hi there, pleased you acepted your dear son is gay.
all the best to your gay son and family.
derek. xxxx.
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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________________________________
From: "modera...@gaybombay.in" <modera...@gaybombay.in>
To: gay_bombay@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sun, 20 February, 2011 18:22:01
Subject: g_b My son is gay, and I'm proud of him'

  

My son is gay, and I’m proud of him’
Shruti Ravindran
Indian Express, Sun Feb 20 2011, 17:03 hrs
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/my-son-is-gay-and-im-proud-of-him/752229/0

[image] Bina Guha Thakurta at a cafe in Kolkata, with son Tirthankar,
who made the coming-out film Piku Bhalo Achhey.

Parents of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender children go to the
Supreme Court to weigh in on the debate over same-sex relationship.
The story of how they came to accept and understand their children.

In the office of Minna Saran, the manager of a beauty salon in Le
Meridien, Delhi, nymphets with flowers in their hair gaze out of
gilt-edged frames on the walls, and ceramic angels sidle up close to
fuzzy ducks and bunnies on the shelves. At her desk, with a sweeping
view of central Delhi filling the window behind her, and a portrait of
her son Nishit beside her, Saran herself is all steely-eyed,
unsentimental resolve. The lead signatory on a special leave petition
she has signed with 18 other parents, she is determined, on her son’s
behalf, to defeat the self-elected guardians of “family values” who
oppose the Delhi High Court’s July 2, 2009 judgment which read down
Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, a colonial-era law that
criminalises “unnatural offences”, including consensual same-sex
unions. “If we have legal, human rights, as citizens of this country,
why should our children be denied these rights?” she says hotly. “When
they’re toppers or go to Harvard, they’re acclaimed. Should they be
ridiculed just because they have special preferences?”

She may not have had far to go, but Saran has still come a long way
from when her son came out to her on camera, in his moving 1999
documentary Summer in My Veins. “You’re joking. You like to shock
people,” she had said to him then, adding, with a near-imperceptible
wince, “Are you going around with...men?” With his calm reply, “I
have,” her disbelief and shock turned, in an instant, to total
acceptance: “You’re my son. I’m not going to be ashamed of what you
do, or who you are. Till the time I’m alive, I’m with you, I’m with
you, I’m with you.” Nishit died in a car accident shortly after, in
2002. “Talking about all this takes me back,” she says, dabbing her
eyes with a tissue. “The pain is too much. But I’m standing by him.
It’s something I want to do. I know if he was here, he would’ve been
involved.”

So, on his behalf, she awaits the result of her petition — and three
others supporting it — which goes up against 15 others filed by motley
religious groups and individuals in the Supreme Court on April 19.
With most of them decrying the putative “corrosion of family values”
that decriminalising same-sex relations will lead to, Saran’s
petition, which she’s signed with 18 other parents of children who
identify themselves as lesbian, bisexual, gay or transgendered, is a
fitting response, made from unimpeachable moral high ground. Its
signatories come from various classes and regions — Delhi, Kolkata,
Guruvayur, Bangalore, Mumbai, Pune and Chennai — and it is far more
widely representative of those “Indian family values” in apparent need
of protection. As parents, who have “a direct and immediate stake in
the outcome of these proceedings,” they argue that it is, in fact,
Section 377 which is a threat and a “gross intrusion into family
life”.

It is a convincing argument, but most of the parents making it needed
convincing first, due to the public nature of the undertaking. “We
tried persuading a lot of parents, and it was a conflicted process.
Most of them were wary about exposure, and some, who were willing to
sign, were prevented from doing so by other family members, who
created an ugly scene,” says Vikram Doctor, a member of Gay Bombay,
which assembled the informal pressure group through workshops to help
parents come to terms with their children’s sexuality. This might not
be an easy task, as most Indian parents like to pretend their children
are asexual, and even expect them to be so until they marry. For the
most part, Doctor says, parents “eventually accept it, as most do love
their children a lot”, even if they first “put on a tamasha — cry, and
take their kids around to 50 temples”.

Petitioner Vijayam PS, however, was not given to such theatrics. She
might have grown up in a village in Palakkad, Kerala, where she
“didn’t know what was these things”, but her 30 years working as a
senior accounts officer at the General Post Office in Bangalore
brought her up to speed on “these” and somewhat less common things,
such as a male clerk working under her, who “had his monthly period”.
So, when her son, college lecturer Nithin Manayath, came out to her
about six years ago, she quickly reconciled herself to it, even
spending the first year of her retirement working with Sangama, a
Bangalore-based NGO which aids sexual minorities.

“See, whose fault is it? Nobody’s fault. It’s his psychology,” she
says matter-of-factly, over the phone from her home in Thrissur,
Guruvayur. “I didn’t feel anything; I was not sad, not happy. I had no
trouble in digesting all this. I told him, live how you feel like.” To
this, she added, “Don’t think of marriage; well and good,” having seen
the fallout of gay men being forced into marriage, whose wives then
had a “big problem of adjustment”. But she cautioned her son that the
lack of a conventional support system meant he needed to “maintain”
himself: “I told him that I’d help till I am there, but after some
time, he may need companionship.” That admission aside, she has little
patience for the standard-bearers of heteronormative culture.
“Sexuality is not for procreation,” she says. “Why do gents go to sex
workers? For procreation? No. They are going there just for fun. Just
think of it, ya!”

Though a little more soft-spoken, petitioner Shobha Doshi, a
58-year-old social worker and cancer survivor living in the Mumbai
suburb of Mulund, is just as firm about challenging the hypocrisy of
those who oppose the decriminalisation of homosexuality. “Who asks
heterosexual people what they are doing in their bedroom?” she says
indignantly. “So many things they are doing – nobody objects! They’re
just harassing people (who) are a minority.”

She found out that her son Shameet, an Atlanta-based computer
engineer, was gay and living with his boyfriend about five years ago,
through her elder son. “So I called him in Atlanta and asked him,
first thing: ‘Why hide this for so many years? We used to discuss
small-small things, why couldn’t you tell me about this?’” Doshi
recalls. “He told me, ‘Many educated parents are not accepting (it),
mamma. I can’t live without your support.’” She didn’t see why he had
to. “My son is very intelligent, he has a good job,” she says.
“Growing up, he was a very quiet child, he never mixed with anybody,
or had girls come home late. But in a younger age, he was a naughty
child. Now, I realise why he was quiet.”

She attributes some of the ease with which she accepted the news to
her struggle with cancer 25 years ago. “After that, I learned to
live,” she says, in a calm, childlike voice. “Life is beautiful, you
have to accept whatever comes your way.” With acceptance came
understanding. After she spent six months in the US with her son and
his boyfriend, cooking Indian food for their potluck parties, she
wondered at the commonness of this identity, previously so obscure to
her. “Most of Shameet’s friends are Indian,” she says. “When I saw
them, I thought, if there are so many gay Indians living in Atlanta,
then how many there’ll be in India!”

Meeting them also rid her imagination of the stereotypical mincing gay
man that Bollywood had taught her to expect. “It was a little
exaggerated, and left a bad impression,” she says. “But they are good
human beings, and so intelligent. I felt they are more soft than
normal people, maybe because they’re not as accepted by society.” This
understanding proved useful in reconciling her son’s boyfriend, a
Pakistan-born American, with his mother. His elder brother had thrown
him out of the house on discovering his sexual orientation. “When I
met her, she was crying and crying and crying,” says Doshi. “I told
her, ‘See, you can’t change them. It’s nobody’s mistake. It happens in
life.’ Now,” she adds, proudly, “she comes to their house and cooks
for them.”

When confronted with the truth about her son Tirthankar’s sexual
orientation, Kolkata-based Bina Guha Thakurta, for her part, chose
denial over tears. As implausible as it might seem, when Tirthankar’s
coming-out film Piku Bhalo Achhey (Piku is Fine) was the talk of
Kolkata in 2003, his mother was still oblivious to the fact that he
was gay. “I really did believe that his film was about a fictitious
character,” insists Guha Thakurta, looking distinctly uncomfortable
with the recollection, as she empties two sachets of brown sugar in
her cup of latte at a central Kolkata coffee shop, turning every so
often to her son beside her for reassurance — which he gives her
readily, squeezing her arm, or smiling encouragingly at her. “Almost a
year after the film was made, he came up to me and said he had
something to say. I knew it was something really important — mother’s
instinct — if you can call it that. He would keep talking about
same-sex relationships so I knew what he meant when he said he was
gay.”

As the president of the South Kolkata Mahila Morcha, the women’s wing
of the BJP, Guha Thakurta didn’t live a blinkered housewife’s
existence, sequestered in the kitchen of her Park Circus home. Yet,
she says, she lacked “the vocabulary to define such relationships. I
would look at eunuchs and pity them. That was my only exposure to the
LGBT world.” The realisation that her son was gay plunged her into
depression. “I firmly believed that everything I had struggled for had
come undone.” Living with a conservative joint family didn’t help
either. “One of my sisters-in-law took it upon herself to show me all
the newspaper clippings talking about my son and his film and say that
he has brought shame to the family. It never occurred to me that I
could answer back,” she says. That’s just what she did, though, years
later, when the same relative came to her, brandishing a newspaper
clipping of Tirthankar, who had led a procession celebrating the Delhi
High Court’s repealing Section 377 in 2009. “I was curt, and told her
that I’m actually proud of my son for standing up for his beliefs,”
she says brightly.

By signing this petition, she’s standing up for his beliefs too. “As a
parent, I can’t abandon my child. And I firmly believe that each
person has the right to choose his or her partner. Societal pressure
cannot work in personal matters.” She does admit, however, to exerting
these pressures herself, in trying to wheedle her son into marry a
girl. “When he’d protest and say that he didn’t want to spoil a girl’s
life, I tried to convince him by saying that I would handle the
situation. Now I know that’s almost criminal,” says Guha Thakurta.
Today, all she wants is for her son is to find a suitable partner. “He
should get to know the person before he starts seeing him. He
shouldn’t jump into something impulsively,” she says, this time,
giving her son’s arm a reassuring squeeze.

While for gay men like Tirthankar and Nishit, coming out was a
much-mythologised moment, for practising advocate Keya Ghosh’s son
Debjyoti, it must’ve been dissatisfyingly undistinguished. “When
Debjyoti did come out to me, it was more of a formality,” she says,
with a wave at the framed photographs of her son scattered across her
sprawling south Kolkata living room. “He had a lot of flamboyant gay
friends who would come over to our house, and I was very comfortable
with them.” She was initially worried about Debjyoti — who’s currently
in Budapest for further studies — having multiple partners, as “gay
men tend to be a little promiscuous, but when he found himself a nice
doctor boyfriend, I was relieved,” she says, with a laugh. “After all,
everybody wants a doctor as a son-in-law.”

Minna Saran, too, is quite content with her son Nishit’s choice in
men. Her life would be bleaker if she didn’t have his last boyfriend,
Mandeep, to cheer her. “He’s stood by me like a rock. See, that’s
him,” she says proudly, showing photo after photo of him beaming
widely on her smartphone. “I call him my daughter-in-law. Here he is
with my other daughter-in-law!”

While she and her fellow petitioners will feel vindicated if the
Supreme Court upholds the Delhi High Court’s 2009 verdict, Saran is
convinced that the approval of parents is more crucial than that of
“legal heads”. “They want acceptance because they need you, they can’t
live without you,” she says, “They don’t want society’s acceptance,
they want your acceptance.”



 
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