish rule from the 17th century to the 18th century. Notable ones include the Tamblot uprising of Bohol in 1621–1622 and the Tapar rebellion in Panay in 1663.[49][50] Later rebellions in the 19th and 20th centuries were also led by male shamans. However, these later shamans (collectively known as the dios-dios, "god pretenders") followed syncretic Folk Catholicism, rather than pre-colonial anito shamanism. Though they still dressed as women in rituals, they were married to women and were unlikely to be homosexual.[37][51]

Feminized men were also persecuted harshly in the (then recently) Islamized ethnic groups in Mindanao. In Historia de las Islas de Mindanao, Iolo, y sus adyacentes (1667), the Spanish priest Francisco Combés records that their "unnatural crime" was punished by the Muslim peoples in Mindanao with death by burning or drowning, and that their houses and property were also burned as they believed that it was contagious.[15]

This was followed by American colonization (1898–1946), which though secular, introduced the idea that homosexuality and effeminacy was a "sickness".[17][52] Despite this, the colonization of the Philippines did not fully erase the traditional equivocal views of Filipinos with regards to queer and liminal sexual and gender identities. Though there are still problem areas, Filipino culture as a whole remains relatively accepting of non-heteronormative identities like the baklâ.[17]

Culture

Vice Ganda, a popular Filipino comedian, actor, and television personality, self-identifies as a baklâ.[53]

Beauty pageants

Baklâ communities are renowned for staging beauty pageants,[7] with Miss Gay Philippines being national in scope. Participants model swimsuits, national costume, and dresses, and showcase their talents, as in female beauty pageants worldwide.

Swardspeak

Baklâs have an argot, or secret language, called swardspeak. It is used by both masculine and feminine baklâs and incorporates elements from Filipino, Philippine English and Spanish, spoken with a hyper-feminised inflection.[7] It was widespread and popular until the 1990s, but is now considered unfashionable in most parts of Manila.[7] Modern versions of swardspeak are generally called "beki language", "gay lingo", or "gayspeak". They commonly make their way into mainstream Filipino culture. One early example is the song "Bongga Ka, 'Day" (1979), the biggest hit song of the Filipino Manila Sound band Hotdog. The title of the song means "You're fabulous, Girl" and uses the swardspeak slang bongga ( "fabulous").[54][55][56]

Babaeng bakla

Heterosexual women who develop deep friendships or almost exclusively associate with the native bakla LGBT subculture are known as babaeng bakla (literally "a woman who is a bakla"). They stereotypically acquire the mannerisms, campy sense of humor, lingo, and fashion sense of the bakla. They are also usually more extroverted and socially dominant. It is commonly perceived as a positive self-identification, and various prominent local celebrities (like Maricel Soriano and Rufa Mae Quinto) openly identify as babaeng bakla.[57][58]

2018 rally to support the passage of the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity and Expression (SOGIE) equality bill

Since independence, noncommercial, homosexual relations between two adults in private have never been criminalized in the Philippines, although sexual conduct or affection that occurs in public may be subject to the "grave scandal" prohibition in Article 200 of the Revised Penal Code (though this is applied to everyone, not only LGBTQ people).[59]

In December 2004, it was reported that Marawi City had issued an ordinance banning bakla from going out in public wearing female attire, makeup, earrings "or other ornaments to express their inclinations for femininity". The ordinance passed by the Marawi City Council also bans skintight blue jeans, tube tops and other skimpy attire. Additionally, women (only) must not "induce impure thoughts or lustful desires." The Mayor said these moves were part of a "cleaning and cleansing" drive. The ordinance is possible because Marawi was part of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (now the Bangsamoro), which allows separate civil laws (based on the Sharia) from the rest of the country, as long as they do not violate the Philippine Constitution.[60]

Same-sex marriage is not recognised in the Philippines, preventing many homosexual men from getting married. Legislation attempting to legalise same-sex marriage in the Philippines has been presented to Congress, but none has passed thus far.[61]

Religion

The Philippines is predominantly Christian, with over 80% of Filipinos belonging to the Roman Catholic Church.[62] Church doctrine officially tolerates persons with such orientations but condemns homosexual activity as "intrinsically disordered."[63] This condemnation of homosexuality presents a problem for baklâ because of potential discrimination in a Catholic-dominated society. As a result, baklâ youth in particular are at a higher risk for suicide, depression and substance abuse than their heterosexual peers, with risk increasing as parental acceptance decreases.[64]

While a significant minority, baklâ adherents of Protestantism face varying degrees of acceptance based on the denomination to which they belong. The Philippine Independent Church, which is in full communion with the worldwide Anglican Communion, officially does not endorse homosexuality.[65] Various Evangelical churches and the Iglesia ni Cristo are more fundamentalist in doctrine, and thus strongly condemn homosexual acts and suppress such identities within their congregations.

Non-Christian Filipinos who profess Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and other faiths also present a wide range of doctrinal views. Islam, the second largest religion in the Philippines, comprises roughly 5.57% of the population.[66] Islam shares views with other Abrahamic Faiths in that homosexual acts are held to be sinful.[21][67] According to the Delhi High Court, Hinduism does not officially condemn homosexuality.[68] As for Buddhism, the Dalai Lama (who is the most influential figure of the Gelug tradition of Tibetan Buddhism) has maintained that homosexuality is "sexual misconduct" for Buddhist followers but does not condemn it for non-believers.[69]

See also


References

  1. Tan, Michael L. (2001). "Survival Through Pluralism: Emerging Gay Communities in the Philippines". Journal of Homosexuality. 40 (3/4): 117–42. doi:10.1300/j082v40n03_07. PMID 11386330. S2CID 43819477.
  2. Aggleton, Peter (1999). Men who sell sex: international perspectives on male prostitution and HIV/AIDS. Temple University Press. p. 246. ISBN 1-56639-669-7. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  3. Diaz, Robert (2015). "The Limits of Bakla and Gay: Feminist Readings of My Husband's Lover, Vice Ganda, and Charice Pempengco". Signs. 40 (3): 721–745. doi:10.1086/679526. S2CID 147230469.
  4. Gonzalo, Ally (October 2, 2019). "'There's no shame in being who you are': Photographer explores Filipino 'bakla' culture". CBC. Retrieved March 1, 2023. The term includes individuals who identify as trans, non-binary, bisexual, etc. While most bakla are attracted to men, collectively referring to them as "gay" would be inaccurate as some self-identify as women.
  5. Ceperiano, Arjohn M.; Santos, Emmanuel C. Jr.; Alonzo, Danielle Celine P.; Ofreneo, Mira Alexis (2016). ""Girl, Bi, Bakla, Tomboy": The Intersectionality of Sexuality, Gender, and Class in Urban Poor Contexts". Philippine Journal of Psychology. 49 (2): 5–34.
  6. Tamayo, Kristine Jazz (2018). Legal Gender Recognition in the Philippines: A Legal and Policy Review (PDF). UNDP, Commission on Human Rights of the Philippines.
  7. Benedicto, Bobby (2008). "The Haunting of Gay Manila: Global Space-Time and the specter of Kabaklaan". GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 14 (2–3): 317–338. doi:10.1215/10642684-2007-035. S2CID 143735570.
  8. Poushter, Jacob; Kent, Nicholas (June 25, 2020). "The Global Divide on Homosexuality Persists". Pew Research Center. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  9. Patiag, Vonne (March 3, 2019). "In the Philippines they think about gender differently. We could too". The Guardian. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  10. Wolff, John U. (1972). "baklà". A Dictionary of Cebuano Visayan. Vol. 1. p. 86.
  11. "bakla". Tagalog Dictionary. 2004. Retrieved December 5, 2009.
  12. Manalansan, Martin F. (2015). "Bakla (Philippines)". The International Encyclopedia of Human Sexuality: 113–196. doi:10.1002/9781118896877.wbiehs042. ISBN 9781118896877.
  13. Manalansan, Martin (2003). Global Divas: Filipino Gay Men in the Diaspora (illustrated ed.). Durham: Duke University Press. p. 25.
  14. Noceda, Jose (1860). Vocabulario de la lengua tagala: compuesto por varios religiosos doctos y graves, y coordinado. Ramirez y Giraudier. p. 454. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  15. Garcia, J. Neil C. (2008). Philippine Gay Culture: Binabae to Bakla, Silahis to MSM. Manila, Philippines: UP Press. ISBN 978-9715425773. Retrieved November 18, 2013. "Also, another semantic space that bakla occupies refers to a state of mental confusion and undecidedness. This may be used to bear a linguistic affinity to the way Tagalog poet Francisco Balagtas used the word bakla in the context of a temporary lack of resolve, an emotional wavering in several scenes in at least two of his best known works, the romance Florante at Laura and the play Orosman at Zafira; later, prewar Tagalog writers used bakla to mean fearful and weakened.
  16. de Veyra, Lourd (October 24, 2013). "HISTORY: MAY BAKLA NGA BA NA KASAPI SA KATIPUNAN?". News5 Everywhere. Archived from the original on March 5, 2014. Retrieved November 17, 2013.
  17. McSherry, Alice; Manalastas, Eric Julian; Gaillard, J. C.; Dalisay, Soledad Natalia M. (January 2, 2015). "From Deviant to Bakla, Strong to Stronger: Mainstreaming Sexual and Gender Minorities into Disaster Risk Reduction in the Philippines". Forum for Development Studies. 42 (1): 27–40. doi:10.1080/08039410.2014.952330. S2CID 154043405.
  18. United Nations Development Programme (2014). Being LGBT in Asia: The Philippines Country Report (PDF). Bangkok: UNDP, USAID. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 1, 2020. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  19. Cupin, Bea (April 14, 2016). "'Bayot, bakla' don't mean 'weak,' transgender bet tells Duterte". Rappler. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  20. Hart, Donn V. (November 1968). "Homosexuality and Transvestism in the Philippines: The Cebuan Filipino Bayot and Lakin-on". Behavior Science Notes. 3 (4): 211–248. doi:10.1177/106939716800300401. S2CID 143669453.
  21. Johnson, Mark (March 1995). "Transgender Men and Homosexuality in the Southern Philippines: Ethnicity, Political Violence and the Protocols of Engendered Sexualities amongst the Muslim Tausug and Sama". South East Asia Research. 3 (1): 46–66. doi:10.1177/0967828X9500300104.
  22. Kroeber, A. L. (1918). "The History of Philippine Civilization as Reflected in Religious Nomenclature". Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History. XXI (Part II): 35–37.
  23. Yuson, Alfred A. (January 9, 2017). "Neologisms". PhilStar Global. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  24. Banzhaf, Jane S. (1969). Toward the Exploration of the Bakla Personality (Thesis). Ateneo de Manila University.
  25. Garcia, Neil C. (1992). "Closet Quivers: Politics and Poetics". Diliman Review. 40 (2): 5–10.
  26. Garcia, J. Nelia C. (2000). "Performativity, the bakla and the orienting gaze". Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. 1 (2): 265–281. doi:10.1080/14649370050141140. S2CID 145490503.
  27. Nadal, Kevin L.; Corpus, Melissa J. H. (September 2013). ""Tomboys" and "baklas": Experiences of lesbian and gay Filipino Americans". Asian American Journal of Psychology. 4 (3): 166–175. doi:10.1037/a0030168.
  28. Natividad, Celine D. (July 2, 2017). "Watching your language". The Guidon. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  29. Pascual, Patrick King (October 15, 2014). "Use 'she' for Jennifer Laude". Yahoo! News. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  30. Pikramenou, Nikoletta (2019). Intersex Rights: Living Between Sexes. Springer. p. 120. ISBN 978-3-030-27554-9.
  31. Lorway, Robert (2021). "Check Your Denominator: Geographic Mapping, Activisim, and the Standardization of Sexual Risk". In Graham, Janice E.; Holmes, Christina; McDonald, Fiona; Darnell, Regna (eds.). The Social Life of Standards: Ethnographic Methods for Local Engagement. UBC Press. p. 123. ISBN 9780774865241.
  32. Dumaual, Miguel (July 2, 2021). "He or she? Either, Vice Ganda says, in viral explanation of gender identity". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  33. Gingoyon, Maki (June 17, 2015). "Transgender women in PH: Accepted or merely tolerated?". Rappler. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  34. Weinrich, James (1991). "Reality or Social Construction". In Stein, Edward (ed.). Forms of Desire: Sexual Orientation and the Social Constructionist Controversy. New York: Routledge. pp. 175–208.
  35. Cole, Fay-Cooper; Gale, Albert (1922). "The Tinguian; Social, Religious, and Economic life of a Philippine tribe". Field Museum of Natural History: Anthropological Series. 14 (2): 235–493.
  36. Brewer, Carolyn (1999). "Baylan, Asog, Transvestism, and Sodomy: Gender, Sexuality and the Sacred in Early Colonial Philippines". Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian Context (2). Archived from the original on February 12, 2020.
  37. Garcia, J. Neil C. (2004). "Male Homosexuality in the Philippines: a short history" (PDF). IIAS Newsletter (35): 13. S2CID 141119860. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 8, 2019.
  38. De Leon, John Angelo Vinuya; Jintalan, Joseph (September 29, 2018). "Accepted or Not: Homosexuality, Media, and the Culture of Silence in the Philippine Society". Jurnal Komunikasi, Malaysian Journal of Communication. 34 (3): 408–425. doi:10.17576/JKMJC-2018-3403-25.
  39. Lachica, Maria Milagros Geremia (1996). "Panay's Babaylan: The Male Takeover". Review of Women's Studies. 6 (1): 53–60.
  40. Blackwood, Evelyn (2005). "Gender Transgression in Colonial and Postcolonial Indonesia". The Journal of Asian Studies. 64 (4): 849–879. doi:10.1017/S0021911805002251. JSTOR 25075902. S2CID 162771344.
  41. Scott, William Henry (1994). Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 971-550-135-4.
  42. Jose S. Buenconsejo (2013). Jennifer C. Post (ed.). Songs and Gifts at the Frontier. Current Research in Ethnomusicology: Outstanding Dissertations Volume 4. Routledge. pp. 98–99. ISBN 9781136719806.
  43. "6 Guidelines for Becoming a Filipino Shaman". The Aswang Project. December 4, 2016. Retrieved May 12, 2018.
  44. Castano, José. 1895. "Breve Noticia Acerca del Origen, Religión, Creencias y Supersticiones de los Antiguos Indios del Bícol." Madrid: Colegio de Misioneros de Almagro.
  45. Limos, Mario Alvaro (March 18, 2019). "The Fall of the Babaylan". Esquire. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
  46. Peletz =, Michael G. (2009). Gender Pluralism: Southeast Asia Since Early Modern Times. Routledge. p. 84. ISBN 9781135954895.
  47. Garcia, J. Neil C. (June 23, 2014). "Philippine Gay Culture: Conclusion". Panitikan: Philippine Literature Portal. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  48. Duka, Cecilio D. (2008). Struggle for Freedom. Rex Bookstore, Inc. pp. 99–100. ISBN 9789712350450.
  49. Marco, Sophia (2001). "Dios-Dios in the Visayas" (PDF). Philippine Studies. 49 (1): 42–77.
  50. Garcia, J. Neil C. (2004). "Male Homosexuality in the Philippines: a short history". IIAS Newsletter (35): 13.
  51. "Gay or transgender? Vice Ganda gets candid on sexual identity". ABS-CBN News. April 10, 2018. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  52. "Vice Ganda's 'Slang' Dictionary". Manila Bulletin. November 9, 2012. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  53. Alba, Reinerio A. "In Focus: The Filipino Gayspeak (Filipino Gay Lingo)". In Focus: The Filipino Gayspeak (Filipino Gay Lingo). Republic of the Philippines National Commission for Culture and the Arts. Archived from the original on October 30, 2015. Retrieved April 2, 2017.
  54. Torre, Beatriz A.; Manalastas, Eric Julian (2013). "Babaeng Bakla: Friendships between Women and Gay Men in the Philippines". Philippine Journal of Psychology. 46 (2): 149–163. S2CID 55833746.
  55. Placente, Rommel (November 25, 2019). "Rufa Mae not sure if she had a relationship with gay". PSR.ph. Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  56. The Revised Penal Code. 1930.
  57. LeiLani Dowell (February 17, 2005). "New Peoples Army recognizes same-sex marriage". Workers World Party. Retrieved November 17, 2008.
  58. "Philippines". International Religious Freedom Report 2004. U.S. Department of State. 2004. Retrieved July 11, 2010. Over 81 percent of citizens claim membership in the Roman Catholic Church, according to the official 2000 census data on religious preference.
  59. Reyes, Mark (2015). "Perceived Parental Support as a Protective Factor Against Suicidal Ideation of Self-identified Lesbian and Gay Filipino Adolescents". North American Journal of Psychology. 17 (2): 245–249.
  60. "Anglican Communion Q&A" (PDF). Anglican Communion Home Page. Anglican Communion Office. Retrieved April 2, 2017.
  61. "The Philippine Statistical Yearbook" (PDF). Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved April 2, 2017.
  62. Burton, Richard. "The Qu'ran and Homosexuality". Fordham University. Retrieved April 2, 2017.
  63. Rao, HS (July 3, 2009). "Hinduism does not condemn homosexuality". Rediff.com. Rediff. Retrieved April 2, 2017.
  64. Harvey, Peter (2000). An Introduction to Buddhist Ethics: Foundations, Values and Issues (illustrated, reprint ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 432.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Bakla, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.