Batty boy
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Bati boy, bati man, pariss, chi chi man and chiefe are sexual slurs used in Jamaica, Belize, Guyana and the rest of the Anglophone Caribbean to describe gay men. The term is a Jamaican abbreviation of the word bottom into batty; "batty boy" is a cognate of the American English "butt boy". Usage is commonplace in some Caribbean cultures where homosexuality is condemned, partially as a result of mainly conservative Christians as well as Rastafarian beliefs (mainly in Jamaica). Many Jamaican musicians have used the term to disparage gay men. In one notorious song, dancehall musician Buju Banton advocates violence against "batty boys", including shooting them in the head and setting them on fire, in "Boom Bye Bye":
- Boom bye bye, in a batty bwoy head,
- Rude boy nah promote no nasty man, dem hafi dead.
The term was brought to the United Kingdom by the post World War II Jamaican immigrants and is now popular among the young Britons. The term was further popularised in the United Kingdom by the rise of British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen and his portrayal of the character Ali G. Ali G however referred to the alternate spelling: bhatti boy. Recently, some gay men in these areas have begun referring to themselves as "batty boys" or "battymen", in order to reclaim the term and remove the stigma associated with it. This is similar to the way that the term "queer" is being reclaimed in the United States. For this reason, in some cultures batty can be used as a simple description of sexual orientation much like the word "gay", or it can be used to be degrading.