S Gurumurthy, 05 Jul 2009

Homosexuals displaced the Economic Survey for the year 2008-09 from the 
headlines of most media on July 3, 2009. “Historic bench mark”; “Sexual 
equality”; “Landmark Judgement”. This is how the media had headlined the Delhi 
High Court judgment holding Sec 377 of the Indian Penal Code, which makes 
homosexual acts offences in law, partly unconstitutional. Sec 377 of the Indian 
Penal Code was not Manu's code. It was Macaulay’s. This colonial law made 
homo­sexuality punishable. In Judo-Christian tradition, homosexuality was seen 
an act against the law of God, punishable even with death. The Islamic rules 
also prescribed capital punishment for the offence. In all Abrahamic 
traditions, the hostility to homosexuality originated in the story associated 
with a city as Sodom (the etymological source of the world ‘sodomy’) where the 
sexual sin was first committed according to their texts, though the respective 
accounts varied. This is the philosophy of the law against homosexuals in 
Abrahamic societies. Macaulay’s law reflected their theological position. 
Earlier, there was no state law in India to punish homosexuality. Does that 
mean that the Hindu — read Indian — tradition approved of homosexuality? Read 
on.

What was the position of the state and state enacted laws in India such 
matters? The king or the state in India had refrained from handling most issues 
which the society or families could handle. It is the colonial state, with its 
laws and courts, that began to intrude the sovereign domain of the family and 
society. The Indian discipline was always built around unenforced social and 
family norms; not state laws. Self-restraint and shyness were the tools to 
regulate the deviants from the norms, not the police or courts. Even today, it 
is this non-formal moral order — read dharma — not the laws of parliament or 
state assemblies, that largely governs this society. India is otherwise 
ungovernable; just some 12000 plus police stations in some 7 lakh towns and 
villages cannot regulate over 110 crore people. Thanks to this moral order, the 
Indian society had handled, and even now handles, such sensitive issues with 
great finesse than does state law. It is in stark contrast to the gross state 
law and media discourse of today. Historian Devdutt Pattanaik says that in 
Hindu literature ‘though not part of the mainstream, the existence of 
homosexuality was recognised, but, not approved’. Narada­smiriti prohibited 
marriage of homo­sexual men with women. Manu did suggest mild punishments for 
homos, but of an extreme type. The Indian tradition therefore neither 
encouraged nor punished lesbians or gays; nor did it celebrate them or despise 
them. It regarded them as a small, marginal fact of life, preferring to ignore 
them; and treating them as not worthy of public discussion for or against that 
might disturb the rest of the society.

Homosexuals are, in numbers, marginal even in the West. In the US where the 
gay-lesbians are aggressive in the public discourse, the 2000 US Census data 
reveals that only 0.42% households are same-sex households. Studies in US or 
France and Canada show just some 1-2% admit to be gays or lesbians. The 
deviation from the mainstream behaviour is as marginal as that. Yet it is the 
geo-Christian hostility to even such marginal groups that turns them into 
vociferous action groups in the West.

In the Indian — read Hindu — civilisational ethos, humans had never been seen 
as belonging to one uniform behavioural class. The Indian civilisation had 
recognised diversity in behaviour and  morals. It therefore never imposed one 
moral value or rule for all. But it believed in a hierarchy of moral 
principles. It held out right conduct as ideal for the rest to imbibe and 
follow, but on their own volition. Even as it had evolved normative moral 
principles for the mainline society, it had subtly ignored, rather than focus 
on or punish, the deviants. Those who could not follow an ideal were never held 
as illustration for others to follow.

For example, the Indian society had evo­lved one man-one wife as the ideal 
model for life, but never made it the law. It had indeed celebrated monogamy; 
but had never prohibited or punished polygamy. It did not even outlaw 
polyandry. Even today, regardless of the law, polygamy prevails in different 
parts of India. Even polyandry exists in certain communities in North India. It 
is neither proscribed nor accepted by others. But even those who did not follow 
the ideal of monogamy never disputed its virtue; nor did those who followed 
that virtue look down upon those who did not. Sri Rama was monogamous, but his 
father, Dasharatha, was polygamous. Yet, Rama revered him; obeyed him totally. 
Rama is therefore rega­rded, besides an ideal being, an ideal son as well. But 
Prahlada defied his father; he is regarded as an ideal person, though some may 
not see him as an ideal son like Rama. Likewise, Sita obeyed her husband; but 
Meera defied hers; and yet both are accepted as great. Obeying one’s husband or 
one’s father or being monogamous was held as a high virtue. Even the more macro 
idea of “ahimsa paramo dharma”, namely non-­violence as “the highest value”, 
was regar­ded as a virtue of those only who had

renounced the world; and not for householders and others. So the society was 
ruled more by hierarchy of virtues and illustrative conduct than by law. What 
is correct was never judged by how many people adhered to it; but how virtuous 
it was and regarded by all as such.

Tolerance for the deviants from generally accepted human conduct is part of the 
Ind­ian ethos. Here, the society would wisely ignore the marginal deviants 
rather than punish them, even discuss them — a more subtle, sensible social 
management principle. The society felt, even now feels, shy to discuss them. 
That is why the traditional religious scholars have refused to be drawn into 
the current debate on the issue. In the Indian tradition, homosexuals, as 
elsewhere, were thus regarded as deviants. But, here, unlike in the Abrahamic, 
the right of these deviants to exist without being

punished was never denied; and will never be. Yet no one can argue here or 
elsewhere that homosexuality is a virtue. No law or court of law can declare it 
as a virtue. That is the crux of the debate; and that is what
is being obfuscated.

QED: The Delhi High Court ruling held only one part of Sec 377 as 
unconstitutional. But what part is held constitutional — that is, what act of 
homosexuality is still punishable — cannot be described without allowing the 
discourse to become shameless; without spilling filth in the discourse. So it 
is not being described as shamelessness should yield to shyness. But, the 
media, particularly the visual, has been purveying needless filth using the 
issue for quite some time now. And growing shamelessness is replacing dignified 
shyness that marks the public discourse. Is it fair to subject a shy society to 
a shameless debate?  

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