Kommal Publishing (pty) Ltd

Released on: January 14, 2008, 3:05 am

Press Release Author: Homosexuality in Indian Society by SUTRA Magazine

Industry: Media

Press Release Summary: Being Indian; be it in India, South Africa, or anywhere else
in the world; our roots are grounded in conservative layers of impermeable
teachings. We are in the 21st century and even so, our traditionalist principals and
values remain. This is a strong point in our culture, but also a weakness. It is
important to note that principals should remain steadfast only if they are
commendable and impartial.

Press Release Body:

Homosexuality in Indian Society

SUTRA looks back at the life of (and recognizes) the first and, to date most
prominent gay activist in India.

Ashok Row Kavi was born on 1 June 1947, in Mumbai. He was educated in Mumbai's
"Bombay Scottish High School", and then moved on to Bombay University where he
achieved his Honors in Chemistry.

He later achieved a diploma in Theology from the Ramakrishna Math, at which stage he
trained to be a monk. During this period he realized his homosexuality and had come
to accept it. Ashok came out in 1868, when he did an interview in Savvy magazine.

SUTRA looks at an extract from an interview with Ashok Row Kavi, and Perry Brass,
author of How to Survive Your Own Gay Life:

Can you tell us something about yourself? How did you end up being virtually the
only openly gay man in India to speak out on the HIV issue there?
Ashok Row Kavi: "I was born in Bombay on June 1st, 1947, a premature baby not
expected to live. Amma and Anna (Mom and Dad) were Brahmin refugees fleeing poverty
in South India. Anna finally became a leading light in Bollywood (India\'s Hollywood)
and a founding member of the Indian Motion Pictures\' Producers\' Association.

I was educated in Mumbai\'s elite Bombay Scottish High School from whose Secondary
School I graduated. I got an Honours in Chemistry from Bombay University after two
years doing textile engineering at the prestigious Victoria Jubilee Technical
Institute (VJTI) in Bombay.

I did my diploma in religion and comparative theology from the Ramakrishna Math
where I trained to be a monk. I also discovered my gay nature there and was given
sensible counseling for it by the monks. \"Accept it as natural. Whatever occurs in
nature is natural though it may not be common,\" advised my counselor, Swami
Harshananda.

I returned from the monastery to do a post graduate in Journalism while working as a
trainee in the Free Press Journal, and finally joined the \"Indian Express\" chain of
newspapers in Bombay. I started India\'s first Playboy clone, Debonair, with my
English friend Anthony Van Braband in 1971.

I left the Express to start India\'s first morning tabloid, The Daily in 1981, left
that to become city editor of my home ground newspaper, Free Press Journal. I then
became bureau chief of India\'s newsweekly, The Week. There I came out, creating a
ruckus in the conservative Christian management.

I quit journalism in 1990, after attending the Fifth International AIDS Conference
in 1989 at Montreal, where I was aghast to see American gay men fighting for their
very lives to get funding to fight AIDS.

I had come out openly as a gay man in 1986 (while at The Week), when I did an
interview in Savvy, one of India\'s most controversial feminist magazines, explaining
what \"gay\" really meant. It was not only a first but started a furor because of the
plain speaking I did about the numbers [of Indian men] involved...

Before that I used to review books on homosexuality, and thus gave a good inkling that

I was queer from the insights I had into the homosexual world in India. Coming out
was a natural defense mechanism, but I now wonder. So many people have forgotten my
long innings in journalism, human rights and my reportage in such famous cases like
the Bhopal Gas Tragedy, where I was one of the first journalists to get in while
thousands were dying.

I\'ve become just a \"gay activist,\" which is a very uni-dimensional look at my life.
I have interests in religion, social biology, sexuality, science and even astronomy.


I have reported developments in India\'s atomic energy establishment, the speeches of
Indira Gandhi and her downfall, done court reporting, reported death and disaster on
a huge scale. I am not just a gay activist: I am India spanning 50 years of her
5,000 year old civilization. A sliver of it, but a good representative one, no
doubt."


Web Site: http://www.sutramagazine.net

Contact Details: Yash Bridgmohan
Kommal Publishing (pty) Ltd.
SUTRA MAGAZINE
www.sutramagazine.net
yash@sutramagazine.net

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