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Gay
India News & Reports 2005
Also see
Gay India News & Reports 1998-01
Gay India News & Reports
2002
Gay India News & Reports
2003
Gay India News & Reports
2004
Gay India News & Reports
2006
Gay
India News & Reports 2007 Jan-Jun
Gay
India News & Reports 2007 Jul-Dec
Gay
India News & Reports 2008 Jan-Apr
Gay
India News & Reports 2008 May-Dec
Also
see:
Gay India 2001-03
Gay Bombay /Mumbai 2006
Gay Hyderabad 2006
Gay Chennai /Madras 2006
Gay Bangalore 2006
Gay Bombay Yahoo Group: gaybombay@yahoogroups.com
1
Lesbian couple sparks debate in Uttar Pradesh state 4/05
2
HC hands over alleged lesbian couple to parents 4/05
3
Transvestites get ''married'' 4/05
4 Bollywood
and Bomgay (1) 5/05
5 Bollywood
and Bomgay (2) 5/05
6 AIDS
Rises in India—Gay sex accused 5/05
7 Fear
and loathing in gay India--a
look at gay life in India 5/05
8
Social taboos pressure lesbian love 6/05
9 Pakistani Sex Workers Visit India
to Discuss Safe Sex Practices and Combating
AIDS 6/05
10 India's deadly secret: HIV/AIDS explosion: Virus has begun long-feared breakout
among
1 billion 6/05
11
Broken bones and a broken heart 7/05
12 Indian Cinema Examines Lesbian, Gay
Themes 7/05
13 Music
video is taking the gay community to middle class homes through
the small screen 7/05
14 Indian Lesbian Couple Weds 7/05
15
Queer no more--new book shows, ‘coming out’ has never
been easier
for homosexuals in India 7/05
16 Gay
activists protest in Mumbai 8/05
Sify News
http://sify.com/news/offbeat/fullstory.php?id=13721145
19
April 2005
1
Lesbian couple sparks debate in Uttar Pradesh state
by Vinay Krishna Rastogi in Lucknow
Two lesbians of Allahabad have decided to approach a court
with the plea that they be declared a married couple. The girls, Shilpi Gupta and Usha Yadav, were arrested after
they lived together for six months. They declared before
the Dhoomanganj police in Allahabad
that they would commit suicide, but would not leave each other. Discuss:
India should
legalise same-sex marriages Their love became public knowledge after Shilpa’s parents lodged
a complaint against Usha, a computer teacher, for kidnapping their daughter.
The two had
been missing since the last week of January and had been living together.
The two girls left Allahabad after they were harassed by their parents
and had gone to Setalwad district in Gujarat to live with a common friend.
Both
the young women were sent for medical examination. Even at the police station,
the two demanded that they be allowed to live in the same cell. They will
plead before the magistrate that if they are sent to jail, they should
be allowed
to live in the same cell.
But Circle Officer of Dhoomanganj, Arvind Misra, says there is no law that
can allow marriage between two persons of the same sex. Legal experts say
there is no law that prohibits two adult women from living together.
Shilpi’s father admitted that she had repeatedly turned down marriage
proposals with men because of her lesbian relationship. Meanwhile several organisations have demanded that the Government amend
the law to allow same-sex marriages. Legal experts say the government should
consider the recent advice of the Supreme Court to re-examine the issue
of
same-sex
marriages, permitted in many developed countries.
A section of legal fraternity feels it is the democratic right of people
to choose their partners and the state should not interfere. But president of the Uttar Pradesh unit of Shiv Sena, Vijay Kumar Tewari,
who is also a leading High Court advocate, says such permission should
never be
granted by law as it is against Indian cultural ethos. "We cannot convert our country into Lesbos, the ancient Greek village which
was infamous for women having sex with women," he said.
Press
Trust of India, Allahabad
http://www.sulekha.com/htblogs?title=HC hands over alleged lesbian couple to
parents&url=
April
21, 2005
2
HC
hands over alleged lesbian couple to parents
The Allahabad High Court on Thursday handed over an alleged
lesbian couple to their parents after they stated before the court that
they wanted
to go with them. Both Usha Yadav and Shilpi Gupta were produced before
the court by the city police after a habeas corpus petition was
filed by the former's father.
The two girls gave statement before the court that they had gone to Gujarat
together in search of employment and would like to go to their respective
homes, after which Justice VK Chaturvedi dismissed the petition.
Rajendra kumar, father of Shilpi Gupta, had lodged an FIR that one Usha
Yadav had "kidnapped" his daughter following which police recovered
the two girls from Gujarat and produced them before a Judicial Magistrate
in Allahabad.
Later, Harbans Singh, father of Usha Uadav, filed a habeas corpus petition
before the High Court that Shilpi's parents had kept his daughter confined,
on which the court directed that they be produced before it. Earlier,
the two girls had maintained before police that they wanted to live like
husband and wife.
Asia
Pacific e News letter http://www.indiadaily.com/breaking_news/32414.asp
http://us.click.yahoo.com/CybhMB/SOnJAA/xGEGAA/WzSolB/TM
21
April 2005
3
Transvestites get ''married''
Full
moon acting as witness, the sounds of music, laughter and tinkling
anklet bells in Tamil Nadu
heralded the
marriage of thousands of transvestites from across India
to normal men - only to be widowed the next day.
The
annual four-day
festival to Aravan, a deity locally known as Koothandavar,
started Tuesday on the full moon night or Chitra Pournami
in the Indian month Chitra. At a small Krishna temple in
the Koovagam
village in Villipuram district, the transvestites underwent
the age-old ritual, replete with gaiety, pomp and splendour,
inspired out of an excerpt from the Hindu epic Mahabharata.
The
temple priest, K. Shanmugam, says he has lost count of the
weddings he performed; at least 10,000, he estimates.
According to mythology, Aravan was one of Arjuna's many
sons, sacrificed
so that the Pandavas could win the battle of Mahabharata.
As a last wish, he desired to get married, causing Lord
Krishna to take the form of a beautiful woman so that Aravan
could
marry him. Aravan was then beheaded, and Krishna became
a
widow.
Known as Aravanis, the worshippers that include transvestite
community and many normal men, whose families have undertaken
vows at the temple for some boon, undergo the complete
ritual - from marrying to getting widowed.
Weddings
are performed by tying the mangalsutra, or symbolic wedlock,
under
the full moon. The day after the weddings, the married men
go
through
a consummation ritual, following which their "spouses" go
through a ritual rubbing off their vermilion from their forehead,
donning white garb like widows.
Since
2003, the rituals have been held in an organized manner with
many NGOs partaking in
the activities. A rights
conference takes place every
year to assure participation of Aravanis from different states. "We
take our annual holiday this time and come home," said
Meena, a transvestite, who is part of a filmmaking effort on
their lives by the Don Bosco Institute of Communication Arts.
According to state estimates, Tamil Nadu
alone has 140,000 transvestites.
The South
India Aravanigal Rights and Rehabilitation Centre, Tiruchirapally,
is appealing to the government to legalise
the "third gender" in all India's forms and official
documents so that they are not forced into the "male" or "female" categories. "If
we don't get jobs, we are forced into prostitution. Give us
a livelihood opportunity," says Chandra, a transvestite
activist working with the South India AIDS Action Programme.
The organisation is also imparting vocational training to the
Aravanis to wean them away from begging and prostitution. Special
cultural events are organised by NGOs. Actors, who enact the
Aravan story from the Mahabharata, also act out AIDS-care and
awareness skits. Films related to gender issues are shown and
a beauty pageant for "Miss Koovagam" is being held
for the transvestite community since 2003.
[AIDS_ASIA]AIDS
Analysis Asia Pacific e News letter. An e FORUM for peer
to peer cross cultural discourse on HIV/AIDS issues and
concerns of people from Asia- Pacific region. Web page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AIDS_ASIA/
For further details of the AIDS_ASIA e FORUM. Please contact
the moderator by e-mail: moderator_aidsasia@yahoo.com Yahoo!
Groups Links
From
OutTraveler Magazine (USA)
May/June 2005
4
Bollywood
and Bomgay (1
of 2 stories; see #5)
by Shashank Samant
Bombay is the city of dreams, goes the commonly tossed line that":" probably
coined centuries ago by some ron/antic. The dreams in Bombay
have only gotten bigger and more colorful. One of the world's
ever-evolving cities, often called the New York of the East,
every face here has a different story to tell, and every mind
weaves a vibrant dream in true Hindu psychedelic fashion.
In
cosmopolitan Mumbai (what Bombay was renamed in 1996, though
loyalists prefer the former name) the most elite of the elite
and the poorest of the poor often cross paths. The dimmed lights
in plush apartments of the Manhattanesque skyline overlook the
simmering kitchen fires that provide the light by which children
study in the slums. Different realities exist and coexist. Life
is full of contrasts and contradictions, of extremes, and yet
there's a twinkle in every eye.
This
city is a city of survivors; you can feel it and you can smell
it. ~ As your flight hits the
runway of Mumbai's Sahar I' International Airport the scent
of life is unmistakable even in the wee hours of the morning.
You
are instantly thrust into the Mumbai trance during the arduous
taxi ride from the airport to Colaba, the area of the city
most popular with tourists. As your cab floats by the promenade
on
the seashore opposite the grandiose Taj Mahal Hotel, Y' catches
something peculiar: dozens and dozens of men returning your
stare, a mischievous glint in their eyes.
You
are passing by "the
oldest gay cruising area in the city, where nocturnal creatures
out with darkness on their side.
But
now modern gay Mumbai is finally coming out of the shadows.
The southernmost tip
of the
island of Bombay, Colaba hosts the two most famous landmarks
of the city: the Gateway of India a grand Taj Mahal Hotel.
Colaba causeway is the area most tourists call home.
Whatever you want
you can get it here and more. Leopold Cafe, the place
where every Westerner goes for breakfast, is right in the center
of this
street. And right outside the cafe you are likely to
encounter
a friendly, middle-aged, unnamed woman. She's been a
permanent fixture here for years and offers foreigners small
parts in
Bollywood movies for about $44 a day. You may not come
out a star, but
scores flock to Mumbai just for the chance.
Modeled on big brother Hollywood Bollywood is the Indian
film industry, the largest in the world (producing
nearly 1,000
films a year), headquartered in Mumbai. Films aren't
just a part of
life for people in India; they are a way of life. The
over-the-top, surreal dance numbers in nearly every
Bollywood film often
make no sense in relation to the story, but no one
seems to be complaining.
A new wave of filmmakers is making hard-hitting films,
sticking to the subject and without any songs, but
those still constitute
only l0% of films made today. When you're living in
abject poverty, who wants more harsh reality? The city
needs
its Technicolor dreams like a desert needs water, and
those
dreams get no larger-than-life
than in Bollywood. Most of the studios are situated
in suburban Mumbai, north of the old city. Filmcity is
the
studio that
most
tourists visit to get a glimpse of the separate reality
of Bollywood. Spread out in a picturesque rain forest,
it houses
about 20 film
sets and many natural locations. There are nearly a
dozen studios besides Filmcity; two noteworthy ones are
Filmistan
and Filmalaya.
Bollywood's pomp and campiness make Mumbai a natural
draw for gays. But just how gay-friendly is India?
In this era
of ‘desis’ (Indian
expatriates living overseas) and globalized out-sourcing, the
subcontinent is more hip to homosexuality than it would seem
at first glance. Local gay groups are fighting against part of
the Indian penal code that makes any homosexual act illegal and
punishable with life imprisonment. (Luckily it is rarely enforced,
but police often threaten with it when looking for bribes).
Activists
frequently circulate petitions and hold protest marches,
while the Naz Foundation has filed a court
case seeking repeal of the law. The case was dismissed by the
Delhi high court in 2004,
but the foundation has vowed to appeal. Previously
rare TV debates about homosexuality are even occurring. The
increasing number
of gay parties in Mumbai is another indication of
progress. Dressed in the latest fashions, the "kings and queens" strut
out for the Gaybombay parties that have been going strong for
over five years, held on two Saturdays a month.
Last
year's Gaybombay (or "GB") Valentine's Day party on the barge off the
Gateway of India hosted nearly 500. Happening Mumbai nightspots
like Mikanos, Razzberry Rhinoceros, and Copacabana have offered
their space for GB parties too.
Gaybombay also organizes support
meetings and gay film festivals. Says Vikram Doctor, an active
member of the group: "A lot of people find it difficult
coming into a gay space for the first time. We try and facilitate
that." The results are showing: The four-year-old GB film
festival is an ongoing monthly event of private screenings, with
desis flying in from different continents bringing DVDs of gay
films for private screenings to packed houses.
Equally
popular was Larzish, India's first public gay and lesbian
film festival,
held in 2003, complete with panel discussions,
organized by the lesbian group Humjinsi and the Indian
Centre for Human Rights
and Law. But like many developing countries,
India is far from securing any form of gay rights, legally
or socially. Although
you may see men walking down the streets holding
hands, as in many countries such a display does not indicate
homosexuality.
Hindu scriptures term homosexuality an act against
the religion, and families routinely kick out their gay and
lesbian offspring.
Even
for all the openness of the GB parties, rainbow flags are no
longer hoisted because of potential police
trouble. Even if
reality is not perfectly rosy, there are always
the dreamy visions of Bollywood. The Indian film industry
has traditionally turned
a blind eye to gay issues (even heterosexual
kissing is a rarity on the screen). In 1996 Deepa
Mehta's film about lesbianism,
Fire, opened to vandalized cinemas, and the
trashy 2004 film Gir!friend caused protests by conservative
and lesbian
groups
alike.
But
recently a number of big, well-received film projects had either
a prominent gay character or a queer
subplot. 2002's
Mango Souffle by filmmaker Mahesh Dattani
dealt with a gay man's struggle to come to terms with his sexuality
and included Indian
cinema's first gay male kissing scene, albeit
underwater.
And
one film that made Bollywood sit up and take
notice was blockbuster
Kal Ho Naa Ho, in which metrosexual superstar
Shahrukh Khan and his partner in crime, leading actor
Saif Ali Khan, unabashedly
played characters with strong homosexual
undercurrents. The population's mind-set is slowly evolving
as Mumbai edges
into modem global
culture. A freer, more open "Bomgay" may
not be a distant dream after all.
From
The OutTraveler Magazine (USA)
May/June 2005
5
Bollywood and Bomgay (2 of 2 stories; see #4)
by Chandler Burr
No one ever accused filmmaker Riyad Wadia of not
taking life on his own terms. In a society of crushing tradition
he was an
openly gay Indian man who dressed in skintight sparkling Lycra
and went to bed at dawn, like a star in the Bollywood musicals
he loved.
He
was a Wadia, one of the wealthiest and most powerful families
in India (though he was not personally wealthy), and
he knew everyone in the Bollywood movie magazines. He moved
effortlessly through Mumbai (where he was born in 1967), from
the mansions
on Malabar Hill to the gutters of Colaba. His films
were shown at Cannes, Sundance, and Tokyo. None of it ever fazed him;
he figured, "Well, of course." In 1996 Bollywood director
Kaizad Gustad introduced Riyad to gay novelist and poet R. Raj
Rao, whose work is suffused with Mumbai's heated, lush ethos.
The
film Riyad wound up making from Rao's stories was the groundbreaking Bomgay; the city was his set. The film was shot in the majestic
restrooms of Victoria Terminal, where gay Indian men cruise.
They shot the squatters who defecate on the railway tracks
up to Andheri.
Few
in this city of sparkling musicals had dared to film this kind
of reality or film anything with a queer
bent.
Bomgay rocked India. The film's words
shocked people:"ln
the old days! The touch of some men polluted! Today is
it yours! Viruses and all;' as did the images of a brutal
gay bashing in a train station restroom and a fantasy orgy
in a library.
Says
journalist Vikram Doctor: "Everything Riyad did
was done with style and splash, and that is exactly what
the gay
movement in India needed. Thanks to him, gay issues took
their place on those society-people page 3s of newspapers."
Riyad
was eager to spread the gospel of Bollywood around the
world. In September 2003, when I was staying at his family
apartment
on Worli Sea Face, looking out over the Indian Ocean, he
showed me a large photo spread he had organized for Conde
Nost Traveler
with pictures of all his star friends-Vivek Oberoi, Shilpa
Shetty. I had no idea he was sick (his family, seeking
privacy, has not
disclosed the cause of his death, which came
on November 30, 2003).They held a big memorial, and all the page 3
people came
to honor him. He would have loved it. At the time of his
death Riyad was finalizing a script for a Bollywood musical.
I had
no doubt it would have been as splashy and over-the-top
as his vibrant life.
Gay.com
U.K.
May
13, 2005
6
AIDS
Rises in India—Gay sex accused
by Gus Cairns,
India has reached the "point of no return," as
1 percent of its citizens have HIV. The crisis is exacerbated by the country's
refusal to acknowledge sex between men, researchers warned last week.
Michael Weinstein, the head of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, warned that
if a country's HIV prevalence rises beyond this "tipping point," it
is on its way to an African-style pandemic.
"
India will be South Africa. India will be Botswana. There's no question whatsoever," Weinstein
said.
One percent in India represents 7 million adults, because of the country's
large population.
Richard Feachem, the director of the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria,
said last month that this meant it has already far outstripped South Africa
as the country with the largest number of HIV-positive people in the world.
"
The epidemic is growing very rapidly. It is out of control. There is nothing
happening in India today that is big or serious enough to prevent it," he
warned.
Exactly why this is happening is partly caused by the amount of unprotected
sex going on between men, according to a recently published study.
Researcher Lalit Dandona conducted a huge study of 6,661 gay men who met in
cruising areas -- parks, cinemas and roadside food stalls -- in cities and
rural areas in Andhra Pradesh state, in the southeast of the country. His findings
were originally presented to the World AIDS Conference in Bangkok last year.
Dandona already knew there were high levels of sex between men throughout India
-- one study found that nearly one in 10 single men and one in 30 married men
had had anal sex with another man in the previous year. His study, which was
coordinated by the U.K.-based International HIV/AIDS Alliance, found that the
vast majority of gay sex was anal sex -- 85 percent of men, compared with 15
percent who had oral sex.
Half the men didn't use a condom during their last encounter, one in three
never used a condom and more than one in five claimed never to have even heard
of condoms.
Furthermore, two-thirds of the men also had sex with a woman. Forty-two percent
of the men were married.
In comparison only 9 percent were in a long-term gay relationship.
BBC
NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/south_asia/4304081.stm
7
Fear and loathing in gay India--a
look at gay life in India
May
17, 2005 Throughout South Asia, homosexuality has been a taboo subject.
There are signs in some areas that gay people are now becoming
more open in their behaviour. In the first of a series of articles
from the region, the BBC's Soutik Biswas looks at gay life in
India.
She is a qualified computer professional and works in a government
job, but has been forced to live a double life for many years
now. At work, she uses her true name. Outside, she uses a nom
de guerre, heading a support group for lesbians, bisexuals and
transgender communities.
She lives with her partner - who lives a similar double life - in an apartment
in the eastern city of Calcutta they bought together with a bank loan after
fighting for one for six years. "When we went to the bank for the first time to get a loan, I was told I
could not put down my partner as a co-applicant. It had to be a spouse. Finally,
last year, the bank relented. I put down my partner as a friend," says
Malobika, 41.
'Unnatural offence'
It has been a long, strange trip towards coming out of the closet for lesbians
like Malobika in conservative India, where same-sex relationships are illegal
and almost blasphemous.
The 145-year-old colonial Indian Penal Code clearly describes a same sex
relationship as an "unnatural offence".
These days, there is a greater openness about the gay community in the big
cities. But homophobia is still pretty rampant
Rafiquel Haque, gay activist
In a largely patriarchal society, lesbians bear the brunt of social ostracisation
and the law more than gay men. In many states, lesbians have taken their
lives after facing harassment at home and outside. Malobika and her friends have been luckier - "We are educated and have
a class advantage," as one of them says. Born to a mechanical engineer father and a homemaker mother, Malobika discovered
her sexuality when she was 17. Some 18 years later, when her parents were
frantically looking around for a suitable groom, she finally told them the
truth.
"My mother said she did not understand what I was saying. It took some time
for the whole thing to sink in," she said, sitting in a smoky teashop
in downtown Calcutta. Five years ago, Malobika along with five other lesbians started up a support
group called Sappho named after the Greek lyric poet. They run a helpline, publish a magazine and take up cases of human rights
abuses.
Anguished world
The helpline has become their window to the dark world of Indian lesbians.
Most of the women who call in say they have been forcibly married off by
their
parents. When they tell the truth, they are thrown out of their homes by
their spouses, parents and relatives. Most of these hapless women suffer from
extremely low esteem and say that
something is gravely wrong with them.
Am
I normal? Am
I like other women? Tell me please," asks
an anguished caller on the Sappho helpline. A panicky man
asks, "My wife says she is a lesbian.
Can you please cure her?" Sappho has a psychiatrist
on the line, who counsels these panicky women - and men.
Homophobia, say support groups, is acute in India. Malobika says
when parents find out - or the girl tells them - the truth, they
run to the doctor. "The doctor typically tells the girl to
swim, cook and knit. 'That way she will become a girl again,' they
say. "The parents then usually take the girl home and shut
her up, cutting her off from the outside world." Many girls
from the villages escape to the big city after being thrown out
of their homes.
Greater acceptance
Malobika remembers one 28-year-old girl who ran away to Calcutta to be
with her partner and take up a job in a beauty parlour. Four years
later, her
estranged parents came to visit her - and since then have accepted
the relationship.(5)Pavan Dhal is worried about "risky sexual behaviour"
In big cities like Calcutta, there is slightly more acceptance of same
sex relationships these days. As in other parts of the world, India
has seen
a growing gay and lesbian movement. "These days, there is a greater openness about the gay community in the
big cities. But homophobia is still pretty rampant," says Rafiquel
Haque, 31, a theatre actor and gay rights activist.
This means that when bright, young men like Rafiquel decide to come out
of the closet and begin talking to the media, they lose some friends.
One reason is that gay behaviour is also regarded as sexually predatory. Rafiquel says he was friends with a "liberal" artist couple
and their only son - till they saw him on a television show on gay issues. "The moment they came to know I was gay they stopped talking. They stopped
their son from meeting me. His mother told me, 'If my son becomes like
you, I will commit suicide'."
Coming out of the closet, however, is easier now: the eastern West Bengal state
alone has some nine gay and lesbian support groups.
Carnival
Rafiquel, who was instrumental in setting up one in 1993, says they
reached out to 5,000 gay men in the state within three years.
Two years ago, he organised a same sex mardi gras in Calcutta. Since
then it has become a regular yearly event.
Plays on gay issues are staged, members debate community issues, and
books and journals are sold at this merry fortnight-long carnival. It climaxes with a colourful march through the streets of Calcutta
- last year as many 300 gays, lesbians and transgender people participated
in the
march.
But life is still not easy even for a gay man in India - he usually
faces derision at work, and struggles to find a partner. Most gay men usually cruise darkly lit streets and unkempt parks and
often get picked up by police looking for bribes. "It's not easy to meet a partner. I still don't have a lasting partner.
It can be very lonely sometimes," says Pavan Dhal, 36, who heads a
support group. "There's also a lot of risky sexual behaviour. Its not a very happy situation
that way". (End of story)
Comments
from readers:
The real issue in India when it comes to religion, caste, sexuality etc is
the battle between the older guardians and the new generation. For society
to progress as a whole, grassroots mobilisation on each front can help raise
awareness amongst the people. However, many activists become victims to violence
and cannot fall back on the law for protection. It seems like a vicious cycle.
Layla Rao, USA
As a gay man living (and also having been born and raised) in California, I
recognize the huge gift I've been granted by having myself, my life and my
style for the most part accepted by the American community at large. Do not
get me wrong, there are struggles the gay community here in the USA still face,
particularly since the fundamentalist right-wing found their voice and vehicle
for articulation in George W. Bush. However, recognition of and a keen interest
in the struggle of all gay peoples across the globe needs to take place. Perhaps
one day Calcutta and Mumbai will mean to South Asia what San Francisco and
New York mean for North America.
Elliott, California, United States
I think its great that things are getting better for homosexuals in India.
But like every other thing that is 'taboo' in India, there is hardly any discussion
about it. Until people start to talk about it more, change will be slow. In
a country that can't even deal with the Aids issue as it should and dispense
sex education as it should, homosexuals have a long, long way to go. Also,
Dr Subramaniam, hiding behind the wall of 'we need to sort out other issues'
will not work.
Sonali, USA/India
It's unfortunate that the opposition to giving rights to homosexuals in countries
all over the world is so rooted in culture. Homosexual rights are an incredibly
pressing humanitarian concern and it is rather disappointing that we cannot
grant these rights due to people's deeply held cultural beliefs. It is not
right to interfere with someone's culture, yet it is also not right to allow
such rampant homophobia to exist. Which do you choose?
Emily Rutherford, USA
It is evident from the Kamasutra and the sculptures at Kajuraho that ancient
Hindu India recognized and probably accepted homosexual practices. It was only
the advent of the intolerant puritanical Islamic and Christian conquerors of
India that has brought Indians to their present despicable state of intolerance
of homosexuality and for that matter anything that is not orthodox. Hinduism
is a tolerant religion but Indians are not a tolerant people.
Kishore, USA
My heart goes out to every young Indian, male or female who is not permitted
the full expression of individual sexuality and personal rights in general.
The erotic nature of Hindu stories and depictions has left me quite confused
as to the prudishness about sex in general among Indian Hindus. Is it just
Victorian nonsense or something deeper? There is no contradiction between a
desire for an end to social inequality, especially uprooting the stubborn caste
system, and acceptance of homosexual civil rights, which essentially lay out
the right to be left alone and protected from the worst forms of repression.
A tolerant society is more in keeping with India's establishment as pluralistic
state.
Steven Dornbusch, Los Angeles, California, USA
I am happy to see Indian gays fighting for their rights. I am gay and live
in France. Being gay is not very easy here, either, but compared to India or
other countries like that, we live a very enjoyable life.
Antoine, France
It's a pity that the Indian so called society rules so much on personal lives.
As a matter of fact a straight man cannot have a straight girl of choice, the
system decides. Its the pseudo-prudish hypocritical society and the rules which
are not totally based on history should be changed. A man has his own right
to live, act and perform in his life, and no other man, in any utopian situation
has a right to comment or criticise his behaviour.
Rakesh, India
Living as a child in Madras (Chennai) in the 1980's I remember being surprised
at all the men holding hands. I had never seen anything like this in the US
and wondered why there were so many gay men. In fact, I saw many more men holding
each other's hands than women with men. Eventually I guessed that men were
holding hands as a substitute for the affection and touching that did not exist,
at least publicly, between men and women. I still find it ironic that while
both man - woman public affection and homosexuality are practically disallowed,
man-to-man public affection is accepted.
John Miller, USA
I think that India should try to deal with its ethnic and caste problems first,
before dealing with a unnecessary and unimportant issue of gay rights! With
language and caste discrimination at its height the punitive issue of gay rights
is a waste of time.
Dr Karthigeyan Subramaniam, USA
I live in Spain and my government will legalise same-sex marriage very soon.
Homosexuality is in the centre of the political agenda right now but the most
important thing is that all parties agree gay people should have the same rights
that heterosexual people have. A few years ago, the situation in Spain was
absolutely different. When I read about what is happening in India, I want
to encourage Indian gay people to fight because change is possible and it is
possible very soon.
Ignacio, Spain
All the comments here make everyone believe that this issue is only in India
and not in the Western world. Western countries are still caught up with the
same sex issue and finding it difficult to find direction to move forward.
There is greater understanding in the Western world compared to countries such
as India. We need to understand that India has a centuries old culture and
tradition. It is not easy to change the situation quickly. I believe more education
is very important at this point.
Yogi Selliah, Canada
It is
difficult being gay in India. The pressure to get married comes from
everyone around you - starting with your parents
right to even work colleagues.
Indian society dictates that getting married is the ideal way of life, so
being gay is an uphill struggle. It can be also a mental torment
trying to fit into
everyone's way of thinking. I was brought up in Bombay but have managed to
be myself as a gay in the UK, and 20 years later my folks are still trying
to find a wife for me. It never stops and I wonder how long it will be before
the thinking changes. From my last visit to Bombay, there seems to be vast
changes on an economic level but attitudes towards gays still have a long
way to go for even being accepted.
Sajan, UK
Homosexuality
has been richly portrayed in ancient Hindu texts and temple drawings,
it is even visible in the Bhagavad Gita
and the like. Successive
colonisations
led to the Victorian morality which gave way to the subject being taboo.
Also, the comparison between England and India on this level of openness
makes no
sense because cultural paradigms are poles apart in the two countries.
Yet, I think we are making great progress compared to other
developing countries
in tackling extremely sensitive issues. We are building a open and absolutely
free democracy albeit slowly.
Monika Kochhar, India
I welcome
your coverage of this issue and encourage you to continue and expand
its scope. Like many others, I am happy to read
of India's emergence
as a
world economic power after its recent history. I applaud it as the world's
largest
democracy. In that context it is duty bound to acknowledge the rights
of its sexual minorities and give them the full protection
of the law, nothing
less.
William Roche, France
If India
wants to take strides with the rest of the developing countries,
it will need a broader acceptance for different
kinds of people. This
means gays,
lesbians, minorities of all kind, races, languages and philosophies.
That's the way cookie crumbles in developed, educated democracies like
the US
and UK. My take is that 5-10 years down the line when India achieves
100% literacy,
things will get better for all of who are being oppressed, unheard
or misunderstood. br /> CJ Vasani, New York, USA
I went to India and was shocked at how gay people were seen and treated.
I thought that we had a problem in the UK with anti-gay feelings, but
it appears
that we are light years ahead of our friends in India.
Frank Hindle, Manchester, UK
Richard Jones of Sweden may not be a 'homophobic threat', but his
view that there is something 'unnatural' about homosexuality
is indeed homophobic,
on two levels. First, homosexual behaviour is frequently observed
among animals
as diverse as ducks and monkeys. Secondly, human beings engage in
unnatural behaviour every day. What could be more unnatural
than taking aspirin,
flying in a aeroplane, or using a computer to read the news? Homosexual
behaviour
cannot sensibly be regarded as unnatural, and nor can 'unnatural'
behaviour be necessarily classified as wrong.
Lee Jones, Oxford, UK
As a gay boy myself in a Chinese university, I don't feel much social
pressure imposed on me, because there are also some other guys who
are homosexual
on my campus. Some of us know each other well and develop some very
normal friendships.
We exchange views on life and help each other solve some of the psychological
problems. We don't try to expect social acceptance for us, but try
to establish a soothing environment among ourselves.
Danny, China
Having just returned from five weeks in India, my view is that the
problem is far worse than described here and suppression of relationships
is
not restricted to gays. In Mumbai at least moral policing means that
displays
of affection,
even simple holding hands is rarely seen. A kiss in public will cause
widespread disbelief. This has led to abuse, with tales of couples
being harassed
by police for bribes and recently a young girl of 14 being raped
by a policeman after
being pulled up for supposedly behaving indecently with a boy, this
was in
broad daylight. For gay groups to make real and lasting progress,
I feel that need to broaden their agenda and make the message to
India's
non-gay
youth
that they too are also being heavily suppressed.
Barry B, UK
So disheartening to hear people say things like "choose to be gay".
Are you kidding? Would we risk losing jobs, family, friends and security
and, often, face violence, death and imprisonment for a lifestyle choice?
Please
accept that being gay is an identity. It varies in nature and expression
but it is fixed and real. We've moved on from thinking that black people
have smaller
brains; that women are incapable of logical thought. One day this
planet will be enlightened enough to realise that love is all that
truly matters and that
gay people are real, valid and deserving of their fellows humans'
respect.
Danilo, London, UK
It's a good thing to show these type of things on the net, it creates
awareness in people, especially people living in rural areas in India.
Amrinder Singh, Ireland/India
More and more articles like these should be published so that common
people become aware of the situation, which would eventually help
society to accept
these people.
Manav, Afghanistan
People in all over world need to understand that being gay or lesbian
is not a prank! I am not gay, but I think we need to mull over the
issue and
understand
things from others point of view, rather than our old traditions.
Harpreet Singh, London, UK
Being an Indian I understand the culture and the various restrictions
there are. I face up to a lot in my life with my parents and relationships
outside.
In my opinion people should do what they feel is right for themselves.
However this causes so many problems with families who end up breaking
apart. People
should accept each other for who they are which shows development
in understanding. I don't exactly agree with gay relationships but
I wouldn't
judge anyone
because every one is different and the sooner that every one accepts
this the happier
people will be. Places like Indian are too culture bound and I feel
they need to expand their horizons and not be afraid of true reality.
Gurjit, England
Why is it in all of the discussions about gay people those who don't
quite have the same point of view as the gay groups are called homophobic
or "aren't
enlightened or educated"? I have nothing against people who choose to
live as gay and I have worked for many years amongst people who are gay, but
this intolerant attitude towards people who think that it is not natural to
be gay is another form of "viewpoint fascism" and here
in Sweden it is getting so bad that it is even damaging the chances
of people accepting
gay people into everyday life. I can accept and associate with people
who are gay but its my personal opinion that homosexuality is not
in agreement with
natures order, but this does not make me a homophobic threat.
Richard Jones, Sweden
Having spent some time in Calcutta last year, I experienced many
encounters with other gay men. Although I was not looking for a partner
at the
time I was approached quite openly and propositioned in the street.
My status
as a
Westerner no doubt contributed to this, but even clubbing with Calcuttan
friends I was treated just the same as my straight friends, if with
a little more interest.
I think there is no doubt that homosexuality is a huge issue in India,
but it's a Western desire to assert one's identity as one thing or
another that
is upsetting the balance. There is no gujurati word for 'gay', for
instance, and I had a relationship with a man in Delhi who though
dismissed by
his colleagues as 'not normal' was nonetheless accepted, along with
his open
sexuality.
Charlie, England
This is very disheartening. People should be allowed to have their
own private matters since it is not something illegal.
K Hong, Singapore
I am a gay man of 20, I have not yet been able to tell my family
in India of my sexuality due to the immense misunderstanding they
have
of homosexuality.
in England it is better, but still there is prejudice to overcome,
especially from members of the Indian community.
M Brahmbatt, UK/India
BBC
NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/4566091.stm
June 6, 2005
8
Social
taboos pressure lesbian love
Throughout South Asia, homosexuality has been a taboo subject. There
are signs in some areas that gay people are now becoming more open
- but that is not always the case. In the latest in a series of articles
from the region, Sutapa Mukerjee looks at a problematic lesbian relationship
in Allahabad, India."
It has been more than two weeks since we spoke and I haven't seen my
partner for almost a month. Life is not the same for me anymore," says
Usha Yadav.
Hailing from a middle class family in Allahabad, a town in India's
northern Uttar Pradesh state, Usha first met her girlfriend Shilpi
Gupta through a common friend a year back. Since that first meeting
there was not a single day when they did not meet or talk to each other.
But now the two lesbian lovers are not allowed to meet.
'Same way of thinking'
Shilpi's parents are keeping her under virtual house arrest and she
is even barred from using the telephone. I am convinced about carrying
on with our relationship... until society is compelled to accept us.
Usha Yadav Usha is 20, a graduate and up until recently had been working
as a computer instructor. Shilpi is 22. Usha does not shy away from
stating that "it was love at first
sight". She says it started when they began chatting and discovered
they have the same way of thinking. " Shilpi understood my problems and was very supportive. I started loving
her. She wanted me to write to her and would often send back the letters
after leaving lipstick marks on them as a token of love."
Before long, the two could not stay away from each other even for a
day. Usha believes there is no reason why she should feel guilty or
ashamed of loving another of the same sex.
Marriage rejected
" I guess I am made differently. I have never felt any affinity for the
opposite sex. "
As a teenager I loved another girl from my class in school but we too
were separated as her parents were transferred to a far-off town."
Usha became
angry when Shilpi was engaged to be married in mid-January. " I
hated the idea of her living with another. Shilpi too hated every
bit of it, as she had no interest in the guy." Shilpi's father
says that she repeatedly turned down marriage proposals with men
because of her "lesbian relationship with Usha Yadav".
This social pressure directed against the pair made them defiant.
"
We decided to live together," confesses Usha.
But their elopement in January 2005 to a remote town in Gujarat proved
to be short-lived.
Shilpi's parents lodged a complaint against Usha for "kidnapping" their
daughter. They were produced before a magistrate in Allahabad who
ordered both to return to their parents. The police official dealing
with the case, Sarvesh Kumar Mishra,
said that the pair demanded the same cell and "shared a deep
love".
'Perverted
mind'
Today Usha can come and go but Shilpi is restrained at home. "She
is not allowed to interact with any outsider," says Usha.
" Every time I call her, I am told she is not in. I can't concentrate
on anything and have been spending sleepless night without her.
I am sure she, too, is suffering." But Shilpi's mother, Madhu Gupta, takes
a different view. " It was Usha who misguided my daughter. I had never imagined that the
two would elope. It is God's grace that we got back our daughter.
" There can be no doubt of that Usha has a perverted mind."
None of the family members at Usha's house have brought up the subject
of her love affair since she returned home. Despite this Usha
is not comfortable. "Every time I step out people
in the neighbourhood make catcalls. 'Where is your husband, Shilpi?'
they ask me." As Usha and Shilpi struggled with their relationship,
a second incident occurred in Kanpur, 150km (100 miles) east
of Allahabad,
where a
lesbian couple tried to commit suicide. They said they were in
despair because their parents had made them marry men.
Several organisations have now demanded that the law be amended
to allow same-sex marriages.
Legal experts say the government should consider the recent advice
of the Supreme Court to re-examine the issue of same-sex marriages.
They argue that it is the democratic right of people to choose their
partners and the state should not interfere.
When Usha heard of the suicide attempt she said the two girls
were cowards. " Shilpi and I are much stronger. Even if
she is obligated to marry another I am convinced of carrying
on our relationship outside her marriage
until society is compelled to accept us." (End of report)
Comments
from readers:
=Homosexuality in India has been a fact for centuries. Why shy away
from it now? And if we are truly democratic, then why deny homosexuals
their birth rights?
Kapil Komireddi, London, UK (Originally from India)
=The government of India should amend the marriage laws and allow same-sex
marriages to take place. Let people choose what they want.
Pritpal Singh, UK
=You can't help who you fall for, it's as simple as that. Any good
parent would want their child to be happy with their partner. I wish
Usha
and Shilpi the best of luck and the courage to take on the establishment.
BB, UK
=Being a Muslim, I would strongly condemn this growing trend of homosexuality.
The media is very much responsible for creating confusion in the
minds of young and vulnerable girls and boys. Even if there is a tendency
of being attracted to the same sex, it should not be popularized
and
encouraged, as its ultimate consequences are a chaotic and messed
up new generation who don't know where to direct their energies, and
hence
indulge in such acts.
Asima Iqbal, Pakistan
=This
is typical of Indian society, unfortunately. Parents are more concerned
about society's opinions than the happiness
of their kids. There is no doubt that homosexual relationships
can be extremely difficult for parents in such a conservative society
to
accept and understand, but that does not justify the sort of pressure
that these two women have been exposed to. Moreover, both of them
are legal adults and can live their lives as they choose to do. I'd
be interested in knowing on what grounds the magistrate ordered them
to "return to their parents" and on what basis one
of them is being held under house arrest by her parents. If they
really
are determined to live together, they should just leave their parental
homes and deal with the inevitable hassles that will come their
way.
Rustam Roy, London, UK
=If this relationship is natural then society cannot do anything.
In a country like India where friendship between a boy and girl
is not
easy and two girls can easily have contact can also be the reason
for a gay relationship.
Harish Dixit, Germany
=How long did it take for the West to accept gay/lesbians? That
is, if they have. America is still divided along the middle over
gay rights
and same-sex marriages, and gay phobia is not unheard of. Compare
that to a society where sex has always been considered a social
taboo, and
things are being dealt in the typical Indian way - barricading
the revolting children to their home, with the subject-in-question
never
being mentioned at home, and the society hurtling catcalls at every
opportunity. Still, it is has to be accepted it is hard work for
these couples. And in a society like India, any couple, even straight,
if
they want to marry against their parents' wishes. So best luck
to them!
Manav Gupta, UK
=To suggest legitimacy for gay relationships is to sanctify the
culture of our times that breeds deviates, be it Elton John or
Shilpi. The
issue here seems to be a destruction of the family and of the community,
which has let lose a vicious chain of individual idiosyncrasies,
where you are not guilty until you are caught, and sex of any kind
is not
taboo, as long as you don't get Aids.
Jasabanta, Kolkata, India
=I read your article about a lesbian couple in India and I am ashamed
to say that even though I live in India which regards itself as
the world's biggest democracy, it's only on paper. Your choices
are made
by other people. They tell you what to do and what you can't. The
society I live in dates back to the Stone Age. We follow rules
which are antique
and very colonial British rules which are 145 years old. Holding
hands and walking on the road, public display of affection are frowned
upon here. Talk of sex and people will stare at you.
You can't roam around at night for fear of being harassed by the
very people
who are assigned to protect us - the police. Talk about homosexuality
and they will mock you. The city I live in Chennai has its own
share of gays, lesbians and transsexuals but society treats them
like beggars.
They resort to harassment sometimes. This is pathetic. Right from
your childhood your choice is made by other people. This has got to
stop. Indian society is deep rooted in religion.
I come
from an orthodox community and when I question religion my parents
object. But come what may, I have the freedom to make a choice.
The world is moving towards the 22nd century but we are stuck in
the 18th.
It is time people of different sexual orientations are given their
due. They have the right to make choices. This is their life. Nobody
controls it.
Andy, India
=Of late I have been seeing a lot of articles on same-sex couples
from the South Asian region. While it might be an issue of national
importance
in some of the western countries (it was one of the major issues
on which recent presidential elections in US were fought on), it
is far
from being even a gossip issue in South Asia. The story in South
Asia according to me is that of hunger, survival and a new found zest
for growth, development and a determination
to become economically independent. Golf and gay marriages are
issues
understood and discussed by the elite classes where as an average
person is struggling to make his ends meet. Such frequent reports
and square
feet of print space devoted to these topics relating South Asia
is extremely disturbing as it appears to be trying to tell the
rest of
the world that gay marriage/relationships are major issues in South
Asia at the cost of drawing the attention of the world to the real
issues and great success stories. This also suggests at an intellectual
sloth of the personnel covering South Asia who are happy projecting
the western issues as the issues
of the world. They are too lazy to get down from the ivory towers
and dirty their hands in the real issues.
Rajesh, India
=Even though same sex relationship is up to the individual, legalizing
same sex marriage tantamount to protecting and encouraging it.
The question is, is it necessary? In my experience same sex relationship
does not come from the heart as these news reports make out (which
they do to sensationalize news). In India particularly sex education
is limited and many people who are adventuring in their age fall
at
the hands of unscrupulous elements and are exploited. They may
want to come out of it but are either black-mailed or have no other
choice,
hence they bear with it. Except juicy news reporters no body else
can find truly loving same sex couples.
R Balajee, India
=I am very much amazed reading this article, I myself a Muslim cannot
imagine having a relationship like this in my religion and as far
as I know the same is the case with Hinduism. On the other hand
I don't
think that Indian society will ever accept this kind of relationship
so making amendments in the law would be out of question. These
things are seen in the West and we can't bring them here because we
have our own social values no matter if you are a Pakistani
or Indian.
As far as democratic rights are concerned then there are other
rights that need to be fulfilled and should be taken care of first.
Bilal Qureshi, Pakistan
=It is a shame that even in a democracy like India people are not
free. I am also bewildered by the fact that both the girls are
adults and
how can a court intervene in their personal lives when both are
consenting. Every human being living in a free country has the
right to express
his/her freedom in any which way keeping in mind that they do not
expunge on the freedom of others or break the law. The above girls
are doing
neither; if they are breaking the law of same sex marriage then
it is an artefact of the old constitution of India which needs
to be changed.
This is a refreshing step in that direction to alter things (rather
than commit suicide or back out).
Mayank Jaiswal, India
=Lesbians in Asia is becoming too rampant. The government should
enact a law that will bind all these girls from such a frivolous
act.
Jerry, Nigeria
From BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4119982.stm
June
22, 2004
9
Pakistani Sex Workers Visit India to Discuss Safe Sex Practices and Combating
AIDS
A group of Pakistani sex workers have visited the red light district
in the Indian city of Calcutta to discuss safe sex practices and combating
Aids.
It is the first ever visit by Pakistani sex workers to any red light district
in India. The BBC's Subir Bhaumik in Calcutta says over the last decade,
sex workers there have formed a powerful organisation to protect their
rights. The have successfully improved their health standards. They
have also organised campaigns to raise awareness on preventing HIV/Aids.
The group
of sex workers from the Pakistani city of Hyderabad visited Sonagachi
- a sprawling red light district in north Calcutta. "They have
come to the right place because we are the most organised group of
sex workers anywhere in Asia," Swapna Gayen, who heads the Calcutta
sex workers' association, told the BBC.
Safe sex
They were briefed by local sex workers on how they have managed
to combat sexually transmitted diseases and HIV. "It
was unbelievable to the delegation that Sonagachi's sex workers refuse
sex without a condom even in the face of physical torture," Majid
Rani, who led the Pakistani team, is quoted as saying by AFP. She
said this was unthinkable in Pakistan and sex workers there would often
be forced to have sex without condoms.
The visiting
Pakistani women also visited a creche for the children of sex workers
and a consumer cooperative. But Ms Gayen said they were particularly
interested in brothel management and anti-Aids programmes. Pakistan
has 2,300 HIV-positive people, according to official figures. But
the World Health Organisation estimates that the figure could be
closer to 80,000.
BBC
News
June 28, 2005
10
India's deadly secret: HIV/AIDS explosion: Virus has begun long-feared
breakout; Spreading uncontrolled among 1 billion
Prostitutes
line Falkland Rd. in Mumbai, India. Their customers are rapidly
spreading HIV/AIDS from the red-light districts of India’s
big cities to the hinterland.
Photo: Robert Holmes/Corbis
|
by Martin
Regg Cohn Asia Bureau, Mumbai/Bombay
Setting
off on her daily rounds, Alka Gaikwad heads through the city's labyrinth
of slums
to an unmarked home. Inside the gloom, Bharti Dhamankar hunches
over a makeshift shrine of fresh garlands draped over a faded portrait
of a ruggedly handsome
young man.
For five years, the man in the photograph lived with HIV/AIDS.
Two weeks ago, he died of it. Along the way, the former truck driver
infected his wife.
Now, his 31-year-old widow can think only of the medical death
sentence facing her — and the destiny of her two young children who will
become orphans. Choking on grief, she is unable to speak.
And so Gaikwad, in a bright floral print sari, steps into the silence.
The volunteer counsellor goes on house calls well prepared, for
she, too, is an HIV-positive widow — infected by her late husband
a decade ago.
Gaikwad, 33, witnessed her daughter's death from the virus a few
years later. But the survival of her teenage son has inspired her
to keep
living, and counselling. "
I want my son to grow up and stand on his own feet," she says. "Until
then, I won't die."
Recruited by the foreign development charity World Vision, she
comes face to face every day with what most Indians never see — and
the world barely acknowledges: The uncontrolled spread of HIV/AIDS
in a country of 1 billion people.
Since its arrival among prostitutes in the southeastern port city
of Chennai nearly two decades ago, the virus has begun
its long feared "breakout" — spreading
from high-risk groups to the general population. Legions of truckers
and millions of migrant workers are spreading HIV/AIDS from the red-light
districts of India's big cities to women in the hinterlands. More than 5 million Indians are infected with AIDS or HIV (the
virus which causes AIDS) according to rough government estimates.
Officially,
the United Nations ranks India as the second-biggest hotspot on
Earth, slightly behind South Africa's 5.3 million infected people.
But while the world's attention remains focused on Africa, many
analysts and health workers think India is incubating a greater
AIDS disaster
of global proportions. The 5 million figure is too conservative,
they say. "
The official statistics are wrong — India is in first place," warns
Richard Feachem, respected executive director of the Paris-based Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, set up in 2001 by the G-8 group of industrialized
countries. India "is or is becoming the global epicentre for the
pandemic."
By 2000, an estimated 2.8 million Indians had died of AIDS, and
the U.N. projects another 12.3 million deaths by 2015. The U.S.
National
Intelligence Council has warned that 25 million Indians could be
HIV-positive by 2010.
Yet, when the G-8 leaders grapple with Africa's AIDS crisis at
their annual summit next week, India's hidden epidemic won't be
high on
the agenda. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is attending the
summit
in recognition of his country's emergence as a diplomatic power — but
the talk will be of economic growth, not India's AIDS earthquake.
In fact, India's outbreak is at a critical stage, offering a historic
window of opportunity to control the spread of the virus. If AIDS
makes further inroads here, the consequences for the world will
be enormous — with
India ultimately overtaking all of Africa in the number of HIV-positive
people.
Government data suggest an infection rate of 0.9 per cent — far
less than the 21.5 per cent prevalence of South Africa, to be sure.
But the nationwide figures mask a series of alarming regional epidemics
of up to 5 per cent in some of India's southern states, where testing
facilities and hospitals are more reliable. "
The more relevant figure is the trajectory of the epidemic, and we
see a very steep trajectory," says Ashok Alexander,
head of Avahan, the anti-AIDS group established in India by the
Gates Foundation. "It's
different from the African epidemic — we're going to see big
explosions in clusters."
The result could be social and economic upheaval, yet "India is
not even on the radar screen of the international community as far
as HIV/AIDS, and that's a tragedy as far as I'm concerned," Ashok
argues. "I think it will get worse before it gets better."
If the numbers are indeed understated in the rest of India, an
AIDS disaster is in the making not only here but, eventually, everywhere.
Every 1 percentage point increase translates to another 5 million
infected people. "
We think it's much higher, obviously, than what the government is saying," says
Anjali Gopalan, head of the non-profit Naz Foundation, which runs a
home for AIDS orphans and HIV-positive mothers in New Delhi. "We
have lost that window of opportunity."
As India braces for battle against AIDS, it is beset by familiar
handicaps: endemic poverty, cash-starved health care, deep-rooted
public prejudice
and official neglect.
HIV-positive people are India's new untouchables. Against that backdrop,
India has one clear indigenous advantage: a world-class pharmaceuticals
industry that produces high-quality
anti-AIDS
drugs known as anti-retroviral therapy (ARV).
But that head start has been squandered. Due to remarkable government
foot-dragging, Indian-manufactured drugs are more widely available
overseas than on the streets of Mumbai.
Of
the 5 million Indians officially estimated to be HIV-positive,
a mere 7,500 — including Gaikwad — are getting free ARV medicine,
and another 23,000 are estimated to be obtaining it privately. That's
less than 1 per cent of those in need.
In Gaikwad's case, the discovery that her daughter was HIV-positive
brought discrimination and humiliation. A hospital doctor refused
to treat the girl — an all too frequent reaction that sets a negative
example for the general public. "
The medical profession in India has been at the root of much stigmatization
and discrimination," says Alexander.
Fear of catching AIDS turns even family members against one another
in a manner reminiscent of historical caste prejudices.
"
Within my own family, we are treated as untouchables," says Chaya
Jamadade, 30, another widow seeking help from Gaikwad. "We cannot
touch the food, dinner plates or soap."
After she was widowed and found to be HIV-positive, family members
ordered Jamadade's children to keep away and tried starving her
to death. They withheld food for nine days, she says, until police
intervened. " They thought I would just die off or go live elsewhere. They kicked
me out. They used to beat me until I couldn't bear it any more."
Gaikwad stepped in to help, bringing only an infectious smile
into the household. "
I visited the house, talked to the family and neighbours about how
HIV doesn't spread so easily," she recalls.
But the AIDS scare dies hard. A report by New York-based Human
Rights Watch last year documented widespread discrimination against
infected
children and orphans in the classroom, hospitals and their own
homes. "
You see people kicked out of their homes, and this I have not seen
even in Africa," says Dr. Denis Broun, who heads the U.N.'s AIDS
operations in India. "This is something that AIDS has done to
India."
Irrational fears of AIDS transmission and taboos about sex have
set back India's efforts to raise public awareness and detection.
People
who suspect they might be HIV-positive go underground, refusing
even to be tested for the virus. That reticence has lethal consequences
for HIV-positive people.
Without testing, people don't seek treatment; without widely
available treatment, people have little incentive to be tested — they consider
a positive result a death sentence. "
India is very much behind in terms of access to treatment," says
Broun of UNAIDS. " At least 500,000 people should be getting it."
The fact that ARV drugs are manufactured cheaply in India yet
remain inaccessible to so many Indians exasperates Yusuf Hamied.
As head
of Cipla Ltd., which makes low-cost generic drugs, he has spent years
trying to shame the Indian government into distributing medicines
that could prolong lives.
At first, he encountered bureaucratic indifference — a feeling
that India had to marshal its scarce resources for cost-effective
prevention rather than costly treatment. He countered by slashing prices
and offering
free pills, but officials stubbornly refused to lower tariff barriers
on his imported ingredients. Belatedly, the government is funding
a program to place 100,000 people on ARV by 2007, yet only a fraction of
that target has been
reached.
Now that the government has mustered the political will, finding
a practical way is proving difficult.
Across town from Cipla's sleek offices and modern production
facilities, Mumbai's seedy brothels do a booming business. Women
in heavy makeup
line Falkland Rd. day and night, tempting new customers.With
her faded red nail polish, nose stud and long black hair, Shila
Ramagauda
pays
close attention to her appearance — and her health. To maintain
her earning power — about 100 rupees, or $3 a client — she
starts her workday by packing both cosmetics and condoms. "
I know how to protect myself, but I'm still a little bit scared," says
Ramagauda, 25.
With a 5-year-old daughter to support, she can't afford to die
on the job. She counts on condoms for survival, gently persuading
customers
to co-operate. " We are very clear about it. We tell them: `You have a family; this
is not only for you, but also you have to protect your loved ones.'
So this helps us deal with their anger."
What if customers claim to be unmarried? " We tell them, `You may be young, but you will want to start a family
one day, and you'll put them at risk without a condom.'"
If a client still refuses a condom, she puts one on herself — resorting
to the alternative female condoms sold at subsidized prices by aid
groups such as Population Services International. The female condom
has more lubrication than standard male condoms, so in the darkness
of brothels and the haze of alcohol, customers are often oblivious
to their use.
After a slow start, there is optimism that a change in government
last year has brought a shift in India's approach to AIDS. The
previous Hindu fundamentalist government nixed condom ads on
TV, but Singh's
new Congress-led government is not so squeamish.
The prime minister has given his blessing to a more provocative — and
effective — marketing strategy led by the National AIDS Control
Organization and promised to double its budget.
Now, NACO director S.Y. Quraishi is trying to kick-start the
mammoth Indian bureaucracy. Quraishi is determined to change the
way Indians think about safe sex. His model is the multinational soft-drink
giants that
persuaded
villagers
to start drinking bottles of sugared, carbonated water. "
If everyone can be tempted to drink Pepsi, why not condoms, surely?" he
asks, pointing to prophylactic condom packets and posters distributed
by his office. " Information is the only vaccine we have, so we have to catch young
people before AIDS catches them."
From
BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4640847.stm
July
1, 2005
11
Broken bones and a broken heart
Throughout South Asia, homosexuality has been a taboo subject. There are signs
in some areas that gay people are now becoming more open - but that is not
always the case. In the latest in a series of articles about gay people from
the region, Firdaus Kanga reflects on his life.
Born into a Parsi family in Mumbai (Bombay), Kanga now lives in London where
he works as a writer and actor. As a child he was diagnosed with a rare bone
disease. "There were many things I could not do as a boy - the most absurd
of these was not being able to break a biscuit.
There was something about the sound, the snap that always reminded me of those
moments when I would crack a rib or break a hip, which happened almost as often
as the festivals that sprinkled the Indian calendar.
We were
the Parsis of Bombay which meant we could celebrate Eid and Diwali
and Christmas with as much pleasure as our own Navroz (New Year)
we had brought with us from Persia so many centuries ago.
That first relationship ended in the kind of pain that I had never known
And I really did suffer frequent fractures.
I was born with brittle bones, could never walk or go to school with sturdy
little boys who might break my tiny body with a friendly slap on the back. I stopped growing at about four feet.
Imaginary lover
I first knew that ordinary friendship was not what I had in mind when I saw
an attractive man and something inside me flew with a freedom and delight that
I had never known.
Homosexuality was the different part of me that gave me pleasure, allowed me
to hug my body - if rather gingerly - rather than fear it, fear the pain it
brought me, an unwelcome present I could not refuse.
For many years I could only see and smile at and touch my lover in an imagination
that had brought him alive as God was supposed to have made Adam.
No gay men
After all, this was Bombay in the early 1980s.
There was one very special love that I was to find with someone disabled by
that still unexplained condition, Tourette's Syndrome
In all the time I was growing up I had never heard anybody talk about homosexuality.
I certainly knew no gay men, except in the sublime stories I found and read
- those by James Baldwin, E M Forster and Iris Murdoch. Perhaps in some strange sense I was fortunate - my idea of gay love slept in
relationships rather than in frenetic and furtive encounters in the dark. It was not until I was in my twenties and I had written a novel that was being
published in London where I came to live that I met someone who could amuse
and annoy me and drive me fast and furious around the hairpin bends of passion. Coming out was easy for me as I had been stared at all my life - now I turned
heads for happier reasons. My mother, I think, was secretly relieved - she would never have to suffer "the
other woman", the dreaded daughter-in-law who stole so many Indian sons
from their mothers.
My beloved aunt, in an original version of what, I was only later to discover
was an old Jewish joke, asked me to promise her just one thing - that I would
settle down with a good Parsi boy.
That first relationship ended in the kind of pain that I had never known. At
least this time I did not need an X-ray to confirm that something had broken
very badly inside me.
To my surprise, other relationships were to come.
Comedy
I do not intend this to be a potted history of my love life. Nevertheless,
there was one very special love that I was to find with someone disabled by
that still unexplained condition, Tourette's Syndrome.
'I had never heard anybody talk about homosexuality'
No, he did not, as some most people think, swear compulsively. But there were
many other things, all benign, that he felt compelled to do.
Sometimes just being able to sit down took him the best part of an hour. Somehow
we found the comedy between that and the fact that I could never stand up.
We also found a tenderness that I have not known before or since - tenderness
and desire fulfilled.
Even there, there was to be no happy ending - perhaps it is all my fault -
or my excuse.
I don't write happy endings - I find them too contrived, even boring. And they
do not grant us the liberty to look at life and weep.
IPS News
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=29464
Juyl 16,
2005
12
Indian Cinema Examines Lesbian, Gay Themes
by Ranjita Biswas
Calcutta - India A city known for film literacy and great directors like Satyajit Ray,
Ritwik Ghatak and Mrinal Sen this eastern metropolis witnessed something unique
recently - a film award instituted on the theme of gay rights.
The recently concluded annual Siddhartha Gautam film Festival (20-26 June)
part of the ‘Rainbow Pride Week' commemorating the Gay Rights movement,
in the city gave the award to Onir, the director of the hit Hindi language
film My Brother Nikhil and the best actor award to Purab Kohli , who plays
supportive partner to protagonist Nikhil, who dies of AIDS.
Incidentally, Siddhartha Gautam was from Kolkatta and was one of the first
activists to fight for gay rights to be recognised as a part of human rights
in India. British colonial laws, still in operation, deem homosexuality a punishable
offence.
The Siddhartha Gautam Film Festival, organised by Friends of Siddhartha, has
been an annual event in New Delhi since 1993 but in Kolkatta it has a special
place as capital of communist-ruled West Bengal state, known for its liberal
views.
When movie theatres elsewhere, including in the country's film capital of Mumbai
(formerly Bombay) were vandalised halls for showing films on lesbian themes
like Deepa Mehta's 'Fire' , this city showed the film to packed houses.
By instituting the best film award on the LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender) theme, the festival also brought into focus a growing number of
films, features and documentaries, which explore a section of the society about
which people in general are not comfortable with.
But awareness is growing. My Brother Nikhil has, in fact, done to Bollywood
what Philadelphia did for Hollywood in 1993 where the HIV- positive character
played by Tom Hanks generated understanding of the gay community's place in
society.
What has endeared the audience to 'My Brother Nikhil' is the way a sister stands
by her champion swimmer brother as he goes through the experience of being
rejected not only by his friends but also by his own parents once his HIV status
is revealed.
The matter-of-fact way in which the subject is dealt with, including Nikhil's
relationship with his partner, and later his parents' remorse and acceptance
shows a lot of understanding by the director.
'' I cried buckets as the story unfolded but it also made me understand the
nuances of a relationship we try to shut our minds off,'' admitted Anuradha
Baruah, a homemaker.
And that's important, says Pawan Dhall from the voluntary group SAATHI (Solidarity
and action Against The HIV Infection in India), one of the co-organisers of
the festival. ''People empathise more with a problem like this, a problem for
the heterogeneous mindset, of course, if presented in a format like films.
Human stories always appeal.''
Visual projection of serious societal issues is natural in a country like India
which churns out the largest number of film titles in the world each year,
most of them from the western city of Mumbai also know as 'Bollywood' for its
prodigious film industry.
Last year, a film on AIDS awareness 'Phir Milenge' (We'll meet again) directed
by actress Revathy Menon elicited comments from Peter Piot, chief of the United
Nations joint-programmed against AIDS who had said, "When Bollywood, one
of the world's largest film industries with massive audiences, produces a film
about AIDS, everyone has to sit up and take notice.''
Piot thought it was ''extremely significant that Bollywood is joining the struggle
against the epidemic and helping to break the silence that surrounds HIV and
AIDS."
The film revolves round an advertising executive who is fired when her employer
discovers that she is HIV-positive. She eventually wins a discrimination lawsuit
against her employer allowing the examination of stigma, discrimination and
ignorance associated with HIV/AIDS in the workplace.
Earlier, some films from Bollywood mainstream did try to weave male homosexual
characters into the plot. 'Tamanna' (Desire) examines the mental dilemma of
a girl adopted by a eunuch who eventually discovers her well-to-do biological
parents.
The idea of an alternative family to the conventional heterosexual patriarchal
family of the Indian cinema was bold but films were produced which tackled
the subject.
Even real-life stories, not fiction, are emerging on the issue. The simple
docu-feature in Bengali Piku Bhalo Aachhey (Piku is fine) directed by Tirthankar
Guha Thakurta, a medical college student, is a 'coming out' film.
Technically it would not measure up but then the director used a handy-cam
with help from friends during a semester break, ''But it was important for
me to make it. I know what it feels to ‘different' in our conservative
society and the pain thereof. It also helped me to accept my own position in
society. I'm at peace,'' said Guha Thakurta.
The US-based filmmaker Sonali who was in Kolkatta for the festival and is busy
making a documentary on the parents of LGBT aid, ''Many parents feel isolated
in such cases and think that they are the only ones who have this problem.''
''Basically, it's about understanding and acceptance on both sides,'' said
Sonali who feels that a film on the issue will also dispel the myth that LGBT
is prevalent in the West and ''not with us while so many people in the country
are LGBT.''
Sonali admits that having parents talk on camera is a problem though they are
willing to talk about the subject. Initially she is focusing on India but subsequently
she wants to cover South Asia and has chalked out plans to interview parents
in Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan.
Indo-Asian
News Service
http://www.eians.com/stories/2005/07/17/17fir.shtmlIndia's first gay music
video strums up anti-AIDS notes
July 17,
2005
13
Music video is taking the gay community to middle class homes through the small
screen
by Sujoy Dhar, Indo-Asian News Service, Kolkata,
Bollywood's "My Brother Nikhil" did it on the big screen. And now
a music video by well-known Bangla band Cactus is taking the issue of acceptance
of the gay community to middle class homes through the small screen. The music video, in Bengali, is the first such attempt in India and will soon
be aired by some Bengali channels. With the movement by supporters and members of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transsexual) sweeping Kolkata through the gay pride march, a film festival
and growing participation in the AIDS prevention movement, the soon-to-be aired
Cactus music video comes as a reinforcement. " The proposal came from an NGO called Saathi (Solidarity and Action against
the HIV Infection in India) for its opening video of a gay film festival," Cactus
band member and drummer Baji told IANS.
" Saathi is also supported by the Elton John AIDS Foundation."
" We too have been involved in AIDS awareness campaigns for long and through
this video we could fulfil our social commitment. Whether or not there is support
for the LGBT community, AIDS is a common cause after all and the video serves
twin purposes," Baji said. " We have shot outdoors and we begin with the line: Human beings are human
beings, nothing else matters," he said. " This video is important because in the world of LGBT things are always
happening underground. We want to connect with the new generation though music
on such issues," Baji said.
According to Cactus lead singer Siddhartha, the message in the video, called "Pegasus",
is loud and clear and shows the protagonist breaking free of his inhibitions. " Gay people like Elton John and late Freddie Mercury are referred to in
the video. Blue apples also keep recurring as a symbol of same-sex love," said
Siddhartha. " The visual had to be strong since the lyrics are bold," he said. " We are happy that ours is the first such attempt in India," said
Siddhartha. According to Cactus, it has been 30 years that homosexuality has been medically
accepted as normal and the society should also accept it. Saathi director and gay rights activist, Pawan Dhall, said the video is a small
but significant step in integrating the sexual minorities into the mainstream
since music videos make a lasting impression. " There would be raised eyebrows, but people would react," said Baji
whose band last year pasted condoms on the tickets of their concert on the World
AIDS Day to send a strong message.
Indo-Asian
News Service
http://www.eians.com/
July 30,
2005
14
Indian Lesbian Couple Weds
by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff
New Delhi - Two teenage women have married in a traditional Hindu ceremony in India's West
Singhbhum district - despite laws which forbid same-sex marriage.
The women, identified in the local media as Nitima Biruwa and Laxmi Bari, were
married in the village of Bharbaria with the blessings of their families.
Press reports from the region say that the wedding was arranged by family members.
The reports quote the father of one of the women as saying that he had tried
for months to break up the couple to no avail. He then decided that the best
thing would be to allow them to marry.
The women are still in school and say they intend to finish their studies.
Last December the families of another lesbian couple who married illegally
in a Hindu ceremony went to police in Amritsar to try to have the couple arrested
under the country's sodomy law. (story) A judge ruled the women could not be
charged because lesbian sex was not mentioned in the sodomy provisions.
In March 2004, two gay men were attacked by their own relatives after they
came out and exchanged vows. (story)
LGBT rights groups in India are trying to get the sodomy law overturned but
concede it is likely to be a long time before India permits same-sex marriage.
365Gay.com 2005
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1050731/asp/look/story_5051497.asp Calcutta
July 31, 2005
15
Queer no more--new book shows, ‘coming out’ has never been easier
for homosexuals in India
by Anirban
Das Mahapatra
Out of the closet: No,
I will not marry a woman because I am gay and in love with a man and, no, I
will not shut up, because I have a voice. Whip out the leather, the necklaces,
the pink glossy lipstick, then, and take that man’s hand and walk down
Camac Street, and if you die in the process, it’s better being dead than
actually living a compromised life.”
Sometimes, a little bit of noise helps work wonders. And ever since the Deepa
Mehta film Fire — starring Shabana Azmi and Nandita Das as lesbian lovers — hit
Indian theatres to extreme reactions in the mid-Nineties, stray voices demanding
the legitimisation of same-sex love in India were often heard, though few of
them registered in the public consciousness.
Of late, however, the winds of change seem to have started blowing. And the
noise has begun to gain in decibels, moving out of the closet and on to the
streets. Being gay, it appears, is no longer what it used to be, and many are
proud to say that for themselves.
Consider the opening lines, an extract from an essay in a book titled Because
I Have a Voice: Queer Politics in India released in Delhi last week. Editors
Arvind Narrain and Gautam Bhan call the book with 27 articles the first organised
literary effort on the part of the gay community to assert itself in a world
which still sees same-sex love as ‘queer’.
“ It’s a collective voice that demands change, starting from within
one’s own family and extending to a greater social circle,” says
Bhan. “It’s also a statement on behalf of those who still don’t
have a voice of their own, owing to social, cultural or linguistic barriers.”
The contributors to the anthology come from within the gay community, and hail
from distant corners of the country. There’s even an essay by Sandip
Roy, a gay-rights activist based in the US, which compares the way alternative
sexuality is perceived in India and the US. Treading their respective walks
of life, most of them are intensely involved in the gay-rights movement — while
Chayanika Shah is an active member of organisations such as Lesbians and Bisexuals
in Action and Forum Against Oppression of Women, Revathi is currently documenting
the lives of eunuchs in the country.
However, the joint literary effort by Narrain and Bhan is definitely not the
first of its kind when it comes to exploring issues related to same-sex love.
Over the past few years, books relating to ‘queer’ politics in
the country have routinely made appearances in the Indian literary sphere.
Same-sex Love in India: Readings from Literature and History (2000), edited
by Saleem Kidwai and Ruth Vanita, Man Who Was a Woman and Other Queer Tales
in Hindu Lore (2001) by doctor and mythologist Devdutt Pattanaik (who has also
contributed an essay to Because I Have a Voice) and Queering India:
Same-sex Love and Eroticism in Indian Culture and Society (2002) by Ruth Vanita happen
to be some of the better-known texts to this effect. Clearly, the stage had
been set for a collective effort, that Bhan and Narrain eventually managed
to pull off.
Kidwai, a historian and an advocate of gay rights in India, thinks these are
indications of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community
making its presence felt in India. “Even five years ago, it was virtually
unimaginable to launch a book that dealt with same-sex relations in the heart
of the city with such fanfare,” he says of the glitzy release of Because
I Have a Voice at a Delhi bookstore. “Also, identifying oneself as gay
and then writing on behalf the community was not something many dared to do.
But now that things have been set in motion, it will only encourage more and
more people to come out of the closet and assert their rights in society.”
The motion that Kidwai speaks of is evident not only in literature but in other
media as well. While Bangla rock band Cactus belted out their track Pegasus
in support of the gay community a few months ago, the 2005 Bollywood production
My Brother Nikhil dealt rather poignantly with a script that had as its protagonist
an ace swimmer, who happened to be gay and was HIV positive.
Such developments, say activists, are complemented by the fact that ‘coming
out’ for members of the gay community has never been easier. And a major
boost to this effect, feels Calcutta-based activist Pawan Dhall, is the fact
that social acceptance levels are gradually on the rise. “Middle-class
India is slowly coming to terms with alternative sexuality,” he says.
To illustrate his point, Dhall cites an example from his own life. After participating
in a gay-rights rally in Calcutta last year, Dhall says he was approached by
a neighbourhood storekeeper, who had seen him grow up in the vicinity but had
never conversed with him over anything more than routine buy-and-sell over
the counter. “He came up to me and said he had seen me on TV,” says
Dhall. “He then congratulated me and told me to keep up the good work,” Dhall
says.
With the arts having shown the way, it may not be long before the law of the
land follows suit. “The Supreme Court has upheld our appeal to review
Article 377 of the Indian Penal Code [that penalises same-sex relations], and
we are hoping that the outcome would be positive,” says Anjali Gopa-lan,
director of Naz Foundation, an organisation long- devoted to gay rights in
India.
If and when that happens, it would perhaps be the day when the noise, in Dhall’s
words, would lead to a profound silence of understanding. And that, as he says,
would definitely be more welcome than the silence of ignorance.
ndtv.com
http://www.ndtv.com/morenews/showmorestory.asp?slug=Gay+activists+protest+in+Mumbai&id=77519
16
Gay activists protest in Mumbai
by Anupama Ramachandran
Watch story
Mumbai - It was a novel protest to voice their dissent against what the law calls unnatural
behaviour. Over a 100 supporters of the gay rights movement came out into the Mumbai streets
on Tuesday evening. "
A large number of countries have repealed this law. In fact it's a condition
for entry into the European union. India being a democratic will repeal such
an anti-constitutional law," says Anand Grover, lawyer.
'Unnatural act'
Under Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, homosexuality is an unnatural act
and is punishable with a fine and/or a prison term of 10 years or even life imprisonment. The section implies that people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
are criminals, something activists say is unacceptable. "
I want to ask what is natural and what is unnatural. I am gay and have had feelings
for boys all my life. I have never been attracted to girls. Then why can't we
live our lives? We are what we are naturally. Why should we hide it?," says
Geeta, Gay Rights Activist.
Ironically, this law, first introduced by the British in 1860 and eventually
discarded in 1967, continues to find a place in the Indian legal system.
And 58 years after India's independence, it's people like these who are still
looking for their place in society, a place that has been denied to them by laws
like article 377 of the Indian Penal Code.
'Mumbai will lead country in gay marriages'
Labonita Ghosh
December 11, 2005 00:18 I
http://dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1001598&CatID=1
Pop legend Elton John is finally getting hitched. The day the UK government
gave nod to the Civil Partnership Act — which gives gays and
lesbians the go-ahead to marry under a new legislation and also have
the same rights as heterosexual marriages — Sir Elton announced
his forthcoming, and now legal, nuptials with longtime partner David
Furnish. Friend George Michael followed suit, declaring he would tie
the knot with boyfriend Kenneth Goss.
About 1,000 other same-sex couples rushed to officially register themselves
so that they could have a formal wedding, too. The UK joins just a
handful of countries — the Netherlands, Spain, South Africa,
Canada and some states in the US — in allowing gay marriages.
Could India be among the pioneers? “There’s one fundamental
obstacle – Article 377,” says Arvind Narrain, author of
Because I have a Voice: Queer Politics in India, an anthology on gay
and lesbian issues. “Till this law is done away with and homosexuality
de-criminalised, it’s premature to talk about civil rights and
gay marriage.”
If Mumbai’s swish set is anything to go by, the city certainly
seems ready for it. It doesn’t bat an eyelid when designer Wendell
Rodricks and his partner Jerome Marel are openly counted among Goa’s
hippest couples; when actor Bobby Darling details his sex change plans
for the media or even when the media goes to town about Ajay Mafatlal
and his past as a woman.
“
Mumbai is pretty blasé about matters sexual,” says media
expert Pritish Nandy, who doubts there would’ve been so much
hoopla about Mafatlal’s sex change if it wasn’t also about
inheritance.
Actor Khushboo’s recent declarations about pre-marital sex would
not have fazed Mumbaikars, he added. Gay marriages represent one’s
right to exercise one’s sexual preference, and to deny this right
would amount to “hypocrisy and humbug”.
But, adds Nandy, if it were to happen at all in India, Mumbai would
certainly lead the pack.
“
It has been the first to shed hypocrisy because of its liberal and
free-thinking citizens,” he says.
But they comprise only the top 10 per cent, and are not representative
of society in general, cautions Onir, director of the sensitively handled
movie My Brother Nikhil, a film about an AIDS victim.
“
If there is permissiveness, it’s only among the upper classes,” he
says.
“
They can do whatever they want and get away with |