Kolkata (AFP) - An Indian transgender couple who both underwent sex re-assignment have tied the knot in a traditional Bengali ceremony, in what is believed to be the state's first "rainbow wedding".
Surrounded
by family and friends, bride Tista Das, 38, and groom Dipan Chakravarthy, 40,
took part in rituals and pledged their love for each other in Kolkata, the
capital of West Bengal state.
"We
are feeling awesome actually. We are out of the gender box and we love to be an
exception and we think this is a strong bond between us," Tista Das told
AFP on Monday.
"It's
a bond of love. It's a bond of liberty also," she said. "And this is
the solidarity of our souls."
Das said
she battled for a long time to "achieve her identity as a woman, as a
human being", adding: "I was not even considered as a human being in
this brutal society."
A
transgender friend of the couple, Anurag Maitrayee, said the ceremony was a
"beautiful, emotional union of two hearts and two souls".
"Despite
all the oddities and all the atrocities, I have seen how Tista and her journey
from a man into a woman and her relation, emotion, love with a person with a
soul whose journey is from a woman to a man," Maitrayee said.
Official
estimates for India's transgender population are not known but they are thought
to number several million.
Transgenders
often live on the extreme fringes of Indian society, with many forced into
prostitution, begging or menial jobs.
Over the
centuries transgenders have assumed different roles in society, from royal
courtesans to participants in birth ceremonies and other auspicious occasions.
They have
waged a lengthy battle to protect their rights and end discrimination.
India's
Supreme Court recognised them as a third gender in a historic 2014 ruling.
On Tuesday,
India's lower house passed a transgender bill to enshrine the rights of
transgender people in law. The bill is currently being discussed in the upper
house.
But the
community as well as human rights activists have raised concerns that the bill's
language is unclear over whether it allows transgender people to self-identify.
"The
Transgender Persons Bill should be a remarkable achievement for a
long-persecuted community, but the current draft fails on the fundamental right
to self-identify," Human Rights Watch South Asia director Meenakshi
Ganguly said last month.
"It's
crucial that the law be in line with the Supreme Court's historic ruling on
transgender rights."

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