Thursday, August 25, 2016

We have moved . . .

Notice, Aug '16

We have moved to www.vartagensex.org – our new website, which will henceforth include also the monthly issues of Varta in a new webzine format. The 36th (August 2016) issue is already up on the new site. But this blog site is not going anywhere. We will continue to maintain it with all information related pages up-to-date.

Before you move on, spare a look at our new page on Anthologies – another debut in Varta’s third birthday month! Our first anthology titled Queer Potli: Memories, Imaginations and Re-Imaginations of Urban Queer Spaces in India, a collaborative venture with Queer Ink, Mumbai, is just out in an e-book format (print version in the works). Buy, read, share!

Best wishes from the Varta team!

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

We're transitioning!

Notice, Jul '16

Hello readers! Apologies for the long silence. We've been preparing for a transition to a new format the last few months. We're ever so near the final step, and as with all change, this move has not been without a few hiccups. For the first time since Varta started on August 1, 2013, there will be no monthly issue (the 36th) of the blog in July 2016. But we will be back next month, the third birthday month of Varta, in a new avatar!

The new format will be a comprehensive website that will include the Varta webzine (with many new and old features) as well as many new links to the different activities of Varta Trust. The webzine will continue to be published with a monthly frequency. With this change Varta Trust aims also to initiate a new set of journalistic and publishing activities.

Well, more on those when the time comes nearer. In the meantime, we will continue to maintain this blog version of Varta with all information related pages up-to-date. Looking forward to resuming our monthly dates with you!

Best wishes from the Varta team!

Friday, June 24, 2016

Vigils for trust and kindness

Vartanama, Jun '16
By Pawan Dhall

I had forgotten many details of this family story from the time of India’s partition in 1947 – till a cousin sister recounted it recently. My late father, then all of 19 and unmarried, along with his younger brother and parents, lived in Shorkot town in the Punjab now in Pakistan. A time came when they had to leave home in a rush and take refuge in a camp within the town. Only to realize that they had left behind some valuables, which would have proved more than handy if and when they crossed the border.


Teach India gender and sexuality

Insight, Jun '16
By Shampa Sengupta

“Ma, are there only two kinds of human beings – male and female and no more?” This was the question my daughter Suchetana asked me 14 years ago when she was four. As usual, I pretended to be busy (which I often did whenever she asked me difficult questions) and told her I would explain later.

I had to take help of mythology when I came back to her with explanations – since story telling was part of my daily routine when I was with her, I started telling stories from Mahabharata – so Shikhandi’s story was told and retold a number of times, as also those of Brihannala and Iravan. But I distinctly remember Shikhandi was a favourite with both of us.

Books, comics, films, teaching aids are needed to make
children aware about gender and sexuality diversity.
Photo courtesy: Thoughtshop Foundation, Kolkata

Odisha awaits transgender welfare board

Happenings, Jun '16
Anupam Hazra reports on the ‘2nd Transgender Day’ event in Bhubaneswar, Odisha

Inauguration of '2nd Transgender Day'  event at
Bhubaneswar. Photo credit: Anupam Hazra
Bhubaneswar, April 25, 2016: Trans women’s community groups in Odisha made an emphatic presentation of their demands at the observation of the state’s ‘2nd Transgender Day’ at Hotel Keshari in Bhubaneswar today. Odisha Law Minister Arun Kumar Sahoo was presented with a charter of demands for the formation of a transgender welfare board in the state, reserved seats in educational institutes, opportunities to participate in the political sphere, separate beds in government hospitals, pension for individuals above 40 years, and access to benefits under a number of social welfare schemes.

Qatha: Recalling dark room discoveries and more (part 1)

People, Jun '16
By Pawan Dhall

Varta brings you the ‘Queer Kolkata Oral History Project’, an initiative to document five decades of queer lives in Kolkata (1960-2000). Our aim in this project is to go back in time and bring forward diverse queer voices through a series of interviews, which will provide a landmark to Kolkata city's queer history. Typically, the focus will be on the queer scenario in Kolkata during the growing up years of each interviewee – how it was to be queer in Kolkata in different decades since the 1960s till more recent times. The effort will be to bring forward a mix of the well known and the lesser known voices. Apart from the excerpts published here, the project also aims to publish a collection of the interviews in different formats. All interviews are based on informed consent and where requested, all markers of identity have been removed for reasons of confidentiality.

In this issue we bring you the first part of an interview with Suresh, 68, a teacher of marketing management who used to live in Kolkata till the late 1990s and is now based in a coastal town in southern India. Suresh talks about his early sexual discoveries and negotiations around relationships, never mind if terms like ‘gay’ didn’t exist back then.

The interview was conducted by Pawan Dhall over Skype on June 4, 2016, and later transcribed by the interviewer.

Trapped in transit

Clickhappy! Jun '16
By Vahista Dastoor


“The photographer is an armed version of the solitary walker reconnoitering, stalking, cruising the urban inferno, the voyeuristic stroller who discovers the city as a landscape of voluptuous extremes” – Susan Sontag, 1977 

Trapped in transit, Vahista Dastoor spends 13 hours in Bangkok airport – anonymous and unseen, honing her street photography skills.