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g_b Fwd: Indian Supergays Create a Home for Women Rejected By Their Families, 01/26/2012

Aditya Bondyopadhyay
Thu, 26 Jan 2012 21:50:46 -0800

---------- Forwarded message ----------
 Out and Around: Stories From a Not-So-Straight Journey



       [image: Out and
Around]<http://outandaround.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=e84f8e7ccefac8033b1fb4dbf&id=2730d97d4f&e=d0dfad0ab2>

 *Indian Supergays Create a Home for Women Rejected By Their Families*

*By Lisa on Jan 25, 2012 09:10 pm*

<http://outandaround.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=e84f8e7ccefac8033b1fb4dbf&id=f57e867025&e=d0dfad0ab2>

*Just how far would you go to help out your community? This is what I asked
myself when I visited Betu and Maya’s home in South Delhi where they
provide transitional housing for lesbian and bisexual women as well as
transmen who find themselves disowned by their families or in danger after
coming out.* Through their organization,
Sangini<http://outandaround.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=e84f8e7ccefac8033b1fb4dbf&id=ca479f64b8&e=d0dfad0ab2>,
Betu and Maya (pictured left) host an average of 20 “guests” a year in
their home and at times risk their own safety to do so. While they rarely
talk to local press so as not to disclose their location, they graciously
welcomed us into their home.

When I ask Maya about stories that stand out for her she tells us: “The
most dramatic situation was of two women who relocated from another city.
The family of one of the two women was extremely well off. *The father
didn’t leave a stone unturned to get his daughter back. He bribed the
police to attack our house. It was a violent attack. They tried to break
open the house with gas cutters and hammers. I was detained by the police
for five hours. They dragged me out of the house and paraded me to everyone
in the neighborhood.”* Shocked by this story, I asked them why they didn’t
have a security guard. Betu, weighing no more than 110 pounds and standing
not taller than 5’3 tells us, “I’m a person who is not afraid of anything.
I have a black belt. I used to work for security also.”
<http://outandaround.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=e84f8e7ccefac8033b1fb4dbf&id=91366b6ccf&e=d0dfad0ab2>

Maya and Betu have worked hard with officials to gain support for their
non-profit organization. Since the decriminalization of homosexuality in
2009, the law also stands on their side. They work closely with the women
before they separate from their families to find any other alternative
first. Sangini provides a monthly support group and a weekly phone hotline
for women all over India. Maya tells us, “People call us for support. If
they are in imminent danger and have to leave their homes, we plan it out.
We ask them to get their documents and belongings. People bring their whole
lives.* It’s quite traumatic for people to leave their house. Nobody wants
to leave their home like this. There is a reason people stay at home. It is
not only because they are forced to live there. It is because they love
their parents.”*

As a house rule, Maya and Betu request that any guest first call their
families to tell them they are safe and that they will not be returning
home. They are then asked to turn off their cell phones so that their
location cannot be tracked. Maya says, “In the beginning, some of the women
have to stay inside the home as we assess for their safety. There can be a
fear of being abducted. Once this is sorted out, we help them to sort out
jobs and housing.”

Maya reminds us that seeking safety is only the first step. Maya says,
“Everybody wants to be good in front of society. Nobody wants to show
society that they’ve run away from home. There are all these self-doubts
and most people feel guilty when they come here. Our first intervention
when they arrive is trauma counseling.” Yet Maya proudly tells us that with
time, their guests are able to gain their own independence. Their guests
spend an average of two months in their home and almost all find their own
jobs and set appropriate boundaries with their families.

*Betu co-founded Sangini in 1997 because she recognized that queer women
have more challenges in India than gay men. Most adult women live with
their parents until they get married and gender inequalities get reinforced.
* Betu says, “Gay men have more freedom. They don’t have to tell their
parents where they are going. They can just say they are going to see a
friend. Gay women have to leave a phone number behind, explain to her
parents where she is going, and what time she’ll be back. That freedom is
not there.”

So Betu and Maya continue to keep the doors of their guest rooms open an
their house fills with visitors, epecially over the holidays. Betu gets to
the heart of what motivates them to continue when she says,* “It’s really
rewarding when we see women who have settled down and who are living with a
partner, working, saving money and independent. For them we are their
family now.”*



*Sangini
<http://outandaround.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=e84f8e7ccefac8033b1fb4dbf&id=ff667f2ba7&e=d0dfad0ab2>is
a non-profit organization that does not receive support from the Indian
government and runs of private donations. For more information you can
financiall support Sangini, you can contact Betu or Maya at i...@sangini.org
*
  • g_b Fwd: Indian Supergays Create a Home for Women Rejected By Their Families, 01/26/2012 Aditya Bondyopadhyay