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Video Editor: Mohd Irshad Alam, Ashutosh Bhardwaj
For ages, members of the transgender community have been disregarded and ill-treated by the society. In 2014, however, in a historic verdict, the Supreme Court recognised the transgender community as the ‘third gender’, giving them their long due right.
From pariahs to achievers, meet some members of the transgender community who have fought discrimination and intimidation to come out with flying colours.
Ostracised by her family, she attempted to kill herself when she was 13. Despite her troubled childhood, Padmini went on to become India's first transgender prime-time anchor at LotusTV, a local news channel in Coimbatore, in 2014.
The first transgender police officer in Tamil Nadu, K Prithika Yashini fought a legal battle to be identified as 'transgender' on her application form to join the police force. Today, she is a sub-inspector in Chennai.
Assigned male at birth, Manabi Bandopadhyay had a gender realignment surgery in 2003.
In 2005, she became India's first transgender to have acquired a PhD in Bengali literature. On 7 June 2015, Bandopadhyay was appointed the first transgender college principal of Krishnagar Women's College in West Bengal. In 1995, she had also published the first transgender magazine, Ob-Manab, which means 'sub-human'.
In 2008, Laxmi Narayan Tripathi became the country’s first transgender to represent Asia Pacific at the UN, but her childhood was scarred by abuse.
She is a social activist who founded 'Astitva' trust in 2007 for the welfare of the trans community.
She is also the founder of the ‘Kinnar Akhada’ that created history by taking the first 'shahi snan' at the the Kumbh Mela in 2018.
Even Yash Raj Films has taken note of India's first transgender musical band, 6 Pack Band. The team even won the Cannes Grand Prix Glass lion in 2016.
And the list does not end here...
Here are a few more people who are making the trans-community proud.
Despite the 2014 Supreme Court judgment, transgenders continue to be the targets of harassment and humiliation. However, the achievements of these transgender people is proof that the barriers are slowly breaking.
So, this transgender day of remembrance, let us pledge for equal rights for all.
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