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Worldwide Gay Life,
Sites and Insights Gay India
2001-03: Intro; Two academic commentaries
and three interviews serve as a basic introduction to the vast
and complex
potpourri of cultures known as India. Following these academic commentaries are links to parts three and four: interviews with three important gay and lesbian leaders who give a more 'flesh and blood' feel for gay life that is 'out' and evident in modern India. The final fifth section is a story about Calcutta's first gay pride parade and a reflection of its extended meaning. Also see:
By Shivananda
Khan This essay
focuses on men who have sex with men, and gay men. This is because most
of the research and analysis conducted so far by the Naz Foundation
has been on the male to male sexual behaviors as a significant factor
in STD/HIV transmission in India. This
is a different matter than the construction of men's sexualities. Mohammed,
42: "So when I am hot and dont have enough money, then I
know several men who I can have 'maasti' with. A lot of my friends do
this." (Maasti is a Hindi term which means mischief and often has
sexual overtones when it is used between young men.) Who is gay in an Indian context? What is gay? Who is homosexual? About three-quarters (72%) of truck drivers in North Pakistan who participated in a recent survey published in AIDS Analysis Asia admitted that they has sex with other males, while 76% stated that they had sex with female sex workers. Are these 72% gay? Homosexual? There is sufficient anecdotal evidence to indicate that in the other countries of the sub-continent, similar levels of male to male sexual behaviors exist as part of a broader sexual repertoire. Are these males bisexual? In working with sexual health issues in India and in listening to the rhetoric of UNAIDS representatives, international donor agencies, the Indian medical profession, and many Western and Indian gay men, an assumption is often made that same-gender sexual behaviors must mean the person is a homosexual, or gay, while male to female sexual behavior must mean that the person is heterosexual.
The debate
on sexualities may even at times be perceived as a form of neo-colonialism
whereby Western sexual ideologies have "invaded" Indian discourses
on sexuality and identity by professionals, laypersons, "straights"
or "gays," and whereby indigenous histories and cultures become
invisible. However,
the denial of variation in history in many Western and Indian discourses had given rise to a prevailing construction of sexuality, where
a "procreative and penetrative" sexual ideology is the only
"sexuality" that is seen as relevant. Perversely, any other
form is categorized as deviant and Western. The
following comment made to me by a man in New Delhi captures the context
of much sexual expression in India: "Privacy? What privacy?
I share a room with three older brothers, and I have sex with all of
them." ---------------- (Part 2) [Although the concept of MSM (men having sex with men) has been used in the West], "In practice, however, MSM is often use interchangeably with that of 'gay men'." Thus, whilst there was more social acceptance of alternative sexual natures in the 1970s and more space emerged for sexual minorities to live their lives without repression, gay men also became more sexually isolated. Due to the tendency to to associate male homosexuality with effeminacy, men who wished to preserve their masculine heterosexual self-image withdrew from homosexual circuits. Thus there was a decline in the proportion of men who had sex with men who were also involved in heterosexual relationships. The fact that the affirmation of one's homosexuality became the basis of positive social identification also contributed to the view that bisexuality was an illegitimate socio-sexual identity. The rejection of the effeminate stereotype was also part of the gay political agenda. From the beginning, AIDS was associated with sexual deviance, heterosexuals who contracted HIV/AIDS being treated either as 'innocent victims' or as nominal queers (citing Goldin, 1994; Patton, 1994)
First, the status of women in marriage and the norms and traditions controlling their behavior so clearly establish male superiority that Indian men do not have to strongly assert their masculine characteristics in order to be thought of as 'male'. Second, the social position of men in influenced by their caste position. These factors may in part explain why there is no need for a system such as Latin American Machismo to provide a means of structuring power relations between men. ...providing that a man does not adopt an alternative gender identity, he may engage in 'homosexual' activity without compromising his masculinity the taboo on pre- or extra-marital sex for women is more strictly enforced than the taboo on homosexuality. However, due to the social distances between the sexes, men who also seek sexual fulfillment in relations with other men. Indian culture is highly homosocial and displays of affection, body contact and the sharing of beds between men is socially acceptable (Kahn, 1994) This creates opportunities for sexual contact, though sexual behavior in this context is rarely seen as real sex, but as play. Much of this same-sex sexual activity begins in adolescence between school friends and within family environments and is non-penetrative. Young men who cultivate such relationships do not consider themselves to be 'homosexual' but conceive their behavior in terms of sexual desire, opportunity and pleasure Given the constant expectation that a man will eventually marry and produce sons, he can enter in same-sex sexual relations without challenging his masculine sense of self Even effeminate men who have a strong desire for receiving penetrative sex are likely to consider their role as husbands and especially fathers to be more important than their self-identification than their homosexual behavior. Thus, to
be receptive in homosexual encounters does not necessarily denote loss
of manhood. Nor does it imply passivity and a subordinate class. This
aspect of male-male The principal method in the research was therefore participant observations, first covert then revealed. A team of three researchers was formed, all of whom had a background in social science. [The various categories of men who engage in same-sex sexual activities in so-called "sexual circuits" in Madras are given. As with Indian men and women, a social distance exists between masculine- and feminine-identified MSM and it is difficult to envisage a fundamental change in these arrangements - e.g. the development of more reciprocal social and sexual relations. It is therefore highly unlikely that a collective 'gay' consciousness and solidarity can be achieved in the Indian context. Indeed, care should be taken in assuming that an incipient 'gay movement' already exists in the country (Drucker, 1996). [Of all the categories of MSM} Double deckers also represent the only category of MSM in Madras for whom North American/West European model of gay activism may have some meaning. Conclusion: References: Interviewer Raj Ayyar has said: "there are many in the West as well as in India and elsewhere who see homoeroticism as a 'Western import.' "This false cliche held by colonialists and post-colonial ultra-nationalists, by right-wingers and leftists of whatever stripe, is powerfully challenged in 'Same-Sex Love in India' by Saleem Kidwai and Ruth Vanita.
Extensive interviews with these two gay teacher-authors can be read at the following pages: Interview
with Ruth Vanita (pictured at right) ----------------------------- (Part 4) ...and he is much more in addition to being an activist and editor. Interview with Ashok Row Kavi (pictured left)
All three inteviews are courtesy of Gaytoday.com (http://www.gaytoday.com/ -------------------- The Statesman,
Kolkata, India July 27,
2003 Globalization
is creeping, even if on tiptoe, to a conservative city like Kolkata.
I refer not to swanky shopping malls, styled like their counterparts
abroad. I refer to a march by gay men in support of homosexual rights
on 29 June, a first in Kolkata. It began, and wound its way through,
impeccably middle class localities: Park Circus, Gariahat Road, Gol
Park. I do not want to make the claim that homosexuality is a global
import unknown in traditional cultures. Same-Sex Love in India, a recent
book by Saleem Kidwai and Ruth Vanita, catalogues a whole bunch of
references
to, if not homosexual, at least homo-erotic passion in traditional
Indian texts. I do agree, however, with French philosopher Michel Foucault,
himself a homosexual, that heterosexuality and homosexuality as distinctive
lifestyles are a modern Western
invention. The same social arrangement continues, in effect, in the present day. There exists an underground subculture of homosexuality which is not violently persecuted in India. Homosexuals, on their part, must ensure their activities aren't too overt and intrude into the public sphere. That implicit social contract was violated when gay men took part in a public procession on June 29. It must be noted, though, that there were no lesbians in the march, although the topic has been aired in films and books from time to time. The emergence of homosexuality into the public sphere is still a hesitant affair. What makes modern homosexuality shocking to many is its refusal of the "obligation" to procreate. Anyone who believes that the core of his (or her) being lies in his/ her relationship with another person of the same sex is, ipso facto, forswearing his/her "responsibility" for propagating the tribe/ community/ nation/ society. In other words, along with modern homosexuality, the modern individual is born. In any traditional culture, one of the biggest imperatives is to multiply its members. A community's numbers may be depleted by nature's depredations and by war. Replenishing those numbers is a primary need; individual rights and desires come a poor second. Thus the Bible says "go forth and multiply"; for Hindus peace in the afterlife isn't possible unless funeral rites are performed by one's offspring. Modern culture, by contrast, has acquired sufficient control over nature to make overpopulation, rather than under population, a problem. And as far as war is concerned, a million men do not count for much when faced with a single intercontinental ballistic missile, which makes gaining access to the latter a rather more important factor in contemporary power politics. There has thus been a loosening, in the last half-century or so, of the taboo against non-procreative partnerships.
Take the occasion that Kolkata's marchers were commemorating on June 29, along with marchers in Sao Paulo, San Francisco and other cities across the globe. The occasion was the Stonewall riots in New York's Greenwich village in 1969. On June 27, 1969, New York police raided the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in Greenwich village. While such raids had been routine, on that occasion the crowds fought back, and the neighbourhood erupted in riots and protests for the next few days. That sparked the worldwide gay rights movement which has become a facet of contemporary modernity. Many might scent dark neo-imperialist conspiracy here, as raids on gay bars are not yet a local issue in India. But what is a local issue, undoubtedly, is the existence of Section 377 on the statute books, according to which homosexuals can be awarded imprisonment for up to 10 years. And sooner or later the issue might capture the attention of the neo-Hindu right which is obsessed, after all, with questions of numbers and demographics. A marriage between Article 377 and a conservative BJP-type government could yield as offspring some serious persecution of sexual minorities. The ire visited by the Shiv Sena upon 'Fire', a film depicting a lesbian relationship between two women, can be a precursor of things to come.
If the backlash against homosexuality can be attributed to its privileging the modern individual over the social "necessity" to procreate, 21st century biotechnology could bring about a fascinating twist in this tale. I am not referring to cloning where, besides the complex ethical issues that it raises, the characteristics of only one "parent" among a homosexual couple would be transferred. But
can there be a procedure where a homosexual couple can have a child
who will inherit the genetic material of both parents, just as the
children of "normal" heterosexual couples do? The answer to
that question appears to be yes. An experiment carried out with mouse
eggs, and reported in the journal Science, raises that very possibility
if duplicated with human eggs. In the procedure, called egg nuclear
transfer and initially conceived to help infertile couples, the DNA
from a damaged egg can be evacuated and placed in another egg, whose
own DNA has been removed. In theory, the same procedure can be used
to introduce sperm DNA into an evacuated egg, fertilize this "male
egg" with
sperm from another parent in the laboratory, then
gestate the resulting embryo in a surrogate mother. The baby born would have the genetic material of two male parents. The same procedure could be repeated for two female parents. If this or similar procedures of mixing human DNA were to become widespread in another fifty years, an offshoot would be that homosexual couples could become parents and have families just like everyone else. That would, of course, force us to radically revalue our concepts of "motherhood" and "fatherhood". It would do away with one problem, though. If the unconscious resistance to homosexuals stems from the fact that they do not contribute to society's imperative of reproducing its members, that wouldn't hold anymore. Radical individualists might rue the loss of homosexuality's subversive charge, but it would lead to the integration of homosexuals into society, to the extent that even mashima and pishima might not take much notice of the family with same-sex parents living next door.
Note: For more intimate insights about the 'inner' lives of LGBT people I suggest the following sites: Movenpick: http://www.orinam.org/comingout.html and Gay Bombay Yahoo Group: www.gaybombay.org. |