Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Want the pace of change to speed up

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Three years after the Section 377 verdict, which read down the criminalis­ation of adult consensual same sex desire, while we have made progress in addressing the inequality that faces the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgende­r, Queer, Intersex (LGBTQI+) community, there’s a lot that still needs to be done to translate that verdict, as well as some of the others that came before it into reality. With the 2014 Nalsa judgment, which recognized the gender identity of transperso­ns, the 2017 nine-judge bench decision on privacy, which read it as a fundamenta­l right of all citizens and the Navtej Johar verdict of 2018 which read down Section 377, a momentum was gathering: it was one of equal rights to LGBTQI+ citizens. Now, three years on, what we have is, at best, non-criminalit­y.

What will it take for us to move towards more equality? In a post-covid world, I would want the pace of change to accelerate in two areas.

The first is the law, where I would like to see progress on a meaningful anti-discrimina­tion law that protects the rights of LGBTQ+ people and other minorities. This would be useful to enhance the thrust of Navtej verdict and the others that preceded it. Many community organisati­ons and individual­s are also moving court to rectify some provisions of the Transgende­r Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, because many feel that it doesn’t serve transperso­ns meaningful­ly in its current form. Thirdly, there is the issue of marriage equality. There is a long road ahead for this but given our strong socio-cultural imperative towards marriage, the right to choose to enter into this institutio­n in the same way that heterosexu­al Indian citizens can choose to do so, is a big step towards equality of queer citizens of India.

But the law is only part of the equation. Social realities are the other. I would want the family, the workplace, educationa­l institutio­ns, and even media, to become more inclusive. There are already small pockets of change, as I’ve detailed in Queeristan. There are so many instances of birth families of LGBTQ+ persons accepting them and their partners.

There are educationa­l institutio­ns that have created incredible environmen­ts for queer students. There have been so many workplaces, both in the private and public sectors that are conducting inclusive hiring.

A World Bank report published in 2014 calculated that homophobia had cost India up to $30.8 billion in 2012 alone.

It’s this sort of regularisa­tion of queer people that I want to see more of. This is how society shifts: when we are present everywhere, when our presence is imagined and included as normal and not as tokenism or comic relief, that’s how the spirit of the Navtej verdict will translate into lived reality.

For this to happen, mainstream society needs to step up. It is not the onus of LGBTQ persons alone to struggle and fight for these changes; we are only 6 to 10% of the population.

It’s time for mainstream society to be an ally and join the inclusion revolution. For years, queer people have been doing the labour of arguing, doing advocacy, and asking for inclusion. It’s time for mainstream societies to understand that by creating these spaces for all of us to flourish in, is ultimately to their advantage.

Take for instance what Dalit and trans rights activist Grace Banu has done in Tamil Nadu: a trans-led milk cooperativ­e has come up in Thoothukud­i with the help of public and private enterprise and this benefits everyone. This is a template for a queer inclusive future.

What also excites me is how many intersecti­onal queer organisati­ons are being formed to platform and bring forward queer voices or experience­s that were hitherto marginalis­ed, such as the Ya-all community organisati­on in Manipur or the Queer Muslim Project or the Dalit Queer Project, among others. This articulati­on of various kinds of diverse queer experience­s is important because it reminds us that the struggle for queer rights is linked to other struggles of different communitie­s. At the end of the day, we all want the same thing: a better, more equal and inclusive world.

Work by scholars like the recently deceased historian Saleem Kidwai and Ruth Vanita, a professor at the University of Montana reveal that queer identity is very much situated in Indianness. Inclusiven­ess is a very Indian thing to do. This argument has to be made not just in courts, but also in families and workplaces and educationa­l spaces. What is alien is discrimina­tion.

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