Thursday, December 4, 2008

The Final Note

So this being my final entry for this topic I felt that I should look back over all of my blogs and see what my final feelings and thoughts are about this topic. And as it turns out, I feel the same I did when I began. I still think that Hijras are people just like anyone else, although they have the power to bless and curse, which at least I don’t. But I also understand now that they feel like becoming a Hijra is the only way for them to fully enjoy who they are. As I think about it now, it seems similar to a diet. People who dislike or are not happy being overweight diet to become happier. Instead of dieting the Hijras become a Hijra by getting the surgery and living with the Hijras. This isn’t who they chose to be, it is who they were born as. We don’t get to change who we are born as mentally. Physically there are so many plastic surgery and diet options that it has become simple to lose 200 pounds or change from a male to a female. The Hijras are men born with the mentality and soul of a woman, but sometimes the genitalia of a man, or with disfigured genitalia. Instead of being completely shunned, there is a place for the Hijras in the Indian society, even if once in this society they are shunned.

The Hijras have become fascinating people for me, not only because of the surgery they go through, but because they go to such lengths to be happy as who they are. Because they leave their families and so much behind, they have almost become people that I admire. I would never be able to give up all that they do just to be happy. They are strong people who should be admired for their strength and the blessings they provide. I understand their leaving their families to be happy, and even though it is still not a practice that I personally would engage in, I feel like some of it, the surgery, is here in the United States and that the transgender people here don’t get enough credit either for the lengths they go to in order to be happy. Hopefully in the future Hijras will gain all the rights that other Indians have, because they too are Indians who just want to live in their country peacefully.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Sex with Men for Money

Prostitution, as I already described, is very rampant in the Hijra culture because it is one of the only ways the Hijras are able to make a decent amount of money. The only problem with the Hijras being prostitutes is that becoming a Hijra typically means giving up all sexual encounters and desires. Along with giving this up, Hijras are supposed to perform a female role, engaging, when allowed, in female to male intercourse, not male to male. Many Hijra prostitutes perform male to male intercourse, which is illegal because of India’s laws against homosexual acts. These prostitutes are not looked down on, and they are typically not even acknowledged because it is known that there are Hijras who engage in homosexual intercourse, whether or not people discuss it.

I have come to understand that even though prostitution and homosexual intercourse goes against Hijra beliefs, the Hijras who participate in these activities do it because they cannot make a living any other way. Begging doesn’t get them that much money, and there aren’t enough blessing ceremonies to go to for all the Hijras to make a good living. As much as they don’t want to do this, they have to, just as they feel they have to become Hijras. There are, according to Nanda, many Indian men who have homosexual tendencies but are married to women. These men come to the Hijras for prostitution. Although these Hijras are ‘real,’ they blur the line because they are participating in activities contrary to their beliefs. To me, they are just doing what they have to in order to get by.

Works Cited:

Nanda, Serena
1999 The Hijras of India: Neither Man nor Woman. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Company.

Image From: http://www.columbia.edu/~blw2102/

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Understanding

So I’ve come quite a ways in understanding the culture of the Hijras since beginning this blog. Although at first I couldn’t understand why anyone would leave their families to do something as drastic as changing their gender, I now understand that at times you have to put yourself first and do what pleases you, or in the cases where the Hijras are kicked out, you do what you need to do to live happily without your birth family.

The Hijras are performers, and as someone who has seen multiple plays in which my friends were acting, I have seen how simple it is for people to perform different roles. Even though the Hijras are not performing a fictional role, they are performing ‘gender roles’ which essentially means that they are performing the third gender. In the class for which I am writing this blog, Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, we discussed how gender is not a function of sex, instead it is a role that people perform in society. This is why it is possible for multiple genders to exist within one culture. The behaviors or gender roles that the Hijras perform let the society they live in know who they are and what gender they associate themselves with. As I mentioned in earlier entries, the Hijras do not consider themselves to be women when they are becoming a Hijra, and only some of them consider themselves to be women once the operation is complete. Generally they consider themselves Hijras, or the third gender of India.

Although there is still one aspect of Hijra culture, the homosexuality of some of the prostitutes, I understand why the Hijras want to become Hijras and why they are willing to go to such lengths to become who they feel they really are.

Works Cited:

Nanda, Serena
1999 The Hijras of India: Neither Man nor Woman. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Company.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Needing

So a few weeks ago in class we watched a film about gender, and it covered Hijras. This was a really fascinating film because it gave me a glimpse at a more modern day Hijra. Just as Serena Nanda explained, there were Hijra “midwives” who performed the operation, although it is now illegal (there are still some clinics that will do it but they are very expensive), and there was a god leading the Hijras. This was where Nanda and the film differed. Nanda said that the Hijras worship Bahuchara Mata, but the film said that it is actually Santoshimata. Both of these gods lead the Hijras, with “Mata” being in both of their names. They are both gods who watch and protect over a Hijra during the operation, and although the first parts of their names differ, they essentially are both the Mother Goddess to the Hijras.

What was most interesting about the film was how they explained the people living in the same cities as the Hijras. Although they are afraid of the Hijras, dislike them, and look down upon them, they also require the Hijras. The Hijras, so they believe, have the power to curse as well as to bless. When a baby is born, or a couple married, they need the blessing of a Hijra. In a society where these women are shunned, they are also needed and depended upon for many things. This was very interesting to me because although they are shunned, go through a long and painful emasculation process and then have almost nothing left in the end except for their Hijra family, they still find work blessing babies or couples, and they are needed for something. I believe that without being needed in this way, the Hijras would be having a much harder time living in India than they do now. Being needed is essential to most people because it allows them to know that even though they may not be the ideal person of their culture, their culture would also not be the same without them. This is how the Hijras live. Without the blessings that they provide they would be forced into even more prostitution and begging than they already do. The Indian societies that they live in depend on the Hijras just as the Hijras depend on the societies.

Works Cited:

Nanda, Serena
1999 The Hijras of India: Neither Man nor Woman. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Company.

Film: Antony Thomas Middle Sexes: Redefining He and She (2006).

Photo: http://www.columbia.edu/~blw2102/