It seems sometimes that maybe because gay marriage and being gay has been OK here for a pretty long time, the character of the gay community here has become very institutional.Īs for a coming out story. These things are different in Boston, which is way more introverted and quiet, more educated and calm, more homogeneous in its gay population.
Then, of course, Israel is a Mediterranean country: it’s hot, temperamental, edgy, alive all year round and it’s extremely sexual. First of all, Tel Aviv is smaller and everyone knows everyone. Though we are pretty new in Boston / Cambridge, we can already say that it is very very different in terms of gay community when compared to Tel Aviv. We never hid our sexual orientation, quite the contrary. Personally we can’t say being gay had any negative influence on how we were viewed, it never created any special challenges. We were one of the only couples there, and perhaps the only gay couple. Before moving to Cambridge, we both worked full time as journalists in Ha’aretz Newspaper’s culture section, covering arts and architecture on a daily basis.
Gays are an influential part of the society in Tel Aviv: in politics, in media and in culture. It is a bubble, in many ways parallel to how NYC is viewed within the US. Noam and Daniel, in their own words: “Tel Aviv is quite a liberal place within a not-always-liberal country.