A true-blue Mumbaikar, Prasad Ramamurthy investigates the claim that Delhi is India's friendliest destination for queer travellers.
It’s 1 am. Just off the dance floor, inside a glass cubicle, a man is lathering his six-pack under a shower, wearing nothing but a pair of Y-front briefs. He’s gyrating to music spun by a DJ, while about 75 people, mostly men, mill around, watching and drinking. The scene plays out for 15 minutes, until the glass frosts over and the show ends.
I’ve never witnessed anything like this before in India. But it’s a regular occurrence at C U Next Thursday nights, an event series organised specifically for the lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender queer-intersex (LGBTQI) community, at The Lalit New Delhi (www.thelalit. com). And it’s why I’m in Delhi. I’ve heard it’s India’s most friendly city for LGBTQI travellers. Coming from Mumbai, where we pride ourselves on being cosmopolitan and open-minded, I was curious to investigate this claim. Besides, who doesn’t love a Mumbai vs Delhi contest?
I’m staying at The Mister & Art House (www.misterandarthouse.com), ‘India’s first boutique guesthouse and art gallery for men only,’ which I discovered on Grindr, a gay dating app. The unmarked five-bedroom space occupies the top floors of a residential building in a leafy part of South Delhi. Apart from the homoerotic sculptures and miniature paintings, it feels as comfortable as a friend’s home, replete with four-poster beds and warm, helpful staff. Owner Sanjay Malhotra has, for 10 years, also run IndjaPink (www.indjapink.co.in), a local travel company that customises itineraries for gay international tourists to explore India. Over breakfast, he throws me the gauntlet: “Delhi is India’s most advanced city in terms of options available to the LGBTQI traveller.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June/July 2017-Ausgabe von Condé Nast Traveller India.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June/July 2017-Ausgabe von Condé Nast Traveller India.
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