Members of Bangladesh’s transgender hijra group, who have been disallowed from attending different prayer companies, have been welcomed at a brand new mosque within the Muslim-majority nation with the promise of worship with out discrimination.
The common-or-garden construction, a single-room shed with partitions and a tin roof, is a brand new group hub for the minority, who’ve loved higher authorized and political recognition lately however nonetheless undergo from entrenched prejudice.
The mosque close to Mymensingh, north of the capital Dhaka, on the banks of the Brahmaputra river, was constructed on land donated by the federal government after town’s hijra group was expelled from a longtime congregation.
“I by no means dreamt I might pray at a mosque once more in my lifetime,” stated Sonia, 42, who as a toddler beloved to recite the Quran and studied at an Islamic seminary.
However when she got here out as hijra, as transgender folks in South Asia are generally identified, she was blocked from praying in a mosque.
“Folks would inform us: ‘Why are you hijra folks right here on the mosques? You need to pray at dwelling. Don’t come to the mosques’,” stated Sonia, who makes use of just one identify.
“It was shameful for us, so we didn’t go,” she added. “Now, that is our mosque. Now, nobody can say no.”
Hijras have obtained rising authorized recognition in Bangladesh, which since 2013 has formally allowed members of the group to establish as a 3rd gender. A number of have entered Bangladeshi politics, with one transgender lady elected mayor of a rural city in 2021.
However they nonetheless wrestle for primary recognition and acceptance and lack property and marriage rights. They’re additionally typically discriminated towards in employment and are more likely to be victims of violent crime and poverty than the common Bangladeshi.
Hardline Islamist teams have lashed out on the recognition of transgender Bangladeshis at school textbooks, main rallies to demand the federal government abandon its push to incorporate them within the curriculum.
Mufti Abdur Rahman Azad, the founding father of a hijra charity, stated the brand new mosque was the primary of its form within the nation.
An identical endeavour deliberate in one other metropolis was stopped final month after a protest by locals, he added.
Dozens of native hijras donated money and time to construct the Dakshin Char Kalibari Masjid for the Third Gender, which opened this month.
It additionally has a graveyard, after a neighborhood Muslim cemetery final yr refused to bury a group member.
The mosque’s imam, Abdul Motaleb, 65, stated the persecution of the hijra group was towards the teachings of his religion. “They’re like every other folks created by Allah,” he stated.
“All of us are human beings. Perhaps some are males, some are ladies, however all are human. Allah revealed the holy Quran for all, so everybody has the appropriate to hope, nobody might be denied.”
The brand new mosque is already tackling prejudice. Native Tofazzal Hossain, 53, has supplied Friday prayers there for a second week in a row.
He stated residing and praying with the hijra group has modified his “misconceptions” about them. They stay righteously like different Muslims,” he stated.