Mumbai's gay community rallies for freedom
Keith J Fernandez
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1177555

August 16 will see Mumbai's largest gay pride parade ever

Weeks after three other metros stole a march on Mumbai to commemorate
the anniversary of 1969's Stonewall riots in New York, our own city's
gay community plans to come out in a show of national pride on August
16.

Singing, dancing and walking under banners screaming Queer Azadi,
gays, lesbians, eunuchs, bisexuals, kothis, transsexuals and a several
others of alternative sexual orientations will don pink Gandhi topis
and other fabulosities in their own long walk to freedom.

The event kicks off at 4pm at August Kranti Maidan and ends with a
candlelight vigil at Chowpatty. It is being described as an attempt to
cast off the shackles of an outdated legal system. Queer is an
inclusive term that unifies people of alternative, or
non-heterosexual, sexualities, and this event brings together nearly a
dozen disparate human rights and advocacy organisations towards a
common goal.

"This is pride as it relates to India's freedom struggle," says gay
activist Ashok Row Kavi, of the organisation Humsafar. "We may be free
from the British, but we are not free from their outdated laws."

The timing of the event and its route - August Kranti Maidan is where
Mahatma Gandhi launched the Quit India Movement in 1942 - have been
specifically chosen to highlight the fact that India's queer community
is still largely marginalised.

Even as the story of a resurgent, booming India gets retold time and
again, Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code punishes those indulging
in carnal intercourse 'against the order of nature' with up to ten
years in prison. "This is purely a British law, the British corrupted
traditional Indian culture by introducing homophobia into our
society," adds prominent gay blogger, Nitin Karani.

A petition by NGO Naz Foundation to declare the statute
unconstitutional is currently being heard by the Delhi High Court.

Organisers hope the Queer Azadi event will serve to raise awareness
and sensitise the community at large, says event co-ordinator and
lesbian rights activist Geeta Kumana, of the organisations Aanchal and
Infosem. "We want to show we are visible and to send out the message
to people in small cities and towns that they are not alone," she told
DNA. "We're also going to be talking to heterosexuals about the
problem homosexuals face."

Besides queers from across the country, Row Kavi says some
heterosexuals will even be lending their support, including trade
unions and workers' groups.

The date is already prominent on the city's gay calendar: Humsafar and
other organisations have been holding similar events, albeit on a much
smaller scale, on August 16 every year for the past four years.

Mumbai's queer leaders have supported and even helped kick-start pride
events in other cities, says Row Kavi, who promises that from next
year, the city will host two pride events.

The writer is a Gulf-based journalist

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