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Aziz and her dignity (a Boing Boing guest-dispatch from Pakistan)

Started by Shana A, June 30, 2010, 08:21:46 AM

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Shana A

Aziz and her dignity (a Boing Boing guest-dispatch from Pakistan)

Bassam Tariq at 1:24 PM Tuesday, Jun 29, 2010

http://www.boingboing.net/2010/06/29/aziz-and-her-dignity.html

Since it's pride week, I thought I'd share a small story about the disenfranchised transgendered community here in Karachi.

Last week, my uncle took me to meet one of his old neighborhood's infamous icons, Aziz Mamoo. She lives in a small one bedroom shack located in the heart of a very disturbed ghetto. Aziz Mamoo is transgendered or, as they're known in South Asia, a hijrah. At the age of 11, she was kicked out of her house by her brothers and found refuge with the local hijrah guru, Hajji Iqbal. Iqbal took her in and taught the young Aziz how to sing and dance. Every town in Karachi has a designated guru who is in charge of the hijrahs in their area. The guru becomes both the mother and father to their communities hijrahs. The local guru feeds them, provides them shelter, and teaches them how to pray and live a modest life. When there is a birth of a child that is transgendered, some families leave the infant at the guru's doorstep. After the death of Hajji Iqbal, Aziz Mamoo became the local guru of her neighborhood. Countless babies have been left at her doorstep and though she has very little to offer, she never turns them away. The two kids that live with her now are Ashi and Nighat. Many more lived with her before, but she kicked them out after they started doing, as she calls it, "number two work." 'Number two work' is a euphemism for prostitution and it's become a common job for many hijrahs in Karachi.
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


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