THE STATUS OF HIJRAS IN INDIA
NEW DELHI — As India celebrated its recent elections, a small
group of law students in Mumbai worked to file a complaint on behalf of a
segment of society whose members felt they had never received an invitation to
the party: Most of them were not allowed to vote.
The hijra — usually born physically male, but known throughout
south Asia as a third gender because they identify as female — wear women's
clothing and live in closed societies, banding together to brace against
widespread discrimination. Most cannot vote due to the fact that forms for
voter registration and ration cards — documents also needed to rent property or
open a bank account — require them to choose one of two genders. Now they are
lobbying to get that changed.
“We have no constitutional rights — that is the problem,” said
Laxmi Narayan Tripathi, a hijra who serves as chairperson of Astitva Sansthan,
a Rajasthan-based organization devoted to combating HIV/AIDS in India.
“We don't have voting rights; often we cannot get housing. This is not allowing
us to have an identity of our own.”
Despite the fact that more than a million hijra live in the
country, only the southeastern Indian state of Tamil Nadu provides for a
transgendered option on voting registration applications and ration cards, Tripathi
said. In other cities, such as in New Delhi, where ballots allow for only two
gender options, members of the hijra community said that they are treated as
outcasts, forced to beg on street corners or rely on prostitution to survive.
The students from SVKM Law College in Mumbai — Nirav Marjadi,
Kushal Mehta, Dharampal Dave and Jay Vakil — filed a Right-To-Information
inquiry with the Election Commission of India to learn the specific laws
regarding education, employment, voting and ration cards in the state of
Maharashtra. They are working on the draft of a complaint they plan to file
with the Maharashtra State Human Rights Commission, followed by similar filings
in other states throughout the country.
“We have in India reservation(s) for backward classes and
minorities, but these eunuchs are below the minority,” the four wrote in a
statement. “Why are they not enjoying equal rights?”
Hijra say they face discrimination and abuse ranging from
rejection from their families to sexual abuse from classmates. They occupy an
odd place in south Asian culture; though their societal roots are ancient, in
most settings here they are pariahs.
“The traditional job of a hijra is to sing and dance [at weddings
and births],” said one 31-year-old hijra who introduced herself as Tanya. “When
she goes from house to house [in this capacity] she is treated with respect.
Courtesy :- BY UNKNOWN AUTHOR
Dear friends
Who is responsible for the poor status of Tansgenders ?
Why these people were treated like dirt in the society with no
fault of them ?
We are worshipping Lord shiva in the from of ‘ARDHA NARISWARAR”
and why people were rejecting them ?. These question has got no answer so far .
if any one knows
It please let me know .
No comments:
Post a Comment