Kolkata’s transgender community upset it did not get Puja grant
The Hindu
Transgender community in Kolkata upset as their Durga Puja not granted govt. funds for 2nd consecutive year. Ardhanarishwar Durga Puja held for 6 years. Police cautioned against protest. Govt. started giving ₹10,000/committee in 2018, increased to ₹70,000 this year. Community seeks development & empowerment, not confrontation.
The community has been holding its own Ardhanarishwar Durga Puja in Kolkata for the past six years
The transgender community in Kolkata is upset that for the second consecutive year its Durga Puja in the city did not receive the West Bengal government’s grant that was given to puja committees across the State.
The community has been holding its own puja - Ardhanarishwar Durga Puja - in Kolkata for six years now. For the first three years, it was held at the offices of the Association of Transgender/Hijra on Gokhale Road, under the banner of Gokhale Road Bandhan, but in 2021 the venue shifted to a Central government-built shelter in Mukundapur. That was the only time they received the State government grant.
“For the past two years, we have diligently appealed for the donation, a privilege extended to the people of our State. Regrettably, we find ourselves excluded from this opportunity, which has left us deeply disheartened. We believe that the allocation of funds has been disproportionately allocated, with preference given to prominent clubs,” Ranjita Sinha, director of the Association of Transgender/Hijra, wrote in a letter to Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.
“We implore you to consider that you are the esteemed representative and Chief Minister of all the citizens within our State, including those who, like us, come from marginalised and underprivileged backgrounds. The prevailing sentiment of discrimination and difficulty securing an audience with you has deeply disheartened us,” Ms. Sinha wrote.
The community had planned to hold a protest during the Durga Puja Carnival scheduled for Friday evening but according to Ms. Sinha, she was visited on Thursday evening by a police sub-inspector who told her that the police department was “deliberating” on their matter (since it is the concerned police station that hands out the cheques to individual puja committees) and cautioned them against holding a protest.
Last year, the police had said that the cheque could not be handed over for technical reasons because the venue of the community’s Durga Puja could not be located since it had shifted from the limits of one police station to another - a claim rubbished by Ms. Sinha who said that their puja was too prominent to be missed considering it was being visited by foreign dignitaries.
More than 2.6 lakh village and ward volunteers in Andhra Pradesh, once celebrated as the government’s grassroots champions for their crucial role in implementing welfare schemes, are now in a dilemma after learning that their tenure has not been renewed after August 2023 even though they have been paid honoraria till June 2024. Disowned by both YSRCP, which was in power when they were appointed, and the current ruling TDP, which made a poll promise to double their pay, these former volunteers are ruing the day they signed up for the role which they don’t know if even still exists