Khawal


The khawal was a traditional native Egyptian male dancer cross-dressed in feminine attire and was popular up until the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

Name

In the oldest Arabic dictionary Kitab al-'Ayn the definition of khawal was a "servant" or "slave". Khawalat were acquired by unknown means, perhaps purchased as the spoils of war. However, they were different from classic slaves because the term did not necessarily imply ownership.

History

Following prohibitions on women dancing in public, cross-dressing boys and men took their place throughout the Middle East; in some Arab countries, these transvestite dancers were known as gawwal, and in Egypt, they were known by the related term khawal. The khawal imitated female ghawazi by dancing with castanet self accompaniment, painting their hands with henna, braiding their long hair, plucking their facial hair, wearing make-up, and adopting the manners of women.
As they impersonate women, their dances are exactly of the same description as those of the Ghawazee ... Their general appearance... is more feminine than masculine: they suffer the hair of the head to grow long, and generally braid it, in the manner of women... they imitate the women also in applying kohl and henna to their eyes and hands like women. In the streets, when not engaged in dancing, they often veil their faces; not from shame, but merely to affect the manners of women.

Khawal distinguished themselves from women by wearing a mix of men's and women's clothing. The khawal performed at various functions such as weddings, births, circumcisions, and festivals.
In the eighteenth and nineteenth century, they also commonly performed for foreign visitors, variously shocking or delighting them. The khawal were perceived as sexually available; their male audiences found their ambiguity seductive.
In modern Egyptian slang, the term is derogatory and refers to a passive gay man.