How do people live in a country that for more than a hundred years has prohibited them by law to be themselves, to love who they want and to dress how they want? We travelled to India to meet people from the LGBTIQ community, to get to know them and to listen to them.
What did we learn? India is a country of contrasts. India has indeed long been considered the home of the art of love, of the Kama Sutra, the oldest erotic guide in the world, of gods with several sexes. The largest democracy in the world. However, India is also a place of oppression, where true love seems to exist only in Bollywood movies and where talking about sexuality has been taboo since the rule of prudish British imperialists in the 19th century. Until the end of 2018, a single paragraph of India’s penal code, Section 377, marked homosexual acts out as a criminal offence.
For over 150 years, “Section 377” has been part of the Indian Penal Code. The section was introduced during British colonial rule in India in 1861, and established “carnal intercourse against the order of nature” as a crime punishable by law. Homosexual acts have been criminalised for a long time since. In 2018, the Supreme Court ruled that use of the section to victimise gays and lesbians was unconstitutional. It was thereby repealed.
We visited them with the hope of better understanding this country and its contrasts. We didn’t expect the elimination of one paragraph to change the mindset of 1.3 billion people. However, it wasn’t until we spent time in Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata and New Delhi that we came to understand how frequently violent assaults still occur, or how it must feel to have received official permission to love whomever and however you want and yet still have to hide this from your own family.
The purpose of “377. Inside India’s Queer Community” is to convey these insights to those who cannot experience this with their own eyes. Through this project, we want to give a voice and a face to those who are forced to hide every day. We have set out to tell the stories of those who are part of India’s LGBTIQ community – who trusted us to give us a glimpse of their true lives, thoughts and feelings.
How do people live in a country that for more than a hundred years has prohibited them by law to be themselves, to love who they want and to dress how they want? We travelled to India to meet people from the LGBTIQ community, to get to know them and to listen to them.
What did we learn? India is a country of contrasts. India has indeed long been considered the home of the art of love, of the Kama Sutra, the oldest erotic guide in the world, of gods with several sexes. The largest democracy in the world. However, India is also a place of oppression, where true love seems to exist only in Bollywood movies and where talking about sexuality has been taboo since the rule of prudish British imperialists in the 19th century. Until the end of 2018, a single paragraph of India’s penal code, Section 377, marked homosexual acts out as a criminal offence.
For over 150 years, “Section 377” has been part of the Indian Penal Code. The section was introduced during British colonial rule in India in 1861, and established “carnal intercourse against the order of nature” as a crime punishable by law. Homosexual acts have been criminalised for a long time since. In 2018, the Supreme Court ruled that use of the section to victimise gays and lesbians was unconstitutional. It was thereby repealed.
We visited them with the hope of better understanding this country and its contrasts. We didn’t expect the elimination of one paragraph to change the mindset of 1.3 billion people. However, it wasn’t until we spent time in Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata and New Delhi that we came to understand how frequently violent assaults still occur, or how it must feel to have received official permission to love whomever and however you want and yet still have to hide this from your own family.
The purpose of “377. Inside India’s Queer Community” is to convey these insights to those who cannot experience this with their own eyes. Through this project, we want to give a voice and a face to those who are forced to hide every day. We have set out to tell the stories of those who are part of India’s LGBTIQ community – who trusted us to give us a glimpse of their true lives, thoughts and feelings.
The purpose of “377. Inside India’s Queer Community” is to convey these insights to those who cannot experience this with their own eyes. Through this project, we want to give a voice and a face to those who are forced to hide every day. We have set out to tell the stories of those who are part of India’s LGBTIQ community – who trusted us to give us a glimpse of their true lives, thoughts and feelings.