New Jersey Assembly passes Gay Marriage Bill, Governor to Veto it

2012
02.18

On Feb 16, the New Jersey Assembly passed a same-sex marriage bill  that would allow gay couples to marry . However, the bill faces fresh opposition from Governor Chris Christie, who has vowed to veto it. Earlier this week, the New Jersey State Senate had passed the bill with 24 to 16 votes and sent it to the Assembly for voting.

A similar move at legalising same-sex marriages two years earlier in New Jersey had failed when the supporters of the bill could not garner enough votes. However, advocates of the bill have been able to garner the support of 10 more legislators in the Senate this time, and this is seen as a huge win for gay rights in the state. On Thursday, after debating the bill for over 2 hours, the New Jersey Assembly too passed the bill with a 42-33 majority.

However, Governor Chris Christie has said that he will veto the bill and instead put it up for a referendum by people in November. “I’ve given them an alternative. Put it on the ballot and let the people decide,” The New York Times quoted him as saying.

In case the Governor vetoes the bill as expected, supporters of the bill have the option to garner two-thirds majority to override the veto. If signed into law, New Jersey will become the eight state in USA to allow same-sex marriage.

Project Bolo DVDs launched in Human Rights Film Fest

2012
02.04

India's human rights film festival

New Delhi: “This is the time in History when advocacy of Human Rights is most needed as personal rights are in danger of erosion the world over with the rise in conservatism and fundamentalism,” Max CLAUDET,  Counsellor for Culture and Cooperation, French Embassy of India,  said in New Delhi while inaugurating Flashpoint – the 2nd Human Rights Film Festival on 3rd Feb.

He said showcasing human values and basic rights was an important initiative and the European Union Countries and particularly France fully supported Human rights.

Feroze Gujral – former super model and eminent media personality said being a conservative society which is fast liberalizing, people in India go through a myriad of emotions in their day to day life while negotiating these contradictions. “It is important to make everyone aware of their rights through displays like the Flashpoint Film Festival,” she said. Ms Gujral is also Director of Philanthropic Art Foundation and works for many social causes.

She also released DVDs of Project Bolo – a collection of stories of Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender persons of India. Project Bolo documents individual profiles and reconstructs the unique history and progress of the Indian LGBT community from the early 70s. It is produced by Humsafar Trust, Mumbai.

Poet Hoshang Merchant, who is featured in the video shared how in the 60s and the 70s there were no role models for the community and he had to ‘invent’ what a gay person looks like and feels and then present it to the world.

Writer Parmesh Shahani said Project Bolo will be an important archive and comes at a time when the LGBT rights have acquired a new space and language in society.  “We need to continue to reflect for achieving our rights.”

Sridhar Rangayan, Festival Director said 16 films from seven nations will be shown at the festival in the next three days. “It is interesting to see how Human Rights are perceived in different parts of the world. What may be more acceptable as a basic human right in one country may be looked upon with anxiety in another. And an example of this is Surrogacy, which is finding acceptance in India but not so in many western countries,” he said.

The much acclaimed “Cotton for my Shroud” (Directed by Nandan Saxena and Kavita Bahl) and Miral, the celebrated film of Director Julian Schnabel were the major highlights of the screening yesterday.  The film which is a French production about the Israel-Palestine conflict stars Freida Pinto in the main lead.

The Flashpoint festival on February 4th will screen 6 films including the much talked about ‘Pink Saris’, sensitive and uplifting film ‘Budrus’ and ‘Mee Sindutai Sapkal’ directed by Ananth Mahadevan about an illiterate abandoned woman who provided shelter to thousands of orphans. A song about Anna Hazare’s fight against corruption.performed by music group Seventh Heaven would also be featured.

 

 

Human Rights, Now!

2012
02.02

Flashpoint Film Festival

Eminent media and fashion personality Feroze Gujral to inaugurate human rights film fest in New Delhi that opens the door for a range of human rights issues from violence, fundamentalism and corruption to gender discrimination and homophobia

 

New Delhi: Following on the highly successful and impactful first edition, the 2nd edition of FLASHPOINT Human Rights Film Festival will be held from February 3rd – 5th, 2011 at Alliance Française de Delhi.

The festival will be inaugurated by Feroze Gujral, eminent media and fashion personality and the director of the philanthropic art foundation Outset India, and Mr. Max Claudet, Cooperation And Cultural Counsellor, French Embassy on February 3rd morning at 10am at Alliance Française de Delhi.

This year the festival will screen 16 films that take a critical and empathetic look at several human rights issues – from religious fundamentalism, communal violence, political authoritarianism, war crimes, homophobia, surrogacy, migrant rehabilitation, women empowerment, corruption and poverty.

The films shine a harsh beam on human rights violations in, as diverse countries as, Kenya, Senegal, Columbia, Israel, Iraq, Kurdistan, Thailand, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Cameroon, USA and India. This year, for the first time, the festival screens six films that are set in India focusing on human rights issues and human right defenders – Firaaq, Mee Sindutai Sakpal, Cotton For My Shroud, Made In India, In Search Of My Home and Pink Saris.

Rangayan says, “The festival is an attempt to highlight issues and initiate a dialogue. The first step towards fighting human rights violation is creating awareness. Only when someone knows there is a problem, can one raise a voice and ignite change. Entry to the festival is free and there is no need for pre-registration. We want everyone to be able to see the films and participate in the discussions.”

FLASHPOINT Human Rights Film Festival is organized by Solaris Pictures in collaboration with Alliance Française de Delhi, Movies That Matter and Ramon Productions.

The 2nd FLASHPOINT Human Rights Film Festival screened also in Mumbai between December 8-10, 2011 and was inaugurated by eminent director Mahesh Bhatt and actress Tisca Chopra alongwith Consul General of France in Mumbai. Other celebrities who attended and participated in discussions were Nandita Das, Onir, Alyque Padamsee, Dolly Thakore, Mona Ambegoankar and Ananth Mahadevan.

The inauguration of the film festival on February 3rd will also feature launch of PROJECT BOLO in New Delhi. Project Bolo is the first ever comprehensive LGBT oral history project that records 20 LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) persons in four cities who open up in a candid manner to offer an inside view into their lives, views and accomplishments. These in-depth video interviews walk us through their lives – their growing up years, sexual explorations, coming out to family/friends/media, their romances and relationships, their fearless career paths and their pioneering accomplishments.

Feroze Gujral who will launch the Project Bolo DVDs in New Delhi says, “”Project Bolo is an important step in the history of the LBGT movement in India and I am proud to support it and release it officially in Delhi. We need to create an inclusive India for all its citizens, and this includes its gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender minorities. I have so many friends from this community and I have always felt angry that their voices are not heard enough. Project Bolo finally amplifies some of these voices, and shows, how, in their own ways, members of this community are not so different from the rest of us, in their lives, hopes and dreams.”

Several Project Bolo interviewees like Saleem Kidwai, Sunil Gupta, Parmesh Shahani, Aditya Bandopadhyay and Hoshang Merchant will also be present during the event.

“We need these voices to ring, loud and clear, across every platform to reach out to the social mainstream – to say we exist and that we lead productive lives. There is a general notion that gay, lesbian and transgender persons are only interested in sex, fashion, partying and drugs. People can’t imagine that they can also be successful doctors, lawyers, writers, filmmakers, historians, professors, businesswomen and corporate executives! Project Bolo will change that person and underline the fact that LGBT persons too are ‘useful’ members of the society!”, says Sridhar Rangayan, who has conceived and directed the project. Project Bolo is produced by The Humsafar Trust in association with Solaris Pictures and supported by UNDP.

Entry to the film festival is free. The full schedule and synopses of films playing at 2nd FLASHPOINT Human Rights Film Festival, can be found at www.flashpointfilmfestival.com

 

Mumbai witnesses Asia’s first gay flash mob

2012
01.24

Gay flash mob of mumbai at marine drive

As part of the pride week celebrations currently going on in Mumbai preceding the actual gay pride march in the city on 28th Jan, Mumbai today witnessed India’s first gay flash mob, which also happens to be Asia’s first gay flash mob. It was a pleasant surprise for many present at Marine Drive when a little after 6pm, more than 50 people started dancing to a medley of carefully selected Bollywood songs ‘Character Dheela’, ‘Sadda Haq’ and ‘Maa Da Ladla’.

Preparations for the first gay flash mob of Asia had been going around for a month with the participants practicing for it every weekend. Dev Kakkad, who is credited with choreographing Mumbai’s now famous flash mob at Chatrapati Shivaji Terminus railway station, also choreographed India’s first gay flash mob. However, publicity in the media about the flash mob beforehand meant that public at Marine Drive already had an inkling about it, thus taking away the surprise element of a flash mob. “It was an amazing experience to be a part of it,” an ecstatic Souvik Ghosh, who happened to be the only non-Mumbai person to be part of the mob, said. “It was a huge success except for the fact that the ambience of a flash mob was a little disappointing because people had already got a hint of it. But we could still pull it like a flash mob,” he added.

Gay flash mobs have emerged as a major source of protest in the west, where many political leaders who aired their homophobia were often confronted with flash mobs by LGBTs. Although flash mobs started in 2003 and have since been organized in various cities across the world, the phenomenon has only recently caught up with India when Mumbai yet again led other Indian cities and a successful flash mob was organized in the busy CST railway station. Given the comments by the Health Minister of India against homosexuality and the recent harassment of people attending the QAM (Queer Azadi March) pride fund-raiser party in Mumbai, the flash mob with its choice of songs made the perfect statement. With its grand success, all eyes would now be on the Queer Azadi March on 28th Jan.

London Gay Men’s Chorus Record Proud2Be Video

2012
01.19

The London Gay Men’s Chorus is Europe’s largest and best known gay choir. Founded in 1991 by a group of six gay men at Angel underground station, the choir now boasts over 230 members in total. The choir which is a registered charity, have sung and performed with Sir Elton John, The Human League, Sandi Toksvig, K. D. Lang, Damien Hirst and the Pet Shop Boys to name but a few. The ‘LGMC’, as they are known, have recorded a Proud2Be video to show the LGBTQ youth that there are people in the world like them who are proud to be who they are.
 

 
The online video campaign is part of a global organisation that was founded in June 2011 by gay identical twin brothers Matt and Jon Price. The Proud2Be project was set up to encourage and support the LGBTQ youth to be proud of who they are. “As children the overriding message we both received from our school and church, the media and society was that being gay was something to be ashamed of. We desire for the LGBTQ youth of today to be able to access a different message,” they say.

Proud2Be video of London Gay Men’s Chorus


 

Matt and John speaking about Proud2BeProject

Here is how you can help the Proud2BeProject! Whether you identify yourself as part of the LGBTQ community or you are a friend or supporter of the LGBTQ community, get involved by making your own Proud2Be Video. Anyone can do this; individuals, couples, groups and families. To find out more about the project and for details on how to make your own Proud2Be Video or to get involved in other ways, head to http://proud2beproject.org/.

A Positive Effect: Blog Contest Results

2011
12.27

In November, we held a month long AIDS Awareness drive, released posters on various social media sites to raise awareness on the issue; held a blogging contest and on 1st Dec- World AIDS Day- joined millions over twitter to spread out awareness and share facts about the disease.

The result of our blogging contest has been announced in the Nov-Dec issue. Thank you all for your participation. It was a tough call deciding the best three entries. We have refrained from giving them positions as each one of them conveys an important message and highlights different situations and problems that affect positive persons. Assigning them any ranks would have somewhat meant that one is better than the other and thus defeated the purpose of the contest.

The best three entries are as follows:

A Positive Effect by Sonam DemblaRadha was taking off the red ribbon from her saree when she looked into the mirror to travel back in time…. Sitting on the damp bed struggling to carefully remove the ribbon from her saree Radha was riveted by the shadow of a photo of her husband kept on the bedstand. One look at his cheerful innocent face weakened her heart and filled her eyes with tears… Read here.

A Positive Effect by Dharshan Das - Radha was taking off the red ribbon from her saree when she looked into the mirror to travel back in time…. It all came back to her, filling her mind like a heady draught of memories of things long gone but their vestiges stuck to the periphery of her mind like unwanted vagrants in a growing city… Read here

A Positive Effect by Dr. Himadri Roy – Aakash was taking off the red ribbon from his shirt when he looked into the mirror to travel back in time… He could see how after his fun-tastic college days he did get through IIMC for pursuing PG Diploma in Advertising and Public Relations. The girl friend, who was glued to him, always had to separate from him, as she got through her higher studies somewhere in the US. But before they parted for the last time Aakash had enjoyed a memorable session on the back seat of his car… Read here

 

 

CrowOutAIDS

2011
12.27

UNAIDS has launched a new project CrowdOutAIDS to harness the power ofsocial media and connect with young people to crowdsource a UNAIDS youthstrategy on HIV. We talk to Mikaela Hildebrand to find out more.

 

G:  What is CrowdOutAIDS?

MH: CrowdOutAIDS is a collaborative project to develop new ways for UNAIDS to work with young people in the AIDS response. It is the first time the UN is collaboratively developing an actionable strategy on HIV and young people using online technologies, and voluntary offline meet-ups around the world.

Through online tools and crowdsourcing technology, CrowdOutAIDS will help young people come together to crowdsource a UNAIDS youth strategy on HIV.

The aim is to rebuild UNAIDS’ work with young people from the ground up.

 

G: The focus of CrowdOutAIDS is youth. Why so?

MH: Young people account for 41% of all new HIV infections among adults globally, and about 5 million young people are living with HIV.

When young people have a firm place at the decision-making table able to influence policy and programme development from start to end, and mobilize for change on some of the sensitive issues that the response to HIV touches upon, we will see a more efficient response that meets the needs of young people. Young people are also early adopters of new technology and new modes of communication which can be leveraged in the repose to HIV.

 

G: The website says, “UNAIDS needs a new approach”. What’s been the current approach till now and what have been its shortcomings?

MH: 30 years into the HIV epidemic the climate is shifting. Our approach has focused on working with a ‘set’ constituency, important groups that have taken a lead to deliver on AIDS. We believe it is important in moving forwards to build bridges to establish new and strategic alliances with youth networks and organization who work in related areas to reach the ambitious goals UN members stats have committed to in the UN Political Declaration on HIV/AIDS adopted by the General Assembly, in June 2011.

New communications tools also allow for a new ways of collaborating, organizing, mobilizing young people across borders; we need to leverage these new tools for a better, more informed response to AIDS.

 

G:  How is CrowdOutAIDS reaching out to young people?

MH: CrowdOutAIDS uses social media tools like Facebook, Twitter and Renren to reach out to young people. We are also using email. In addition, we are working with youth networks on the ground that have many members in their organizations as well as contacting large youth networks that we have previously not engaged with.

 

G:  What is the UNAIDS Mandate? How do you plan to incorporate the views of so many people?

MH: UNAIDS, is an innovative partnership that leads and inspires the world in achieving universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support. UNAIDS fulfills its mission by:

  • Uniting the efforts of the United Nations system, civil society, national governments, the private sector, global institutions and people living with and most affected by HIV;
  • Speaking out in solidarity with the people most affected by HIV in defense of human dignity, human rights and gender equality;
  • Mobilizing political, technical, scientific and financial resources and holding ourselves and others accountable for results;
  • Empowering agents of change with strategic information and evidence to influence and ensure that resources are targeted where they deliver the greatest impact and bring about a prevention revolution; and
  • Supporting inclusive country leadership for sustainable responses that are integral to, and integrated with, national health and development efforts.

Crowdsourcing enables UNAIDS to reach a much broader constituency though an open and transparent process, in line with the rights of young people to participate in decision-making processes that affect them.

Each of the 8 online Open Forums is staffed with a community mobilizer. Every week the community mobilizer produces a short summary report that is posted on the CrowdOutAIDS blog for community review. Based on the discussions in the Open Forums a survey will be developed where the key issues raised are ranked by the community to decide what should be included in the final document.

 

Based on these key priorities UNAIDS will launch an application that allows participants to submit concrete actionable ideas to be included in the strategy that corresponds to the key issues prioritized by the community. The best ideas will be voted on through the “wisdom of the crowd.”

In the final phase, a Wikipedia-like platform will be launched where elected representatives from the 8 regional forums will collaboratively write up the strategy document, live. The CrowdOutAIDS community will be able follow the drafting process in real time and comment via a chat function.

The output document, shaped as an action plan, should be in place by mid-January. UNAIDS has committed to work with young people in the AIDS response to implement this action plan with the caveat that it needs to be within the mandate of the organization.

 

G: How does one partner with CrowdOutAIDS?

MH: There are several ways to partner with CrowdOutAIDS: By engaging and spreading the word about the 8 online forums. By hosting an offline CrowdOutAIDS Open Forum. As a media representative, you can also join our network of CrowdOutAIDS bloggers. If you are interested in partnering with CrowdOutAIDS  write an email to ngl@unaids.org

 

G:  Are there any offline activities planned as well?

MH: Yes, we are mobilizing a network of volunteers who can self-organize offline CrowdOutAIDS Open Forums. The purpose of these meetings is to ensure that young people who live in areas where there is low internet penetration have an opportunity to provide input to the process. However, all young people no matter where they live, are more than welcome to volunteer and take the online conversation offline and host a forum.

 

G: How has been the response till now?

MH: The response so far has been great with over 2500 young people signing up. Discussions are ongoing in all the regions of the world, and we are growing by the day. This is the first time the UN has used online tools for policy/strategy development, and we are excited to see how this unfolds over the next few weeks as the community grows.

 

A Positive Effect

2011
12.27

-Sonam Dembla

Radha was taking off the red ribbon from her saree when she looked into the mirror to travel back in time…. Sitting on the damp bed struggling to carefully remove the ribbon from her saree Radha was riveted by the shadow of a photo of her husband kept on the bedstand. One look at his cheerful innocent face weakened her heart and filled her eyes with tears.

Her flail fingers ran through the pages of her marriage album. Tantalized by the togetherness and harmony portrayed in the picture. Within seconds her mind was in clusters- piles of abstract memories disjointed the neurotransmitters and suppressed numbness all over again. Passage of a few weeks and then, it is was his 3rd death anniversary and ironically their 8th anniversary of marital bliss.

Amit and Radha had been together since childhood and life was smooth sailing for  both of them. Never had they ever expected that something as tiny as a needle would tear apart their lives rendering them unrepairable forever. Running into the 2nd year of their marriage Amit met a near to death accident while back from work. Two months to recovery and joy had once again bounced back into their lives. They were expecting their 1st child but soon their happiness was curtailed with the discovery that both of them were HIV positive and the unborn child too bore the chances positively.

The couple almost 5 months into the family way was heartbroken to hear the news and asked their parents and extended family for taking the responsibility of the unborn child after their demise. But to their dismay, nobody accepted their plea .Burdened with grief, after living a life of isolation and disgrace for 2 years Amit resorted to committing suicide by jumping from their 7th floor apartment along with their 5 month old son.

Brought up in a society where families teach their children virtues of unconditional love, Radha always considered living in isolation and killing oneself as a cowardly phenomenon. But living with this disease made her realize that surprisingly and strangely in such cases, the cowardice was not on part of the victims but on the part of their families and society they lived in. The victims of this virus once were brave, but like the virus even their own family sucks out all the traces of bravery in them.

The only cure to this social evil is to try and direct ourselves and those around us to fight against this disease and not against the victims of it and work towards giving them a more meaningful, purpose filled and respect filled life.

Like a child who was almost suffocated to death by his mom’s umbilical cord still grows up loving his mother, in the same way a virus in the blood stream of our loved one cannot overpower the relationship we share with them .We just need to see the whole issue in a positive light rather than falling in  vicious pool of rumors the disease is surrounded with.

 

 

A Positive Effect

2011
12.26

-Dharshan Das

Radha was taking off the red ribbon from her saree when she looked into the mirror to travel back in time….

It all came back to her, filling her mind like a heady draught of memories of things long gone but their vestiges stuck to the periphery of her mind like unwanted vagrants in a growing city.

4th,July,1993:

It was perhaps the worst day of her life or so it seemed to her then (she could not fathom that there was worse to come). In a fit of anger, which sprung forth from all the years of holding it in, having to hold it within her, she blurted out to her parents that she wanted to be a woman. Radha was not born Radha but as Ramana. She went through all the loneliness and humiliation that are a part of being “different”.

Now that she had confessed out of this unforeseen madness, there was no going back but the look on her parents’ faces made her wish she could!

She was unceremoniously thrown out into the street after all their attempts at convincing her that it was just a phase and that it could all be cured by a professional failed. Shaken, hurt, humiliated and angry at the fact that the people who knew her for so long could not even understand her, she wandered the streets of Bangalore knowing not what awaited her. She wished to die but something in her told her how cowardly that would be! She had to show the world (and herself) that she is capable of achieving anything in the world. These thoughts seemed to give her strength but she hoped it would not drown in the deluge of apathy that she could sense churning up within her mind.

 

12th,July,1993:

After living a week on the streets, sleeping on the footpaths and eating morsels from the little money she had, Radha came across the only people whom she felt could understand her, for they too must have gone through all the various vagaries of being “different”. They did not seem all that sad though, dancing as if nobody mattered.

The Hijras had gathered for some wedding that was taking place and they delighted (or perhaps frightened) the crowds into a frenzy. Radha walked upto them, they did not seem to notice. She waited till the dancing abated and spoke to the one who seemed to be their leader. She later came to know it was Rani Di. Rani looked down with her heavily kajal-lined eyes after Radha had narrated her story, a look of compassion and understanding. Her eyes were moist.

 

18th,February,1998:

Radha was excited. She was finally to be purged of her maleness physically. She never had any maleness within her. The operation had cost 3000 rupees but Rani Di and the other girls pitched in to pay the amount. When Radha went with Rani to the place where her operation was to take place, she could not help but notice that the room was not well maintained. She had also heard of others dying during castration. Her fears seemed to flee like the darkness from sunlight, by the warm and firm touch of  Rani. She went ahead with her operation. And she became herself, completely.

 

3rd,March, 1998:

Her colony had been raided by the police suspecting them of prostitution. This had lead to an altercation between Rani Di and the officers and Rani along with few other girls had been jailed for the night. When they returned they spoke of such horrid and disgusting things that it shook Radha to her core. They spoke of being molested by the very people who had arrested them for prostitution. They had been locked up with common criminals, among men. This was not only denigrating but also made them prone to the depraved acts of the other inmates.

Radha could not find Rani Di anywhere. She asked people where she was and they said that Rani had been locked in a separate cell even though she had asked to be in the same cell as the others.

Rani returned by the evening but spoke very little, she wasn’t the loud, joyous soul she was before. Something seemed amiss.

 

26th,January,2000:

Rani Di had contacted an NGO working for the welfare of the Hijras. The workers spoke about the various causes of AIDS and others STDs and also they helped the women of the colony get jobs. Radha, being among the few who could converse in passable English, took up a job with the NGO as a spokesperson. She knew Rani Di had suggested her name to the head of the NGO, though she couldn’t quite comprehend why Rani herself had not been as proactive with the workings of the organization. She also noticed that Rani Di was not herself any more, she was but a pale ghost of the vibrant and inscrutable matron of the colony.

Radha saw how thin Rani had grown. She seemed to be sick all the time these days, but being the woman that she was, Rani never showed it to the other girls, not that they did not notice though.

 

6th,August,2000:

The colony was hit by a torrent of tears. Rani Di had died after a severe bout of pneumonia. Radha knew pneumonia could not kill a person and that even after being given proper treatment with help of the NGO, Rani had not survived meant only one thing.

It had always been in the back of her mind, but Radha never heeded her instinct about it. Now when Rani had gone, it all fell into place. Radha knew what happened that day when Rani and the others were jailed. Radha realized why Rani had weakened and dramatically reduced to half the person that she had been.

Radha understood why Rani had grown quite, and why she had not taken a better interest in the NGO’s activities, even though it was her who had contacted them in the first place.

Radha just realized she had lost the person who had taken care of her, the mother who had helped her be born again, the sister who held her hand when she needed most and perhaps the only person who truly believed in her. Radha had lost her Rani to AIDS.

 

 

 

A Positive Effect

2011
12.26

- Dr. Himadri Roy

Aakash was taking off the red ribbon from his shirt when he looked into the mirror to travel back in time…

He could see how after his fun-tastic college days he did get through IIMC for pursuing PG Diploma in Advertising and Public Relations. The girl friend, who was glued to him, always had to separate from him, as she got through her higher studies somewhere in the US. But before they parted for the last time Aakash had enjoyed a memorable session on the back seat of his car. As he took out some of the condom packets and kept near the shelf of the mirror. He laughs and recalls how his father scolded him the next day when he discovered the used condom left on the foot matt of the back seat.

As he laughs aloud for a while, then he looks at his deep, painful eyes. Today he participates in every occasion whenever awareness programmes for HIV/AIDS take place in the city. Today, he joined the rally organized by the UNAIDS and saw people around. One of the on-looker comes to him and smiles, he was mot more then 16 or 17, the thin line of moustache was still coming upon his face. He puts his hand forward and says, “Hi! Is this rally only for those HIV+ people or anyone can participate?”

 

Aakash smiles brightly, “Yes, anyone can join it! Its just an awareness rally.”

They started walking together and discussing the basic information about HIV+ people. Aakash kept on answering all the queries of the teenager. For a while there was no conversation between them, the guy holds Aakash’s right hand and puts his fingers into the gaps, Aakash halts and stares at him. He asks, “What happened?”

He grins broadly displaying his haphazardly arranged disproportionate teeth. With lots of courage in his eyes, he puts a question forward, “Are you also a HIV+?”

Aakash gives a painful smile, nods his head with affirmation.

“I know it would be too personal to ask but, I am very curious to know how did all this happen!” his grin extends further.

“Oh, yes you have asked something very personal but as you are a young adolescent, I don’t mind sharing my experience with you.”

The teenager hugs him without any thought, “You know I lost my best friend few months back, he was also suffering from the same, but as he was a drug addict, I presume he acquired the disease from it!”

Aakash could feel the sorrow, as his tear drops dripped upon his shoulders from his thin eyes. One of the participants with the red ribbon on a white tee, smiled at Aakash and said, “Com’on, lets walk little fatser!”

Aakash nods his head and replies, “You guys move ahead, I’ll join you!”

The young leaves the hug after sometime, Aakash holds his hand and says, “Lets sit there by the road. By the way, I’m Aakash and you!”

Wiping his tears with the back of his palms, he smiles, and answers, “I’m Lalit. I study in the first year in DU.”

“Ok, I presume you joined the rally because of your friend.”

Rohit nods his head. They sit down on the side of the road, upon the pedestrian. Throngs of people participated in the rally were walking with red ribbons pinned upon their chests. Hundreds of them stood on the pedestrian to watch what was all about the rally. Aakash stares at the footsteps that passed by with dust strolling behind them.

“Yeah, tell me!” Lalit enquires with a soft tone.

Aakash returns back to reality, “Oh yes, it all began five years back…”

He heaves out heavily and continues, “This damn jam, horrible! Whenever it rains the Tilak Pul gets awful”, I banged my fist on the driving-wheel with angst. After struggling through the jam for about an hour I came out to a free road in the Lutyen’s Zone. The cellphone rang. I parked the car on the side of Safdarjung Road. Answered the call,

“Hello! Oh Pranay! Yes tell what has happened now? Did the boss screamed again?”

After the conversation with the colleague, I recalled the horrible meeting we had in the board room this late evening, where the reasons for the project to slip out of our hands went to our rival organization was discussed in details, and I was held responsible.

“I am tired now!” The pressure of working in this German MNC, the responsibility of the aged parents –no time for my social life, no time for friends, no time even for my parents.

“Oh god, when will I get free from all these?” probably the answer would come but the honking of a car at my car’s back made me realize I am on road on a rainy late evening.

I started driving again and turned on the Teen Murti round-about. I saw few bus commuters standing on the bus-stop. The downpour increased with every second passing by, it in fact did not allow me to visualize anyone on the bus-stop. But translucently I could see someone asking for lift. I halted my car. The poor guy drenched completely, came running towards my car. I cordially got the driver’s window down, as he came close I could make out he was a young guy, age of about 23-24, completely drenched. I stared at his sparkling eyes, the lids dripping and continuously meandering rain through his strays of hairs. He lips opened with tenderness and gently with water droplets on it, enquired if I was going on his way, and requested very politely, “Sir, please can you drop me till Ring Road if you don’t mind?”

His words reverberated into my ears and I forgot all my tensions of the day.

“Sure!” I smiled and opened the side door and let him hop in. All my angst of life vanished away after having a close look of the guy sitting next to me. I could not find any reasons for such a relaxed feeling.

After taking his seat beside me, he smiled with a relief, and said, “Thanks a lot. You know I have been waiting for about one and half an hour for the bus. I don’t have any words to return my gratitude.”

I smiled back and said, “So your bus ditched you badly and the rain too.”

I started my car and moved ahead.

We were quite for sometime. I didn’t know what to ask how to begin a conversation, except foolishly smiling unnecessarily. His soft voice brought me to senses, I heard him say, “My name is Karan, and I am a research scholar in JNU. I had come to the Teen Murti Library for my thesis work.”

“Oh you are a scholar! I thought you are a college guy. By the way I am Aakash and I work with the advertising firm, McKinsey & Company as a Production assistant.”

“Wow! You are an ad-man, great! Where do you stay? I stay at a rented apartment in R K Puram Sector 12.”

Before I could answer his innocent query, we reached the destination where he will get-off the car. I felt a bit restless, I don’t know the reason. I turned towards him and saw his wet, long hairs falling upon his fair face. I drooled on the two buttons of his drenched plain, white shirt that were kept open, may be to have a glimpse of his hairless chest. I said with impatience, “Can I drop you till your place?”

He slowly dragged the stray of his wet hairs from his face back to its position and turned towards me and answered hesitantly, “But…”

“But what?”

“Won’t you get late for your home? It’s already 10:30.”

His words made me realize he was not only good-looking physically but also from his deep heart. “I usually return home late so my parents are used to my habit of late-coming. You know we ad world people have no time returning home.”

“Even then…”

I could see a resistance at his hesitation. I said with a demanding voice, “Ok! If you have a problem then I won’t compel.”

“No Sir, but I have a problem. I stay alone. I don’t know how I will I return my gratitude. Except a cup of coffee, I won’t be able to offer you anything!”

I felt touched by his words. I smiled and said, “Great! This rain and coffee made from your effort. What a great combination.”

He felt happy by my response and said, “Ok then! Let’s go!”

I drove the car faster and with more ease. My mind got free of all the tensions of my office, my parents and social life. I forgot everything. I had never behaved in this fashion ever. I don’t know why I was getting close to a man of that age. I couldn’t find any reason. I have never been attracted towards my own sex in this way, that too to a stranger, although there are quite handsome guys in my office. They are much better looking than him, but somehow his innocence and serenity in behavior won my heart at that moment.

I came back from my reverie with his soft voice resonating, “Sir! Sir! Sir! You have crossed the lane to my house.”

“Oh shit! I am so sorry!”

And I followed his instructions which led us to a colony with four-storeyed houses. As we came out of the car, we both got drenched by the heavy downpour.

He opened the lock and invited me inside his home. I entered a one-room set of beauty. Very cleanly decked up –the yellow printed bed sheet neatly put up, the side table has a number of books on it, the chair has a few papers dumped on it, and the lime curtains matched the bed sheet.  There was no furniture except these few. He said with etiquette, “Sir, please sit down. I will get the coffee made within five minutes.”

He removed a curtain and entered another room, presumably his kitchen. As he went inside, he said with a loud voice, “Please make yourself comfortable!”

Without thinking twice, I sat down upon the clean single bed with my drenched clothes. I touched the bed sheet very caressingly as if to feel something. I grinned, ‘Poor guy. Must be struggling a lot for his livelihood.’

He comes back with a tray and two cups of coffee on it. Keeping the tray upon the bed, he also sat in front of me with drenched clothes, and said, “Sir your coffee.”

I got pissed off with his address. I said, “In one condition! You have to call me by my name.”

“Aakash, will you have the coffee now?”, he said with a beauty of innocence in his voice.

I picked up the cup, and said him, “You got drenched. Change otherwise you will fall sick.”

“But you are also drenched.”

“What can I do?”

“If you want you can at least dry your hairs, if changing in a stranger’s room is against your principle.”

“Please, don’t call me a stranger now, we know each other by name at least.”

He got up and unbuttoned his shirt, he said, ‘Then what am I?”

I could not hold seeing his smooth chest, I went towards him, held him close to myself, keeping my chin upon his shoulder and said, “I don’t know why, but I think I started liking you.”

Reciprocating my feelings, holding me closer, as if wanted to get lost in my body, and said, “Feel me then.”

I was not prepared for what followed, I had never imagined in my whole life. After my college days with one of my junior girls, this was my first experience with my own sex. But the feeling it left in me was enchanting and satisfying.

I came back home, feeling enthralled, as if I have achieved a great remedy to my stressed life.

Next Friday, I again visited his home, but I was shocked when I came to know from the next-door neighbor that he has left for his hometown for good. Within a span of six months, I forgot him completely. And my remedy could never been achieved again. I felt I was made to suffer the tensions and stresses of this busy metropolitan life. I got an opportunity to visit our head office in Chicago. Before all the formal clearances for the visa, I was told to get my medical checkup done as a technical formality. I visited the appointed doctor and got my tests done.

Today was the day to collect my reports.  I was very happy that I am going somewhere that has always been a dream. I visited the doctor, smiled at him, he looked at me with suspicious eyes of abhorrence, threw the report in front of me, and said with hatred in his voice, “There you are!”

I couldn’t fathom the reason for his reactions. I came out of the doctor’s clinic and sat down on the wheel, still trying to delve the reason for his loathing reaction. I opened the sealed envelope, as I unfolded the sheets, my jaw dropped with shock and hopelessness. Tears twinkled in the corner of my eyes, I could see my dream collapsing. I held the papers in my hand and could visualize my destroyed and ruined world. I bit the lower lips as strong as I could and try to divert the excruciating emotional pain to a physical one. I couldn’t accept that I am an HIV+.

Tears roll down his eyes, Lalit stares at his braod bulging eyes, “Then?”

“Then what! I lost my job, my father expired when this news reached him. My mom also couldn’t bear the harsh taunts of the society, she followed her husband after three months! But with the help of my handful well-wishers, I managed to survive, fighting with healthy lifestyle and see,” with red bulging eyes, Aakash looks at Lalit, “Still I’m surviving!” Lalit holds his palms and says, “May god give you longer life!”

“Thanks, but dear,” holding his cheek, advices, “Never dare to have unprotected sex with anybody!”

As the tears fall upon his naked folded arms, he notices that he was lost inside himself, in the heinous past. Lalit’s innocent face emerges upon the mirror, Aakash tries to touch it and with pathos utters, “God please protect such innocent souls!”