Grace Banu

Grace Banu is an Indian software engineer who is a Dalit and transgender activist. She was the first transgender person to be admitted to an engineering college in the state of Tamil Nadu. She lives in the Thoothukudi district,[1] Tamil Nadu.

Grace Banu
Born
Tuticorin district, Tamil Nadu
Alma materSri Krishna College
Known forTransgender activism
ChildrenTharika Banu

Early life

Banu was born and raised in Tuticorin district, Tamil Nadu.[2] A Dalit, she says that from early in her schooldays she was not allowed to attend the regular hours of 9.30 am to 4 pm.[3] Banu said she was in the eighth standard when she began to experience gender dysphoria.[4]

Other students were told that they would be punished if they interacted with her. This kind of untouchability, based on both her caste and gender identity, caused her to attempt suicide and give up on the idea of finishing school.[5] Banu's family rejected her in 2008 when she told them of her gender identity.[6]

Banu was the first transgender person to be admitted to an engineering college in the state of Tamil Nadu, which she obtained through counselling at Anna University.[7] She was accepted to Sri Krishna College in 2013 through lateral entry. It was here she studied Electrical and Electronics Engineering. In addition to being admitted, Banu's fees were waived. Despite this, she struggled to pay for other associated fees and expenses.[8] Responding to a call for help, a local businessman launched an online campaign raising funds for her to complete the course.[9]

Professional life

After completing her Diploma with honours (95%), Banu was selected to work for a software firm as a programmer. She worked as a programmer until she quit due to alleged discrimination.[10]

Banu said that after she revealed her gender identity to management, she was initially told she could not continue her employment but management changed its decision and she was allowed to work under conditions.[11] Banu worked in her IT position for less than two years.[12] She filed a right to Information (RTI) to find out if Anna University accepted transgender students. On finding out that they did not, she applied against their rules anyway and was given admission to a private affiliated college, Sri Krishna College of Engineering.[7]

Activism and advocacy

Banu is the founder and director of Trans Rights Now Collective which centers on the Dalit caste, Bahujan political party, and Adivasi population.[4] She has started several online campaigns,[4] and voiced concerns and questions on the death of a fellow trans woman, who burned to death in Chennai.[13][14] Banu organized protests and began a legal process to give transgender people the opportunity to participate in Tamil Nadu Public Service Commission (TNPSC) recruitment exams. In 2013, a court order opened the TNPSC exams to transgender people.[11][15] Banu has been critical of the 2019 Transgender Persons' (Protection of Rights) Bill.[16] Banu was the first recipient of the 'Best Third Gender' award. This was awarded by the Tamil Nadu government and organized by the Social Welfare and Women Empowerment Department. The award is intended to recognize transgender people for their contributions to society. Banu requested it to be called the "Best transgender" award.[11]

Banu worked on helping the transgender population during the pandemic. She identified problems with transgender people's ability to receive a ration card.[17] Banu started two online fundraising campaigns during the COVID-19 pandemic to provide food assistance to trans people, including one intended for performers and folk artistes. In 2021 Grace Banu's group, the Trans Rights Now Collective, advocated for horizontal reservation for transgender persons based on their caste rather than putting all the transgender people in the "OBC" or "Other Backward Classes" category.[18] Banu self-published her first book, Talks Of Grace Banu, in 2019. She and her group, the Trans Rights Now Collective, started The Queer Publishing House.[19]

Banu believes that ultimately reservation, dedicated places for members of different groups, is key to the uplift of transgender people. "No amount of temporary governmental and non-governmental schemes can have the transgenerational impact that reservations can have. Reservations are the only way," she says.[20] she has been advocating for Dalit and transgender rights, demanding along with other transgender people for reservation based on gender identity as well as caste.[21][22][23]

Banu insists that the intersectionality of these oppressions matter. She believes that Dalits can be transphobic and that the transgender community replicates structures of caste privilege. She says that upper-caste transgender people bring Brahminism into transgender cultural, community and organizing spaces. Despite being pressed, upper-caste transgender women dominate all the positions of leadership, call the shots and define the needs for the whole community."[20] Denying caste in the transgender community is like "hiding a whole pumpkin in a plate of rice," she says.[20]

Adopted daughter

Grace Banu is the adoptive mother of Tharika Banu, the first registered transgender person to complete her secondary education in Tamil Nadu.[24]

Tharika studied until Class 11 in a government school there. Her parents refused to accept her upon learning that she was a transgender woman. In 2013, Tharika, ran away from her home in the Thoothukudi district, where she did not feel accepted or comfortable. She arrived in Chennai, where she was legally adopted by transgender activist Grace Banu.[25] Tharika credited Banu with helping Tharika finish her education, get an official identification, name change and a sex reassignment surgery.[26]

After Tharika was denied a seat in a Siddha college, Banu filed a court case in the Madras High Court.[27] Banu wrote a letter of assurance that took responsibility if anyone at the school had objections to studying with Tharika. The high court ruled that Tharika would be given admission to the Government Siddha College and the Bachelor of Siddha Medicine and Surgery (BSMS) course.[28]

See also

References

  1. Kumar, S. Vijay; R, Aditi (8 April 2017). "Transgenders eager to don the police uniform". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  2. "Anna University admits transgender in engg course". Deccan Herald. 18 November 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  3. Dalit Camera (19 July 2016). ""Casteism Very Much Exists Among Trans* People": Video Interview With Grace Banu". Feminism in India. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  4. BHANDARA, NEVILLE (21 April 2020). "Vogue Warriors: Meet Grace Banu, the transwoman fighting to ensure the safety of India's trans folx through this pandemic". Vouge. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  5. Krishnan, Madhuvanti S. "Shamed on campus". The Hindu.
  6. Abraham, Bobins (19 November 2015). "Tamil Nadu's First Transgender Engineering Student Is Struggling To Find Money To Complete Her Graduation". The Times of Indiat. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  7. Scott, DJ Walter (20 June 2014). "First transgender in Tamil Nadu gets engineering seat". The Hindu. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  8. Abraham, Bobins (19 November 2015). "Tamil Nadu's First Transgender Engineering Student Is Struggling For Money To Complete Studies". indiatimes.com. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  9. "First transgender person to get engineering seat in TN now has no money to graduate, help her". The News Minute. 18 November 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  10. "Here's how you can help Tamil Nadu's first transgender engineering student". DNA India. 21 November 2015.
  11. Koushik, Janardhan (16 August 2021). "Grace Banu bags Tamil Nadu government's first ever 'Best Third Gender' award for contributions to society". The Indian Express. India. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  12. Prem Shanker, V (12 December 2013). "Indian transgender passes test before exam". Aljazeera. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  13. "Foul play alleged in Transgender Death". The Hindu. 10 November 2016. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  14. "Moral policing in Kerala to clashes in Kashmir: How FB Live is changing the way we tell stories". The News Minute. 23 February 2017.
  15. Vandhana, M (2 December 2013). "Recognised as woman, transgender takes TNPSC exam". The Hindu. Retrieved 9 January 2023.
  16. Lalwani, Vijayta (27 November 2019). "What next for transgender people, as India clears a bill that activists call "murder of gender justice"?". qz. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  17. Koushik, Janardhan (21 May 2021). "Considering Covid-19 relief to trans persons: Tamil Nadu govt in Madras HC". The Indian Express. India. Retrieved 22 November 2022.
  18. "'Don't Have Just One Identity': Transgender People Urge Govt to Rethink Quota Under OBC Category". The Wire. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  19. ANNADASAN, AKILA (12 January 2023). "Queer Publishing House, exclusively for books on and by the LGBTQ, is now at the Chennai Book Fair 2023". The Hindu. India. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  20. Dalit Camera (2 July 2016), Grace Banu - India's first transgender engineering student, & activist, retrieved 15 April 2017
  21. Murali, A. Revathi As told to Nandini (21 November 2016). Life in Trans Activism, A. Zubaan. ISBN 9789385932137.
  22. "Activists demand revised draft of transgender bill". DNA India. 6 November 2016.
  23. Shreya Ila Anasuya. "Merely celebrating the exceptional achievements of trans-people conceals their struggle". Yahoo News. Scroll.in. Archived from the original on 17 April 2017. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  24. "Tamil Nadu HSC results 2017: 1st registered transgender to clear exam hopes to become doctor - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  25. "Tamil Nadu: Tharika Banu, a transgender, pass 12th exams, wants to become a doctor". The Indian Express. 12 May 2017. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  26. "Tamil Nadu HSC results 2017: 1st registered transgender to clear exam hopes to become doctor - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  27. Deeksha, Johanna (17 October 2017). "First transgender to finish +2 in TN, Tarika Banu moves HC after being denied med seat to study Siddha". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  28. Tripathi, Shweta (6 December 2017). "Chennai: Transgender wins battle for higher education". deccanchronicle.com. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
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