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Volume 4

Journal of Pediatric Care

ISSN: 2471-805X

Page 64

JOINT EVENT

August 06-07, 2018 Madrid, Spain

&

2

nd

Edition of International Conference on

Adolescent Health & Medicine

18

th

International Conference on

Pediatrics Health

Pediatrics Health 2018

&

Adolescent Health 2018

August 06-07, 2018

Eunuch and transgender persons: Repositioning of hijra identity in post-colonial Pakistan

Muhammad Ali Awan

Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany

T

his article is based on data, which I have collected for my PhD research on the topic of “Transgender and Human Right

Issues in Pakistan”. This research study follows constructionist grounded theory and gathered data through qualitative

research methods, i.e. In-depth Interviews (IDIs) and Biographic Interviews. In this article, I tried to answer the question ‘How

current legislative bill for the protection of transgender - presented in the Senate of Pakistan in 2017-2018, define hijra identity,

which deviates from socio-cultural and religious perspective?’. The bill allows transgender to identify themselves as per their

sense of identity without bringing consideration of the biological body. However, this kind of provision for the transgender

identity crosses the socially constructed knowledge and Islamic jurisprudence. Where traditionally it is believed that the

biological body of transgender persons determines gender identity. Therefore, those transgender persons who do not possess

true hijra body, i.e. body with ambiguous sex organ cannot be termed as real hijra. Other than this, all hijras are considered as

deviant. Colonial masters criminalized hijra identity due to the dominant discourse of binary of sex and gender. The same is

an issue with Islamic jurisprudence, where importance is given to the body instead of a sense of self. In this case, British rulers

and Islamic jurisprudence criminalized all those persons who possessed the male body and adopted feminine gender. Hence,

current bill inspires from the Human Right Treaties and International Law, which acknowledge and respect the person's sense

of self in determining gender identity. Therefore, one hand the bill fulfills international human right commitments. While,

other hand, it deviates from the socially constructed knowledge. So, in this article I describe multiple discrepancies which

exist at socio-cultural and legal level in term of conceptualization of hijra identity. First, the option for the hijra identity given

by the Pakistani State for making of Computerised National Identity Card (CNIC) deviates from the actual sub-identities like

Aqwa, Narban, and Khwajasara identity, which have been existing under the core hijra identity. Secondly, the identity options

given by the Pakistani State those are transgender male, transgender female and third is Khunsa Mushkil. These identification

categorizations are nearer to the categorization of transgender as per Islamic Jurisprudence. Therefore, in this case the state

is deviating from the modern human right standards. Finally, conceptualization of hijra on the pattern of transgender bluer

socio-cultural meaning associated with the hijra identity, which may vanish hijra culture and hijra as an indigenous separate

identity.

alighous@gmail.com

J Pediatr Care 2018, Volume 4

DOI: 10.21767/2471-805X-C3-012