Seema, a husband and father of two, gets ready for another night of
work on the streets of the Indian capital, placing two halves of a
yellow sponge ball into empty bra cups.
The 33-year-old then
plucks out the stubble on his chin, applies foundation from a pink
heart-shaped make-up box and combs his chin-length black hair in front
of a large mirror.
Seema is transgender, one of hundreds of thousands in conservative
India who are ostracized, often abused and forced into prostitution due
to no legal recognition, even as the world marks International Day
against Homophobia and Transphobia on May 17.
"It's necessary for
me to do sex work because I have to look after my family," Seema said,
adjusting a deep red scarf. "Nobody does it of their own wish. We have
sex because we have no other choice."
Male-to-female
transgenders, also known as "hijras", have a long history in South Asia,
experts say. The Sanskrit texts of the Kama Sutra, written between 300
and 400 B.C., refers to a "third sex". The Kama Sutra is an ancient
Indian Hindu text on human sexual behavior in Sanskrit literature.
During the Mughal empire in the 16th and 17th centuries, castrated
hijras - or eunuchs - were respected and considered close confidants of
emperors, often being employed as royal servants and bodyguards.
These jobs were so coveted that historians say some parents actually
castrated their sons in order to attain favor with the Mughal kings and
secure employment for their children.
But despite acceptance
centuries ago, hijras today live on the fringes of Indian society and
face discrimination in jobs and services such as health and education.
"I think things are different today because of the kind of laws that
were introduced to India when the British came. The whole concept of
unnatural and natural was defined in our law," said gay rights activist
Anjali Gopalan.
Many hijras are now sex workers or move around in
organized groups begging or demanding money from families who are
celebrating the birth of a child or a marriage. They threaten to curse
the happy new couple or the newborn if they do not pay up.
Many Indians fear a hijra's curse, which is said to bring infertility or bad luck.
But transgenders are the biggest victims, say activists.
Hate crimes against the community are common yet few are reported,
partly due to a lack of sensitivity by authorities such as the police.
Last week, an activist fighting for transgender rights had his throat
slashed in the southern state of Kerala. The previous month, in
neighboring Tamil Nadu state, a 42-year-old transgender was strangled to
death with a rope.
HER REAL SELF
By day, in a cramped one-room home in west Delhi, Seema is known by her
male birth name Hardeep and is a loving father of a one and
six-year-old who call her "daddy".
As night falls, she goes to a
local charity to paint her face and transform into Seema, who sells
herself on the street under a busy city flyover.
She earns about
200 rupees ($4), offering oral sex or "thigh sex," in which the client
will place his penis into her clamped thighs. Other hijras generally
offer anal sex too.
Within 15 minutes, a black car pulls up and
she is whisked away before returning to serve another client - this time
a man on a motorbike in a dark shirt and light blue jeans.
The job comes with many risks.
In 2009, Seema was raped by a policeman inside a roadside booth, and she is now HIV positive.
"First and foremost, they are vulnerable to HIV/AIDS. Due to their job,
they get beaten up left, right and centre almost everyday," said Abhina
Aher from the India HIV/AIDS Alliance.
According to the India's
National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO), HIV prevalence amongst
transgenders is 20 times higher than the general population.
Activists say some progress is being made in lifting discrimination.
Three years ago, the British-era law banning gay sex was overturned. In
Tamil Nadu, pensions, free sex "re-assignment" surgery and university
scholarships are now offered.
But hijras like Seema believe more needs to be done.
"If the government wants to help, they should do some sensitization with people so that they don't discriminate," said Seema.
"We are also human beings. It's not my choice God made me this way. I can't help it."
Courtesy:
May 16, 2012 | Atish Patel | Reuters @ "http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-05-16/features/sns-rt-us-india-transgendersbre84g060-20120516_1_transgenders-gay-rights-activist-anjali-gopalan"
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