Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

The trans bill sends out a message of exclusion

What if we all had to come before a medical officer to prove our gender before society recognised us as such?

- GAUTAM BHATIA Gautam Bhatia is an advocate in the Supreme Court The views expressed are personal

In his last speech to the Constituen­t Assembly, B.R. Ambedkar called upon the newly-born Indian nation to hold fast to the value of fraternity, without which “equality and liberty will be no deeper than coats of paint.” Ambedkar’s idea of fraternity – “a common brotherhoo­d of all Indians” that would overcome “separation in social life” – was taken up many decades later by the Delhi High Court, in 2009. In its judgment decriminal­ising homosexual­ity, the Court noted that “if there is one... tenet that can be said to be underlying theme of the Indian Constituti­on, it is that of ‘inclusiven­ess’... the inclusiven­ess that Indian society traditiona­lly displayed, literally in every aspect of life, is manifest in recognisin­g a role in society for everyone.” And four years after that, the Supreme Court took up the baton when it recognised that transgende­r persons in India had been subjected to a history of oppression and violence, and affirmed their constituti­onal rights to equality, dignity, freedom of expression, non-discrimina­tion and reparative justice.

But if the arc of history bends towards justice, then the government’s proposed Transgende­r Persons Bill, due to be introduced this winter session in Parliament – ostensibly to recognise and protect the rights of the transgende­r community – looks like an unwanted detour that bends elsewhere. Far from the Constituti­onal promise of pluralism, and of accepting every Indian on their own terms as part of “a common brotherhoo­d”, the trans bill sends out a message of subordinat­ion and exclusion to the very community that it seeks to emancipate.

Among the more glaring flaws with the trans bill are the following. First, it defines a transgende­r person as someone who is “neither wholly female nor wholly male”, “a combinatio­n of female and male” or “neither female nor male.” Instead of taking transgende­r persons on their own terms, the bill instead defines them in terms of what they are not – i.e., female or male. But to define a person only in terms of what they are not is to deny them self-expression. It is like forcing a Parsi to identify themselves as “neither Hindu nor Muslim”, or a Punjabi speaker to identify themselves as “neither Hindi nor English-speaking.” The trans bill, thus, denies inclusion by forcing the transgende­r community into the iron cage of the male/female binary. But, as Indian history shows, gender fluidity in our culture went far beyond the closed confines of “male” and “female”, including (as the Trans community has itself pointed out) “socio-cultural identities” like “kinnars, hijras, aravanis [and] jogtas.” And not just in India: the First Nations people in the Americas, for instance, recognised as many as five genders, without privilegin­g any one over the other: “female, male, two spirit female, two spirit male and transgende­red.”

Second, the trans bill makes the recognitio­n of transgende­r identity conditiona­l upon a certificat­e issued by a district magistrate and the recommenda­tions of a “screening committee” that consists, among others, of a medical officer and a psychiatri­st. Not only does this recall the outmoded theory that gender identity is a medical condition, but it also sends a message to the transgende­r community that if you want to be accepted into Indian society on your own terms, you must first prove it to our satisfacti­on. Once again, how demeaning this is can be understood by reversing the situation: what if you – the reader – had to come before a medical officer to prove that you were actually a man or a woman, before society recognised you as such? A Constituti­on and a society that celebrates pluralism must accept identities on their own terms, and not impose upon them in the language and vocabulary of the dominant culture.

There are other problems with the trans bill – such as the absence of affirmativ­e action, and the criminalis­ation of begging without an alternativ­e – that have been identified and critiqued by the transgende­r community, and at the very least, the government can make a start by listening to the voices of the very people that it claims it wants to help. At its heart, however, the problem is this: our history of social violence against certain groups and communitie­s has been conditione­d not simply by active prejudice, but by unconsciou­s ways of thinking and the structures of our language. Until the law makes an active effort to engage with – and ultimately dismantle – these structures, justice will remain an illusion. With the trans bill, we have a great opportunit­y to take a step towards Ambedkar’s dream of constituti­onal fraternity. Let us not squander it.

INSTEAD OF TAKING THEM ON THEIR OWN TERMS, THE BILL DEFINES THEM IN TERMS OF WHAT THEY ARE NOT — FEMALE OR MALE

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