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Hijras are a very small minority (albeit they annoy well out of proportion to their number), I would be surprised if there were more than a few hundred or thousand of them in a typical city, though you'll find concentrations in the larger ones
I had previously heard that it was occasionally the case that they would castrate children. I didn't want to malign them more than I already have, so I checked, and it's far worse than I thought:
https://www.indiatimes.com/news/lgbtq-the-truth-about-how-hijras-are-made-in-india-because-they-re-not-always-born-that-way-257525.htmlot-always-born-that-way-257525.html
That's certainly food for thought, you can't just naively transfer Western concepts of transvestitism or transgenderism to other contexts, and these guys victimize each other just as much as they do the general public, and much of the scorn and disdain they get is richly deserved. A 1000 rupees is just 10 USD or so..
My, you're a straight one. That's a common enough euphemism/outdated street slang for heroin, specifically the dirty stuff that's otherwise known as black-tar heroin. I don't think it's India specific, even if it's archaic.
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Like castrati for church choirs, is what it sounds like. Even officially banning the practice meant workarounds like "oh he had an accident where a bull crushed his testicles and they had to be removed" and other tall tales, and the desperate/poor would have a boy castrated in hopes he could become a high-earning singer (of course not everyone did).
There's a Tamil movie based on a novel which is in the vein of realism and is harrowing subject matter; it's about professional beggars, or rather the people who buy and sell them in gangs in order to profit off them. This includes buying disabled children, and if you can't buy them, then you create them by forcing the women to have children. (The movie shifts focus by adding in another alleged true-life story and makes the beggars the secondary plot).
This certainly isn't confined to India; it's been historically noted in the West, too; when you can make money by appealing to charity, then you get professional begging; and when the most sympathy is evoked by the most misery, then you have an incentive to get the most deformed and miserable to extort money out of the public. And to have organised gangs.
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India Today is a reputable news outlet, and the NGO making the claims otherwise stands for the rights of hijras and their general welfare. I claim no specific expertise beyond this, but I can't think of a reason either would pen a hit piece.
It's a good thing you consider the overall rate of birth with ambiguous genitalia, that provoked me to search down the rabbit hole.
The stigma is justified enough as is, it's hard to overstate how much of a nuisance they can be, especially if you're a middle class Indian relying on public transport, but I am relatively open minded about gender norms so it's not like I despise them for just presenting as an opposite gender. I certainly don't care about their other source of income, prostitution.
I would still take it with a pinch of salt, but in general Hijras don't deny the existence of castration ceremonies, they just claim it's voluntary. So maybe let a bit of your current stance on gender reassignment in children in the West bleed through I guess, I personally don't think it's all above board leaving aside the difficulty of verifying numbers and the activists who see any criticism of hijras as hostile.
To put vague numbers on it, I'm 80% that such practises are commonplace, but only 50% or less that it happens with such a high frequency.
It's all good, I feel like these claims are outlandish/inflammatory enough that I should pro-actively provide evidence in the first place!
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