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Hijra (South Asia)

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A Hijra protest in Islamabad, May 2008.

Hijras, (Template:Lang-hi, Template:Lang-ur, Template:Lang-bn, Template:Lang-kn, Template:Lang-te Punjabi ਹਿਜੜਾ) are also known as chhakka in Kannada and Bambaiya Hindi, khusra (ਖੁਸਰਾ) in Punjabi and kojja in Telugu. "Hijra", as with many aforementioned terms is one of the many terms in the culture of South Asia used to refer individuals who consider themselves as transexual or transgender.[1][2] Transgenders are also known as Aravani, Aruvani or Jagappa in other areas of India.[3]

It is a common misconception within the South Asians and lack of respect for wanting to understand the transgender community, at the expense of transgender rights, that they assume hijras are "only men who have feminine gender identity, adopt feminine gender roles and wear women's clothing". When, in reality the community is diverse.[4]

In Pakistan, the hijras identify themselves as either female, male, or third gender. The term more commonly advocated by social workers and transgender community themselves is, 'khwaaja sira' (Template:Lang-ur), and can identify themselves as transexual person, transgender person (khusras), cross-dressers (zenanas) and eunuchs (narnbans).[5][6]

Hijras have a long-recorded history in the Indian subcontinent, from antiquity, as suggested by the Kama Sutra period, onwards. This history features a number of well-known roles within subcontinental cultures, part gender-liminal, part spiritual, and part survival.

In South Asia, many hijras live in well-defined and organized all-hijra communities, led by a guru.[7][8] These communities have sustained themselves over generations by "adopting" young boys who are rejected by, or flee their family of origin.[9] Many work as sex workers for survival.[10]

The word "hijra" is a Urdu-Hindustani word derived from the Semitic Arabic root hjr in its sense of "leaving one's tribe,"[11] and has been borrowed into Hindi. The Indian usage has traditionally been translated into English as "eunuch" or "hermaphrodite," where "the irregularity of the male genitalia is central to the definition."[12] However, in general hijras are born with typically male physiology, only a few having been born with male intersex variations.[13] Some Hijras undergo an initiation rite into the hijra community called nirwaan, which refers to the removal of penis, testicles and scrotum.[10]

Since the late 20th century, some hijra activists and Western non-government organizations (NGOs) have been lobbying for official recognition of the hijra as a kind of "third sex" or "third gender," as neither man nor woman.[14] Hijras have successfully gained this recognition in Bangladesh and are eligible for priority in education.[15]

Terminology

The Urdu and Hindi word hijra may alternately be romanized as hijira, hijda, hijada, hijara, hijrah and is pronounced [ˈɦɪdʒɽaː]. This term is generally considered derogatory in Urdu and the word Khwaja Saraa is used instead. Another such term is khasuaa (खसुआ) or khusaraa (खुसरा). In Bengali hijra is called হিজড়া, hijra, hijla, hijre, hizra, or hizre.

A number of terms across the culturally and linguistically diverse Indian subcontinent represent similar sex or gender categories. While these are rough synonyms, they may be better understood as separate identities due to regional cultural differences. In Telugu, a hijra is referred to as napunsakudu (నపుంసకుడు), kojja (కొజ్జ) or maada (మాడ). In Tamil Nadu the equivalent term is Thiru nangai (mister woman), Ali, aravanni, aravani, or aruvani. In Punjabi, both in Pakistan and India, the term khusra is used. Other terms include jankha. In Gujarati they are called pavaiyaa (પાવૈયા). In Urdu another common term is khwaaja sira (ur).

In North India the goddess Bahuchara Mata is worshipped by Pavaiyaa (પાવૈયા). In South India, the goddess Renuka is believed to have the power to change one's sex. Male devotees in female clothing are known as Jogappa. They perform similar roles to hijra, such as dancing and singing at birth ceremonies and weddings.[16]

The word kothi (or koti) is common across India, similar to the Kathoey of Thailand, although kothis are often distinguished from hijras. Kothis are regarded as feminine men or boys who take a feminine role in sex with men, but do not live in the kind of intentional communities that hijras usually live in. Additionally, not all kothis have undergone initiation rites or the body modification steps to become a hijra.[17] Local equivalents include durani (Kolkata), menaka (Cochin),[18] meti (Nepal), and zenana (Pakistan).

Hijra used to be translated in English as "eunuch" or "hermaphrodite,"[12] although LGBT historians or human rights activists have sought to include them as being transgender.[19]

Gender and sexuality

These identities have no exact match in the modern Western taxonomy of gender and sexual orientation,[19] and challenge Western ideas of sex and gender.[10]

In India, some Hijras do not define themselves by specific sexual orientation, but rather by renouncing sexuality altogether. Sexual energy is transformed into sacred powers. However, these notions come in conflict with the reality, in which hijras are often employed as prostitutes.[20] Furthermore, in India a transgender male who takes a "receptive" role in sex with a man will often identify as a kothi (or the local equivalent term). While kothis are usually distinguished from hijras as a separate gender identity, they often dress as women and act in a feminine manner in public spaces, even using feminine language to refer to themselves and each other. The usual partners of hijras and kothis are men who consider themselves heterosexual as they are the ones who penetrates.[21] These male partners are often married, and any relationships or sex with "kothis" or hijras are usually kept secret from the community at large. Some hijras may form relationships with men and even marry,[22] although their marriage is not usually recognized by law or religion. Hijras and kothis often have a name for these masculine sexual or romantic partners; for example, panthi in Bangladesh, giriya in Delhi or sridhar in Cochin.[18]

Social status and economic circumstances

Most hijras live at the margins of society with very low status; the very word "hijra" is sometimes used in a derogatory manner. Few employment opportunities are available to hijras. Many get their income from extortion(forced payment by disrupting work/life using demonstration and interference), performing at ceremonies (toli), begging (dheengna), or sex work ('raarha')—an occupation of eunuchs also recorded in premodern times. Violence against hijras, especially hijra sex workers, is often brutal, and occurs in public spaces, police stations, prisons, and their homes.[23] As with transgender people in most of the world, they face extreme discrimination in health, housing, education, employment, immigration, law, and any bureaucracy that is unable to place them into male or female gender categories.[24]

In 2008, HIV prevalence was 27.6% amongst hijra sex workers in Larkana.[5] The general prevalence of HIV among the adult Pakistani population is estimated at 0.1%.[25]

In a study of Bangladeshi hijras, participants reported not being allowed to seek healthcare at the private chambers of doctors, and experiencing abuse if they go to government hospitals.[26]

Beginning in 2006, hijras were engaged to accompany Patna city revenue officials to collect unpaid taxes, receiving a 4-percent commission.[27]

Since India's Supreme Court re-criminalized homosexuality abd bisexuality on Dec. 13, 2013, there has been a sharp increase in the physical, psychological and sexual violence against the transgender community by the Indian Police Service nor are they investigating even when sexual assault is reported.[28]

An Indian Hijra.

Language

The hijra community due to its peculiar place in sub-continental society which entailed marginalisation yet royal privileges developed a secret language known as Hijra Farsi. The language has a sentence structure loosely based on Urdu and a unique vocabulary of at least thousand words. Beyond the Urdu-Hindi speaking areas of subcontinent the vocabulary is still used by the hijra community within their own native languages.

In South Asian politics

The hijra community in India has seen many success stories in the political sphere starting with the election of Shobha Nehru in 1998 for the city council seat in Hissar, Haryana. However, given the influence of Islam on hijra communities, there is a lack of Islamic rhetoric in the political sphere. Pakistan, on the other hand, has yet to see a hijra elected into the government, even though there is much political activism from the hijra community. [citation needed] In 2013 transgender people in Pakistan were allowed to run as election candidates for the first time in history.[29] Sanam Fakir, a 32-year-old hijra, ran as an independent candidate for Sukkur, Pakistan's general election in May.[30]

The governments of both India (1994)[31] and Pakistan (2009)[32] have recognized hijras as a "third sex," thus granting them the basic civil rights of every citizen. In India, hijras now have the option to identify as a eunuch ("E") on passports and on certain government documents. However, they are not fully accommodated; for example, citizens must identify as either male or female to vote. There is also further discrimination from the government. In the 2009 general election, India's election committee denied three hijras candidature unless they identified themselves as either male or female.

History

The ancient Kama Sutra mentions the performance of fellatio by feminine people of a third sex (tritiya prakriti).[33] This passage has been variously interpreted as referring to men who desired other men, so-called eunuchs ("those disguised as males, and those that are disguised as females"[34]), male and female transvestites ("the male takes on the appearance of a female and the female takes on the appearance of the male"),[35] or two kinds of biological males, one dressed as a woman, the other as a man.[36]

During the era of the British Raj, authorities attempted to eradicate hijras, whom they saw as "a breach of public decency."[37] Anti-hijra laws were repealed; but a law outlawing castration, a central part of the hijra community, was left intact, though rarely enforced. Also during British rule in India they were placed under Criminal Tribes Act 1871 and labelled a "criminal tribe," hence subjected to compulsory registration, strict monitoring and stigmatized for a long time; after independence however they were denotified in 1952, though the centuries-old stigma continues.[38]

In religion

The Indian transgender hijras or Aravanis ritually marry the Hindu god Aravan and then mourn his ritual death (seen) in an 18-day festival in Koovagam, India.

Many practice a form of syncretism that draws on multiple religions; seeing themselves to be neither men nor women, hijras practice rituals for both men and women.

Hijras belong to a special caste. They are usually devotees of the mother goddess Bahuchara Mata, Lord Shiva, or both.

Hijras and Bahuchara Mata

Bahuchara Mata is a Hindu goddess with two unrelated stories both associated with transgender behavior. One story is that she appeared in the avatar of a princess who castrated her husband because he would run in the woods and act like a woman rather than have sex with her. Another story is that a man tried to rape her, so she cursed him with impotence. When the man begged her forgiveness to have the curse removed, she relented only after he agreed to run in the woods and act like a woman. The primary temple to this goddess is Gujarat[39] and it is a place of pilgrimage for hijras, who see Bahucahara Mata as a patroness.

Hijras and Lord Shiva

One of the forms of Lord Shiva is a merging with Parvati where together they are Ardhanari, a god that is half Shiva and Half Parvati. Ardhanari is especially worshipped in North India and has special significance as a patron of hijras, who identify with the gender ambiguity.[39]

Hijras in the Ramayana

In some versions of the Ramayana,[40] when Rama leaves Ayodhya for his 14-year exile, a crowd of his subjects follow him into the forest because of their devotion to him. Soon Rama notices this, and gathers them to tell them not to mourn, and that all the "men and women" of his kingdom should return to their places in Ayodhya. Rama then leaves and has adventures for 14 years. When he returns to Ayodhya, he finds that the hijras, being neither men nor women, have not moved from the place where he gave his speech. Impressed with their devotion, Rama grants hijras the boon to confer blessings on people during auspicious inaugural occasions like childbirth and weddings. This boon is the origin of badhai in which hijras sing, dance, and give blessings.[41]

Hijras in the Mahabharata

Mahabharata includes an episode in which Arjun, a hero of the epic, is sent into an exile. There he assumes an identity of a eunuch-transvestite and performs rituals during weddings and childbirths that are now performed by hijras.[42]

In the Mahabharata, before the Kurukshetra War, Ahiravan offers his lifeblood to goddess Kali to ensure the victory of the Pandavas, and Kali agrees to grant him power. On the night before the battle, Aravan expresses a desire to get married before he dies. No woman was willing to marry a man doomed to die in a few hours, so Krishna assumes the form of a beautiful woman called Mohini and marries him. In South India, hijras claim Aravan as their progenitor and call themselves "aravanis."[41]

"Sangam literature use the word ‘Pedi’ to refer to Hijra, The Aravan cult in Koovagam village of Tamil Nadu is a folk tradition of the transwomen, where the members enact the legend during an annual three-day festival. “This is completely different from the sakibeki cult of West Bengal, where transwomen don’t have to undergo sex change surgery or shave off their facial hair. They dress as women still retaining their masculine features and sing in praise of Lord Krishna,". “Whereas, since the Tamil society is more conservative and hetero-normative, transwomen completely change themselves as women. In the ancient times, even religion has its own way of accepting these fringe communities.” The Bachura Devi worship in Gujarat and Jogappa cult of Karanataka are the other examples.the kinds of dialects and languages spoken by these community in different parts of the country and the socio-cultural impact on the lingo. ‘Hijra Farsi’ is the transgender dialect, a mix of Urdu, Hindi and Persian spoken in the northern belt of India, Pakistan and Afghanistan and ‘Kothi Baashai’ is spoken by the transgender community in Karnataka, Andhra, Orissa and parts of Tamil Nadu. “They even have sign languages and typical mannerisms to communicate. The peculiar clap is one such,” [43]

— Gopi Shankar in National Queer Conference 2013 organised by Sappho for Equality

Each year in Tamil Nadu, during April and May, hijras celebrate an eighteen-day religious festival. The aravani temple is located in the village Koovagam in the Ulundurpet taluk in Villupuram district, and is devoted to the deity Koothandavar, who is identified with Aravan. During the festival, the aravanis reenact a story of the wedding of Lord Krishna and Lord Aravan, followed by Aravan's subsequent sacrifice. They then mourn Aravan's death through ritualistic dances and by breaking their bangles. An annual beauty pageant is also held, as well as various health and HIV or AIDS seminars. Hijras from all over the country travel to this festival. A personal experience of the hijras in this festival is shown in the BBC Three documentary India's Ladyboys and also in the National Geographic Channel television series Taboo.

Hijras in Islam

There is evidence that Indian hijras identifying as Muslim also incorporate aspects of Hinduism. Still, despite this syncretism, Reddy (2005) notes that a hijra does not practice Islam differently from other Muslims and argues that their syncretism does not make them any less Muslim. Reddy (2003) also documents an example of how this syncretism manifests: in Hyderabad, India a group of Muslim converts were circumcised, something seen as the quintessential marker of male Muslim identity.

In films and literature

Bangladesh

The film Common Gender (2012) relates the story of the Bangladesh hijra and their struggle for survival.

India

Hijras have been portrayed on screen in Indian cinema since its inception, historically as comic relief. A notable turning point occurred in 1974 when real hijras appeared during a song-and-dance sequence in Kunwaara Baap ("The Unmarried Father"). There are also hijras in the Hindi movie Amar Akbar Anthony (1977) who accompany one of the heroes, Akbar (Rishi Kapoor), in a song entitled "Tayyab Ali Pyar Ka Dushman" ("Tayyab Ali, the Enemy of Love"). One of the first sympathetic hijra portrayals was in Mani Ratnam's Bombay (1995). 1997's Tamanna [44] starred male actor Paresh Rawal in a central role as "Tiku", a hijra who raises a young orphan. Pooja Bhatt produced and also starred in the movie, with her father Mahesh Bhatt co-writing and directing. Deepa Mehta's Water features the hijra character "Gulabi" (played by Raghubir Yadav), who has taken to introducing the downtrodden, outcast widows of Varanasi to prostitution. Not surprisingly, perhaps, the film generated much controversy. There is a brief appearance of hijras in the 2004 Gurinder Chadha film Bride & Prejudice, singing to a bride-to-be in the marketplace. There's also a loose reference, in the guise of "Rocky" ("Rokini") in Deepha Mehta's Bollywood/Hollywood.

The 1997 Hindi film Darmiyaan: In Between directed & co-written by Kalpana Lajmi is based on the subject of Hijra, wherein a fictitious story of an actress bearing a son that turns out to be neuter.

In the 2000 Tamil film Appu directed by Vasanth, a remake of the Hindi film Sadak, the antagonist is a brothel-owning hijra played by Prakash Raj. (In Sadak, the brothel-owning character was played by Sadashiv Amrapurkar under the name "Maharani".)

In 2005, a fiction feature film titled Shabnam Mausi was made on the life of a eunuch politician Shabnam Mausi. It was directed by Yogesh Bharadwaj and the title role played by Ashutosh Rana.

Jogwa, a 2009 Marathi film, depicts the story of a man forced to be hijra under certain circumstances. The movie has received several accolades.[45]

In Soorma Bhopali, Jagdeep encounters a troupe of hijra on his arrival in Bombay. The leader of this pack is also played by Jagdeep himself.

In Anil Kapoor's Nayak, Johnny Lever, who plays the role of the hero's assistant, gets beaten up by hijras, when he is caught calling them "hijra" (he is in habit of calling almost everyone who bothers him by this pejorative and no one cares much, except this once ironically, as the addressees are literally what he is calling them.)

One of the main characters in Khushwant Singh's novel Delhi, Bhagmati is a hijra. She makes a living as a semi-prostitute and is wanted in the diplomatic circles of the city.

Vijay TV's Ippadikku Rose, a Tamil show conducted by postgraduate educated transgender Rose is a very successfully running program that discusses various issues faced by youth in Tamil Nadu, where she also gives her own experiences.

In addition to numerous other themes, the 2008 movie Welcome to Sajjanpur by Shyam Benegal explores the role of hijras in Indian society.

In the Malayalam movie Ardhanaari, released on 23 November 2012, director Santhosh Sowparnika tries to depict the life of a transgender. Manoj K Jayan, Thilakan, Sukumari and Maniyanpilla Raju perform leading roles.

Pakistan

The 1992 film Immaculate Conception [46] by Jamil Dehlavi is based upon the culture-clash between a western Jewish couple seeking fertility at a Karachi shrine known to be blessed by a Sufi fakir called Gulab Shah and the group of Pakistani eunuchs who guard it.

"Muraad" (which means Desire in English) but the English title was "Eunech's Mother", was an award winning biographical Telefilm drama made by Pakistan's television channel Indus TV and aired in 2003. The cast had countries top male television actors playing as "hijras"; Sohail Asghar, Nabeel, Qazi Wajid, Kamran Jilani. Produced & Directed by Kamran Qureshi, written by Zafar Meraj. It won both Best TeleFilm and Best Director award.[47][48] The story revolves round “Saima”, a trans woman, who adopts a helpless child ‘Muraad' and her relationship with him against the backdrop of her struggling through her entire life and her "desire" for her son, whom she has sent away to live at a hostel so she can earn a living as a dancer, after her son gets cross with her, due to teasing (both verbal and sexual) they have to face while dancing. This was the first time that influential male actors who came out to support "hijra" rights during interviews; noting that in Pakistani English at that time eunuch was the term to describe transgender person, and "khawaja sara" had not yet replaced what is now considered a derogatory term due to decades of heckling and name calling, "hijra".[49]

In 2004, once again Kamran Qureshi directs a trans drama, "Moorat", which translates as "effigy" in English, however the English title was "Eunech's Wedding". It was produced by famous actor and producer Humayun Saeed and Abdullah Kadwani with more than a dozen star-studded cast male and female cast members for a 26 episode long drama series.[50][51] It was nominated for Best Drama Serial, Abid Ali for Best Actor, and Maria Wasti for Best Actress at Lux Style Awards 2005.[47][52] The show was credited for making people really understand and feel the pain and abuse that khawa sara (hijra) constantly endure and make fun of the way they look or dress without getting to know them how they were naturally born this way. The story involves a young lady who is arranged to marry and it turns out her husband is a transgender person. The story unfolds trans community and their deprived and isolated world and yet portrays eloquently how they too are not far away from the human emotions and feelings and their world not much different than rest of the heterosexual community. Even though they are in plain sight, they are taboo subject and are not taken seriously which makes them suffer endlessly in silence wrapped in slurs. The 26 episode miniseries therefore touches on transgender abuse, women abuse, poverty, immorality of arranged marriages, and child abuse.

Bol (Urdu: بول meaning Speak), is a 2011 Urdu-language social drama Pakistani film. It concerns a patriarch father of the house who is a misogynist, domestic abuser, bigot, and a zealot man (Hakim) who forces religion on his family rather than strictly follow himself. The Muslim family facing financial difficulties due to father wanting a son so expects his wife to give herself to him whenever he chooses, with r without he connect who made her pregnant in order to for father's desire to have another son and his rejection of his existing transgendered child, male-assigned-at-birth daughter, Saifi. The father (Hakim) doesn't like Saifi since she identifies as a girl however Saifi is deeply loved by the rest of her family. As Saifi is groing up men want to take advantage of her, however her oldest sister intervenes and teaches Saifi about what kind of touching is inappropriate. As Saifi is groing older, she is not allowed to leave the house however she really finds her sister's dresses amusing and tries them out; showing how she isn't that way due to bad company, but because she is naturally born that way. However, a neighbour played by famous South Asian singer Atif Aslam who is in love with one of the sisters, gets Saifi a job at a place where they paint trucks, with the blessing of Saifi's sisters and mother. Safi dresses like a boy however other sensed her lack of self-esteem and therefore eventually gang-rape her. She is saved by another transgendered person, played by Almas Bobby (who in real life is a transgender person), finds her and takes her home. Hakim overhears Saifi telling her mother and Zainab what happened. Later on, when everybody is asleep, Hakim locks the room and suffocates his child for luring the men for the "shame" he would have to bear with his name if the story got out.[53]

Outside of South Asia

The novel Bombay Ice by Leslie Forbes features an important subplot involving the main character's investigation of the deaths of several hijra sex-workers.

The novel City of Djinns by William Dalrymple also features a chapter on hijras.

The novel A Son Of The Circus by John Irving features a plot-line involving hijras.

In the graphic novel Habibi by Craig Thompson, the protagonist, Zam, is adopted by a group of hijras.

In the 2009 Brazilian soap opera Caminho das Índias (Portuguese: "The way to India"), hijras are shown in some occasions, especially at weddings and other ceremonies where they are paid for their blessing.In the

TV comedy Outsourced (2011), a hijra is hired by Charlie as a stripper for Rajiv's "bachelor party", much to Rajiv's utter horror.

A short film, under the direction of Jim Roberts, is being made by Rock Star Productions in which the protagonist is portrayed as a hijra. This film is set to be released on May 1.[year needed] [citation needed]

Documentaries

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ "The Ties that Bind Transgendered Communities". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  2. ^ "Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Communities in India". Angloinfo; the Global Expat Network INDIA. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  3. ^ Sharma, Preeti (2012). "Historical Background and Legal Status of Third Gender in Indian Society" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ "" When we say transgender rights, we strongly mean Female-to-male transgender people's rights too"". Sahoodari. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  5. ^ a b "Awareness about sexually transmitted infections among Hijra sex workers of Rawalpindi/Islamabad" (PDF). Pakistan Journal of Public Health. 2012.
  6. ^ "A Second Look at Pakistan's Third Gender". Positive Impact Magazine. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  7. ^ "The most significant relationship in the hijra community is that of the guru (master, teacher) and chela (disciple)." Serena Nanda, "The hijras of India: Cultural and Individual Dimensions of an Institutionalized Third Gender Role", Journal of Homosexuality 11 (1986): 35–54.
  8. ^ "Hijras are organized into households with a hijra guru as head, into territories delimiting where each household can dance and demand money from merchants". L Cohen, "The Pleasures of Castration: the postoperative status of hijras, jankhas and academics", in Paul R. Abramson, Steven D. Pinkerton (eds), Sexual Nature, Sexual Culture, (University of Chicago Press, 1995).
  9. ^ "None of the hijra narratives I recorded supports the widespread belief in India that hijras recruit their membership by making successful claims on intersex infants. Instead, it appears that most hijras join the community in their youth, either out of a desire to more fully express their feminine gender identity, under the pressure of poverty, because of ill treatment by parents and peers for feminine behaviour, after a period of homosexual prostitution, or for a combination of these reasons." RB Towle, and LM Morgan, "Romancing the Transgender Native: Rethinking the Use of the 'Third Gender' Concept", in S. Stryker and S. Whittle (eds), Transgender Studies Reader, (Routledge, 2006), p. 116.
  10. ^ a b c Nanda, S. "Hijras: An Alternative Sex and Gender Role in India (in Herdt, G. (1996) Third Sex, Third Gender: Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History. Zone Books.)
  11. ^ "hjr (main meanings): a) to break with, leave, forsake, renounce, emigrate, flee" Lahzar Zanned, "Root formation and polysemic organization", in Mohammad T. Alhawary and Elabbas Benmamoun (eds), Perspectives on Arabic linguistics XVII-XVIII: papers from the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Annual Symposia on Arabic Linguistics, (John Benjamins, 2005), p. 97.
  12. ^ a b Serena Nanda, Neither Man nor Woman: The Hijras of India, (1999).
  13. ^ "Among thirty of my informants, only one appeared to have been born intersexed." Serena Nanda, "Deviant careers: the hijras of India", chapter 7 in Morris Freilich, Douglas Raybeck and Joel S. Savishinsky (eds), Deviance: anthropological perspectives, (Greenwood Publishing, 1991).
  14. ^ Anuja Agrawal, "Gendered Bodies: The Case of the 'Third Gender' in India", Contributions to Indian Sociology [new series] 31 (1997): 273–97.
  15. ^ Karim, Mohosinul (11 November 2013). "Hijras now a separate gender". Dhaka Tribune. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  16. ^ Bradford, Nicholas J. 1983. "Transgenderism and the Cult of Yellamma: Heat, Sex, and Sickness in South Indian Ritual." Journal of Anthropological Research 39 (3): 307–22.
  17. ^ Reddy, G., & Nanda, S. (2009). Hijras: An "Alternative" Sex/Gender in India. In C. B. Brettell, & C. F. Sargent, Gender in Cross-Cultural Perspective (pp. 275-282). Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson - Prentice Hall.
  18. ^ a b Naz Foundation International, Briefing Paper 3: Developing community-based sexual health services for males who have sex with males in South Asia. August 1999. Paper online (Microsoft Word file).
  19. ^ a b Towle, R.B. and Morgan, L.M. Romancing the Transgender Native: Rethinking the Use of the "Third Gender" Concept (in Stryker, S. and Whittle, S. (2006) Transgender Studies Reader. Routledge: New York, London)
  20. ^ Nanda, Serena. "Hijra and Sadhin". Constructing Sexualities. Ed. LaFont, S., New Jearsey: Pearson Education, 2003. Print.
  21. ^ See, for example, In Their Own Words: The Formulation of Sexual and Reproductive Health Behaviour Among Young Men in Bangladesh, Shivananda Khan, Sharful Islam Khan and Paula E. Hollerbach, for the Catalyst Consortium.
  22. ^ See, for example, various reports of Sonia Ajmeri's marriage. e.g. 'Our relationship is sacred', despardes.com
  23. ^ Ravaging the Vulnerable: Abuses Against Persons at High Risk of HIV Infection in Bangladesh, Human Rights Watch, August 2003. Report online.
    See also: Peoples Union of Civil Liberties (Karnataka) Report on Human Rights Violations Against the Transgender Community, released in September 2003. Reported in Being a Eunuch, By Siddarth Narrain, for Frontline, 14 October 2003.
  24. ^ 'Trans Realities: A Legal Needs Assessment of San Francisco's Transgender Communities', Shannon Minter and Christopher Daley [1]
  25. ^ "HIV risk in Karachi and Lahore, Pakistan: an emerging epidemic in injecting and commercial sex networks" (PDF). 2007. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  26. ^ "Living on the Extreme Margin: Social Exclusion of the Transgender Population (Hijra) in Bangladesh". 2009. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  27. ^ Associated Press (9 November 2006). "Indian eunuchs help collect taxes". CNN via Internet Archive. Archived from the original on 1 December 2006. Retrieved 23 December 2009.
  28. ^ "Indian transgender activist resists molest by police officer, gets beaten up". Gay Star News. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  29. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-22208601. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  30. ^ Pinfold, Corinne (26 February 2013). "Pakistan: First trans woman in general election says the community is 'more than dancers and beggars'". PinkNews. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  31. ^ "Politicians of the third gender: the "shemale" candidates of Pakistan". New Statesman.
  32. ^ Usmani, Basim. "Pakistan to register 'third sex' hijras". The Guardian.
  33. ^ Kama Sutra, Chapter IX, Of the Auparishtaka or Mouth Congress. Text online (Richard Burton translation).
  34. ^ Richard Burton's 1883 translation
  35. ^ Artola, George (1975). The Transvestite in Sanskrit Story and Drama. Annals of Oriental Research 25: 56–68.
  36. ^ Sweet, Michael J and Zwilling, Leonard (1993) The First Medicalization: The Taxonomy and Etiology of Queerness in Classical Indian Medicine. Journal of the History of Sexuality 3. p. 600
  37. ^ Preston, Laurence W. 1987. A Right to Exist: Eunuchs and the State in Nineteenth-Century India. Modern Asian Studies 21 (2): 371–87
  38. ^ Colonialism and Criminal Castes With Respect to Sex: Negotiating Hijra Identity in South India, by Gayatri Reddy. Published by University of Chicago Press, 2005. ISBN 0-226-70756-3. Page 26.
  39. ^ a b Venkat, Vidya (2008). "From the shadows". Frontline. 25 (4, 16–29 February). The Hindu Group.
  40. ^ "Many, if not most, translations of Valmiki's Ramayana do not contain this reference." Joseph T. Bockrath, "Bhartia Hijro Ka Dharma: The Code of India's Hijra", Legal Studies Forum 83 (2003).
  41. ^ a b Narrain, Siddharth (2003). "In a twilight world". Frontline. 20 (21, 11–24 October). The Hindu Group.
  42. ^ Nanda, S. "Hijra and Sadhin". Constructing Sexualities. Ed. LaFont, S., New Jearsey: Pearson Education, 2003. Print.
  43. ^ http://www.thehindu.com/features/metroplus/no-more-under-siege/article5247859.ece
  44. ^ IMDb entry
  45. ^ http://wogma.com/article/jogwa-societal-grime-with-aesthetic-beauty
  46. ^ IMDb entry
  47. ^ a b "Award and Nominations". Kamran Qureshi.
  48. ^ "TV Movie Eunuch's Motherhood - Muraad 2003".
  49. ^ YouTube title: Director Kamran Qureshi.
  50. ^ "Moorat". 7th Sky Entertainment.
  51. ^ YouTube title: Song of TV Drama Series "EUNUCH" (MOORAT).
  52. ^ YouTube title: Song of TV Drama Series "EUNUCH" (MOORAT).
  53. ^ "BOL: A review". DAWN. 7 April 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2013. {{cite news}}: |first= missing |last= (help)

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Basim Usmani. "Pakistan to register "third sex" hijras" The Guardian.
  • Jami, Humaira. "Condition and Status of Hijras (Transgender, Transvestites, etc.) in Pakistan." Country Report, Quaid-i-Azam University.
  • Kugle, Scott. Sufis & Saints' Bodies: Mysticism, Corporeality & Sacred Power in Islam. University of North Carolina Press, 2007.
  • Pamment, Claire. "Hijraism Jostling for a Third Space in Pakistani Politics," The Drama Review 54, no. 2 (2010): 29-48.