Why India’s LGBTQI movement has a headstart over the West’s

http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/living/sexuality-and-the-state
Sexuality and the State

Mangesh Karande is 26, unmarried, and drives an autorickshaw in Mumbai. He
prefers the late night shift because of the higher fares he can charge.

He prefers the late night shift for another reason: Mangesh is intimately
familiar with the ‘ladies’ who loiter around the dark corners of Linking
Road after midnight. He has his favourites.

Like the thousands of other autorickshaw drivers who also frequent these
spots, Mangesh knows that these ladies are actually men dressed as
women—some are transsexuals, some are not. This fact does not seem of much
consequence to their clientele.

For men like Mangesh, sex happens between bodies, not genders. For them,
sex is unabashed, uncomplicated, and, in a way, liberated. In their world,
sex comes within the ambit of either pleasure or purpose. The former can be
enjoyed with anybody; the latter, with their wives.

Mangesh poses a unique challenge to the dominant queer rights movement in
India. He is not easy to slot within the queer alphabet milieu. The Indian
LGBTQI movement has largely adopted—for better or worse—a Western character
in its approach. We look towards the West, specifically Western Europe and
America, for trends and strategies in fighting our own battles. We gladly
adopt the Human Rights Campaign’s ‘equal’ sign in solidarity with the equal
marriage cause. Our terminologies—queer, intersex, gender-curious—are
picked up from Western post-modernist academic discourse. We would classify
men like Mangesh as ‘gay’ or ‘bisexual’, labels whose implications would
surprise them if they knew what they meant.

The recent decision by the Supreme Court of the United States to strike
down the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which prevented gay and lesbian
couples from marrying and enjoying full and equal State recognition, was
celebrated with as much gusto within Indian queer circles as American ones.
Meanwhile, there are also anti-equal-marriage voices within the Indian
queer movement, almost exclusively coinciding with the left of the
political spectrum, which sees this recent US apex court decision as
undesirable, as a reflection of the continued hegemony of the
heteronormative marriage paradigm. Paradoxically, this contrarian movement
in India also looks to the West’s post-modernist vocabulary for inspiration
despite its anti-Americanism.

In the midst of all these Westernised constructs, the fluidity of sexual
expression in India is often ignored for the expedience of fighting for the
rights of well-defined communities. The fear is that such facts muddle the
mind more than clarify, and can pose a threat to the march of equality for
self-identified LGBTQI individuals.

In a sense, these fears are not entirely unfounded. India’s Supreme Court
is yet to decide on the matter of decriminalising homosexual acts; and
pushing a pedantic nuance on the diversity of sexual behaviour in India is
hardly going to make the whole affair more palatable to Indians at large.
Often, big victories require broad and bold brush strokes.

Nevertheless, it is hard not to point out that by adopting Western
templates for LGBTQI rights advocacy, we may have overlooked one of the
unique strengths of our own culture, which could have formed the bedrock of
our argument for equality: namely, Indian culture’s historic character of
decentralised authority.

The Western template seeks the endorsement of the State—a dominant power
centre—by agitating for strong legislative and executive-level action. This
is because the State is accepted as an authority over matters of human
nature and personhood, a view that has roots in Hegelian and monotheistic
thought. First, the State, in all its wisdom, presumed to know what ‘acts
against the order of nature’ are, and then chose to outlaw them; now, the
State is being asked to reverse its decision.

Indian pantheistic traditions are hardly amenable to such centralised
authority. Nature is not thought of as something humans can preside over.
As a result, the products of nature are accepted as is—sometimes, as in the
case of traditional*hijra* culture, begrudgingly so. Indian thought allows
for varying and competing power centres across different contexts that
result in organic synergies and trade-offs.
The Indian approach is to be left alone. It typically likes to circumvent
the power of the State to get about its functions. The State is seen—often
rightfully so—as inept and, at best, an annoying interference in the daily
flow of organic human events. In this sense, LGBTQI individuals in India
have a common cause with almost every other fellow Indian in that our
ultimate goal is the sexual emancipation of all citizens from intrusions of
the State. Our struggle for freedom and equality under the law, then, would
be a sexual liberation movement for all Indians—including Mangesh.

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