Foreign front: Alone no more
The Obama administration recently received a lot of criticism after it issued guidelines to schools to allow transgender students to use bathrooms matching their gender identity, irrespective of what’s on their birth certificate.
This global dilemma was highlighted at the Kashish Mumbai International Queer Film festival. With 182 films from 53 countries, including 27 films from India, the event was spread across five days. With 41 films competing for awards like the Best Narrative Feature Film, Best Documentary Short Film, Best International Narrative Short Film, Best Indian Narrative Short Film, the Riyad Wadia Award for Best Emerging Indian Film-maker and the Best Performance in a Lead Role, it was a gala time for film buffs.
The festival was inaugurated by celebrated English actor Sir Ian McKellen (Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit trilogies), more famously known for his work in theatre way back in 1988. Talking at the 7th Kashish Film Festival, which this year had the theme 7 Shades of Love, he said, “It seems to me that India is at a crossroads. You have to decide whether you are going to be stuck in the colonial past or enter the modern world. Whatever our sexuality, whatever our taste, we all must be treated equally. That is the world Nelson Mandela fought for and that is the future, I believe Mahatma Gandhi dreamt of seeing!”
Alisha, a Peshawar-based transgender activist who was shot at, died recently due to delay in treatment. But Pakistan isn’t the only country that holds bias against the transgender community. Even in the US, there is a heated ongoing national debate over transgender rights in schools and public life
His statement actually set the tone for the only LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) film festival held in India, and the biggest one in South Asia. Whatever apprehensions and aversion the general public has about the LGBT community is set aside after one watches Indian films (many of them National and other award-winning films) like Nanu Avanalla, Avalu (I am not He, but She) (Kannada), Daaravtha (Marathi), Manam (Tamil), Walking the Walk (Telugu), Any Other Day (Hindi/Marathi) and international ventures Anjali (Nepali), Beautiful Something, Daddy, How to Win Checkers (Every time), Two Girls Descending the Stairs, Carol and many others.