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The oddest tribe in Judaism?

They speak Hebrew and go to synagogue. What’s more, these Filipino transvestites are learning how to be Jewish through caring for the elderly.

June 4, 2009 10:35
The Paper Dolls: working as a carer in Israel was like being on another planet, says Chiqui Diokno (far right)

By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

3 min read

A ponytailed Filipino man in jeans is swinging his narrow hips as he pushes an elderly, Orthodox rabbi in a wheelchair. They arrive at a synagogue and while the rabbi discusses the Talmud with similarly aged and bearded clerics, his Asian carer sits to one side, singing along to Abba’s The Winner Takes It All on his personal stereo.

As culture clashes go, it is a fairly strange one. But what makes it even stranger is that the Filipino, Chiqui Diokno, is a drag artist in his spare time.

Diokno is one of eight transvestites from the Philippines whose encounters with Jewish life while working as a carer in Israel are the subject of the award-winning documentary film Paper Dolls, which is being screened in London next week.

“I was working in a religious area in Tel Aviv, Bnai Brak,” explains the 43-year-old Diokno, who has been living in the UK for the past six years. “At first I felt like I was on another planet,” he says. “The way the Orthodox people dress and their attitudes are really different. The children were very annoying. They were following me. Later on they got used to me. I knew them all and it didn’t bother me. People knew that I was a transvestite but they didn’t talk about it.

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