http://www.indianexpress.com/news/i-had-underwear-put-on-my-door...-porn-slipped-in/607006/0

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[image: Indian Express]
‘I had underwear put on my door... porn slipped in’
*Saba Rahman* Posted online: Friday , Apr 16, 2010 at 2335 hrs
*New Delhi : * He is an open gay and knows homophobia, and what AMU
Professor S R Siras may have gone through in the days leading up to his
sudden death, too well. Ashley Tellis, Assistant Professor, Department of
Liberal Arts, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Hyderabad, has faced and
fought virulent homophobic attacks in several academic institutions of the
country while his career suffered in the process.

“I began teaching after my MA in 1991 in Bombay University (I was barely 21)
and was attacked by my department for teaching an Adrienne Rich poem (Rich
is a lesbian poet from the US). Teachers began checking notebooks to know
what I taught and claimed that students were upset and complaining. I quit
the temporary post in two months,” he says.

In 1994, Tellis left India for his PhD from Cambridge. He returned in 1999
and got an ad-hoc post at St Stephen’s College. He lived on the campus —
only to face another bout of homophobia. “I had abuses scrawled on my door,
porn pictures slipped under my door, underwear stuck on my door. I handed a
letter of complaint to the then principal Anil Wilson, but nothing came of
it. I had many arguments with him over the way the college functioned. I
quit the college at the end of the academic year.”

Tellis then went for an interview with the Venkateswara College. “I was not
given the post because I was homosexual. I know this because one of the
experts on the panel, who still teaches at the university, informed me
later.” When contacted, the professor refused to comment.

The gay rights activist then landed a job at Kirori Mal College where he
taught for about three years. There, he was involved with a gender group
called Parivartan and a university-wide group called Forum Against Sexual
Harassment (FASH), which was instrumental in formulating Delhi University’s
sexual harassment policy — a development that reportedly did not go down
well with the authorities.

“So, as a punishment, a girl student who had poor attendance was told that
she would get to take the final exams if she files a sexual harassment case
against me. I know this because the girl asked another girl, who too was on
the attendance defaulters’ list, to sign on the complaint. The other girl
told me. I saw in this a perfect moment to put the (sexual harassment)
policy into action, and sought a copy of the complaint from Principal Dr
Bhim Sen Singh. I haven’t got it till date.”

Dr Bhim Sen Singh says, “A sexual harassment case, which appeared serious,
was lodged against Tellis following which he resigned from the college on
his own. I, however, don’t recall Tellis seeking a copy of the complaint.”

A disgusted Tellis then left Delhi University for the US in 2004. He
returned to India in 2007.

Despite being a PhD and a Rockefeller Residency postdoctoral in the US,
Tellis says he was denied six to seven jobs, including at English and
Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad, between 2007 and 2009. His first
permanent job is at IIT, Hyderabad, which he joined on September 1, 2009 —
at the age of 40.

Tellis believes attitudes towards homosexuality have not changed and
probably never will. “I do not think we should wait for attitudes to change.
I am not interested in heterosexuals accepting me, as they are the most
hypocritical people in the world, but I simply will not let them get away
with their hush-hush, closed-door homophobia. The fact is that I could do
nothing about it at Delhi University. Legally, I had no ground to stand on.
Even the so-called historic judgment of the Delhi High Court today can do
nothing about the structural homophobia in academic institutions.”

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