This is heartwarming in its own way. Homophobia is doubtless equally entrenched among India’s Hindu and Muslim fundamentalists. Heaven forfend the fundis should stop blowing each other up long enough to realize how they are united by their mutual irrational prejudices. We say good for the prince for sticking it to those fools. From Gujarat’s GG2 News, July 8:
An Indian prince has been disowned by his family after he publicly announced he was gay in a country where homosexuality is outlawed by a 145-year-old law.
Prince Manvendra Singh Gohil, who belongs to one of the country`s richest royal families that ruled the former Rajpipla principality in the western state of Gujarat, has been disowned for “activities unacceptable to the society”, one disinheritance notice placed by his parents in a newspaper said.
Last month, his parents issued notices in a Gujarati language daily withdrawing his right to the family property.
‘Henceforth, no one must refer to my name as mother of Manvendra,’ one notice signed by his mother said. ‘If any individual or organisation dares to do so, it will invite contempt proceedings.’
But Manvendra Singh Gohil, 40, who announced he was gay this year, says he has found happiness among Gujarat`s gay community and is not interested in his inheritance.
‘I could not have lived a lie forever,’ he told yesterday.
‘I will not stake my claim to the property. I have found a family in the (gay) community and am happy working for the community,’ said Manvendra Singh Gohil, who runs an NGO working on HIV/AIDS among homosexuals.
‘As an activist, I thought it right to come out of the closet first. Otherwise, it would have been living a lie.’
Homosexuality is banned in India and punishable by up to 10 years in jail, but gay activists are trying to lift the veil of secrecy over the community in a country where public hugging or kissing even among heterosexuals invites angry stares, lewd comments and even beatings.
Gay support groups say the anti-homosexuality law – framed by British colonial rulers in 1861- must be scrapped for an effective fight against HIV/AIDS because many homosexuals refuse to come out in the open fearing harassment by authorities.
See our last post on India.