Friday, February 28, 2014

Exclusive: First GSA in India Speaks to Feminist Teacher, Ileana Jiménez « Feminist Teacher

Exclusive: First GSA in India Speaks to Feminist Teacher, Ileana Jiménez « Feminist Teacher:



Exclusive: First GSA in India Speaks to Feminist Teacher, Ileana Jiménez







Students from Breaking Barriers, India's first student-led campaign to address LGBT issues in schools (photo courtesy: Shivanee Sen).
Students from Breaking Barriers, India’s first student-led campaign to address LGBT issues in schools marching in the Delhi Pride Parade in November 2013 (photo courtesy: Shivanee Sen).
“I’m trying to build a culture of compassion, understanding, and of service. I’m trying to build a culture of questioning the status quo.”
Inspiring words by Shivanee Sen, a young teacher I recently met at the Tagore International School in Delhi, where Sen is mentoring the first student-led campaign in India to address LGBTQI (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex) issues. In the U.S., Sen’s student group would be called a GSA (Gay Straight Alliance), but in India, it’s more like a revolution.
In just a little under six months, Sen has mobilized an energetic group of over 50 students to address issues of gender and sexuality in education and politics. What they have done in a short amount of time is more than what most established GSA’s in the U.S. do in years.
Called Breaking Barriers, Sen started her groundbreaking group during a conversation with her high school students about gender. Her initial goal was to inspire students to care about the hijras, a community of transgender women, intersex individuals, and eunuchs in India who are marginalized both socially and economically. What started as a discussion topic has turned into a national campaign that has gained the attention of