Links
for Gay India
If you find
a bad--or better--link,
please
contact me
Legal
and Political Information
International
Gay and Lesbian
Human Rights Commission
International
Lesbian and Gay
Association
Amnesty
International
Human
Rights Watch
Peter
Tatchell Human Rights Campaign
LGBT Immigration Task Force
Immigration
Information
LGBT
Immigration Help in USA
LGBT
Immigration Help in Canada
Immigration
Equality
Asylum
On-Library (see article #8)
2006
Immigration Film 'Maple Palm'
Guidebooks
Lonely
Planet Guide
Spartacus
Gay Guide
Gay
Guides on the Net
Damron
Guides
Gay
Info Exchange
Lonely
Planet Thorn Tree
India
Information
India
Embassy Washington, DC
India State
Tourist Office
Lonely
Planet India
Factbook
on India
LGBT/HIV All India
GBPoz
INFOSEM
Delhi
Humrahi
Trust--Forum for Gay Men
The Naz Foundation Trust
National AIDS Control Organization
PRISM E-mail : prism_delhi@yahoo.co.in
Human
Rights Law Network
E-mail : hrindel@vsnl.net
Calcutta
SAATHII
Calicutta
E-mail : saathii@yahoo.com
Human
Rights Law Network
New
Alipore Praajak Development Society
SWIKRITI
E-mail: swikriti2003@hotmail.com
The
Praajak GenderTrust
E-mail : pratyaygendertrust@yahoo.co.in
Dumdum
Swikriti Society
(E-mail: swikriti2003@hotmail.com
Durbar
Mahila Samanwaya Committee
Gokale
Road Bandhan
E-mail : ranjitbandhan@rediffmail.com
Bombay(Mumbai)
Humsafar Trust
Gay
Bombay Yahoo Group
Aanchal
Trust for Women (mostly
straight and western)
The
Sakhi Char Chowghi Trust
(E-mail: sakhicharchowghi@yahoo.com)
Dai
Welfare Society
(E-mail: daiwelfaresociety@gmail.com
Bangalore
Sangama
Swabhava
Trust
Alternative
Law Forum
(E-mail: alforum@vsnl.net)
Gelaya
Trust
E-mail: gelayaa2000@yahoo.co.in
Good
as You
Jagruthi
(E-mail: snehadaan@yahoo.com)
Vividha
(E-mail: vividhabangalore@hotmail.com)
Pune
Sampathik Trust
Chennai
(Madras)
SAATHII
- Chennai
Sahodaran (website
under reconstruction)
Social Welfare Association for Men (SWAM)
(E-mail only: sekar_swam@rediffmail.com)
Thamilnadu
Aravanigal Association (THAA)
(E-mail: aashaathaa@yahoo.co.in)
South
India AIDS Action Programme
APSACS (Andhra
Pradesh AIDS Control) Society
SWAM
Chennai
Hyderabad
Saathi
Mithrudu (E-mail: mithrudu@yahoo.com)
Goa
Humsafar Goa
Other
Cities
Infosem
Men's Sexual Health Resources
Southern
California South
Asian Queers
Other
Gay India Information
Purple
Dragon
Wikipedia:
Homosexuality/Rights in India
Khushnet
India's
Gay Divide (story)
Lesbian
Wedding (story)
UN
condemns India
Gay
Asia
Miscellaneous
Info
Gay
Bombay
NYC
Salga
Interview
with Debanuj Dasgupta
Interview
with Ashok Row Kavi
Asian
Gay Magazines
Trikone
LGBT Information
Trikone
Magazine
Bombay
Dost
Huriyah
Magazine (Queeer Muslim magazine)
Literature
About India/Gay/Sexuality
Homosexuality
and Hinduism
Queer
India
A
Queer Indian Lesbian Professor in USA
People
with a History
(Enormous biblio of Gay Studies)
Center for health and Population
South
Asian Women's Network
'Homosexuality
in Ancient India' by Devdutt Pattanaik
'Lesbian
desire in Ancient and Modern India' by Giti Thadani
South
Asian Bibliography
'Same-sex
Love in India' by Vanita & Kidwai
Interview
with Kidwai
'The
man who was a woman and other queer tales from Hindu Lore'
by
Devdutt Pattanaik
'Bisexuality:
identities, behaviors, and politics' by L. Ramakrishnan
'The
Invisibles-Eunichs in India' by Zia Jaffrey
'Lesbian History in India
Other LGBT Travel Links
Lesbigay Travel Info/ News
Rex Wochner Lesbigay News
Gay Reading (webzine)
365Gay.com (webzine)
Gay.com/Planet Out.com News
Gay Today.com
Gay Wired (news/scene/trave/)
Advocate Magazine
Gay and Lesbian Review
Our World Magazine
Out and About Travel Letter (USA)
Out Traveler Magazine
QT Travel Magazine
Gay Travel News
Gay Travel Site
Venturing Out Travel Stories
Passport Magazine
The Grey Gay Guide
Gay Places
Gay Travel Plus
BootsnAll Resources
Queery.com
Fridae.com
Lesbian.com
LGBT Travel Writers
Jan Morris (The Grande Dame)
Jan Morris (BBC Bio)
Martinforeman.com
Peter Tatchell (Activist & Writer)
Bruce Chatwin
Sasha Alyson
LGBT Travel Books (Essays/Stories)
Wonderlands
Lesbian Travels
Gay Travels
Travelers' Journals (mixed)
TravelPod.com
(New LGBT Forum)
Worldsurface.com
Lonely Planet Thorn Tree
Lesbigay Travel Tours
Intnl. G/L Travel Association
Bluway Gay Travel
David Tours
Hans Ebensten Deluxe Tours
RSVP Vacations
Damron Guides and Travel
Gay Travel Plus
Gay.com/Planet Out Travel
Utopia Tours (Asia)
Alyson Adventures
Friends Travel
Gay Away
Venture Out
bGay Travel
Orbitz G/L Travel
Now Voyager
Innovative Gay Travel
Above and Beyond Tours
Pride Holidays
Gay Jet
Purple Roofs Travel
Gay Crawler
Hermes Tours
Gay Family Vacations (with kids)
Olivia Cruises & Resorts
R Family Vacations
Camp Lavender Hill
Camp It Up
Rainbow Family Camp
Worldwide Gay Life,
Sites and Insights Gay India 2006--Part 3: Chennai /Madras A four-part journey
through south India Also see:
Sahodaran’s
message is simple and clear: take care of yourself
and others by practicing safe sex; use condoms and learn about
HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment. HIV
in India
While
at the Sahodaran office I met Dr. Athar Gureshi, a homeopathic physician
who recently moved to Chennai to oversee
the state
of Tamil Nadu HIV educations programs on behalf of the NAZ
Foundation in Delhi. Lobbying
the current government on behalf of HIV care and education has
been modestly successfully in that risk factors—such
as poor health education—are now being addressed.
Progress has also been made thanks in part to the new
national
director
of NACO (National
AIDS Control Organization) Dr Sujata Rao,
a woman sensitive to the plight of AIDS sufferers.
Making arrangements to meet us, Ramki asked if he could bring some friends. Fortunately the friends turned out to be members of Movenpick (movenpick@yahoogroups.com; www.yahoogroups.com/list/movenpick ), a social and support organization composed mainly of middle class LGBT people from Chennai. Started
in 2003, Movenpick usually has meetings at locations in
Marina
or Besant Nagar for food and chat about local events,
personal stuff, careers, HIV, university projects,
families and dating (or lack of). Sometimes they will screen
a
film or go to a concert or to a restaurant or hotel
bar. There are currently about 200 members on Movenpick's
mailing list and typically 15-30 attend meetings. These were mod-con middle class preppy queers, some of them partners in discreet couple-ships, surrounded by like-minded others in close-knit friendship networks—not unlike Berlin or Buenos Aires; friendships based on lifestyle interests, education, manners, profession and personal economy--and separate from other castes in the Indian system, an insurmountable barrier within the LGBT ‘community’, unlike Sydney or Amsterdam. I suspect a gay Dalit--or a prince--would have felt uncomfortable at our table, perhaps slightly equal as a gay person but strained and out of place as a member of a different caste member. By coincidence across the street from our restaurant was the Park Hotel where ‘stag night’ is hosted at the disco on Tuesdays with MDM (men dancing with men) but the entry fee is steep at 1000 RS (about $22) which results in a limited and higher class selection of guys. That
said, class and caste in India are not correlated
in neat/tight ways as suggested here. Upper
class men one might see at Park are just as likely
to not be brahmins, though they may not
be kothis. Lots of non-brahmins do not, as a matter
of being, identify as kothis just as many lower-economic
stratum homosexual/bisexual males do not identify
as kothis. However, occasionally a scandal breaks out in the upper crust such as happened in 2006 when Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil from Gujarat went public with his truth. (See News & Reports 2006, #11 and #19.) "Gohil, who heads a HIV and Aids programme for the local government, said he has found support from gay and lesbian groups in India and abroad. 'All I want to do is to ensure there is a discussion and people talk about homosexuality and that we get some sort of social status,' he said." These are brave sentiments in a highly dense and highly conservative country. There is much progress to be made.
Note: This and the other 3 stories posted about gay India 2006 describe numerous organizations with which many LGBT folks are associated. As a consequence the stories do not portray much about personal lives and feelings as they are experienced on a daily basis. 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.
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