![full indian gay videos full indian gay videos](https://www.glaad.org/sites/default/files/styles/1200x630/public/images/2014-04/Imran-Khan-Takes-A-Break-From-Bollywood.jpg)
![full indian gay videos full indian gay videos](https://specials-images.forbesimg.com/imageserve/5f4e57c23da14efdde12a595/960x0.jpg)
Full indian gay videos code#
While Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code criminalises gay sex, gay marriage falls into a legal grey area because there are no marriage laws for or against gay marriage here. Shah knows that her work is controversial. Most of the work for the website can be done online, she says. Shah oversees the bureau from Ahmedabad, where she is setting up an NGO called Samaanta, to fight for the rights of transgender people, and visits Secunderabad to meet the team once every month. They were reluctant to lend their support at first, but finally agreed after she made them watch several YouTube videos focusing on the marginalisation faced by the community. Soon after finishing college in April 2016, Shah broke the news about the bureau to her parents. Samson rented an office in a bungalow in Secunderabad, and a team of 26 people started work in January 2016. "The response was overwhelming people left high-paying jobs to join us," she recalls. Meanwhile, Shah began reaching out to people whom she thought might be interested in working on the project. Samson first registered Arranged Gay Marriage in Chicago in December 2015, and then as the Custom Soul Connection LLP with the Registrar of Companies in Hyderabad six months later.
![full indian gay videos full indian gay videos](https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2018/09/918/516/photo_1379056121880-1-HD.jpg)
Shah's idea excited Samson, and over several Skype chats they laid out a plan and put together a website. Manvendra Singh Gohil connected her to Benhur Samson, an NRI who runs Surrogacy Abroad Inc in Chicago, an LGBTQ-friendly surrogacy service. While Shah isn't too hung up on the word "marriage" or its socio-political meaning, she felt that including it in the company's name would give people a sense that this "is a place where you're likely to find people who're looking for long-term relationships." Since she was still in college at the time, and couldn't begin the venture on her own, she started looking for someone who could get it off the ground on her behalf. If heterosexual people could use matrimonial services to find partners, she wondered, why couldn't the LGBTQ community have the same option?
![full indian gay videos full indian gay videos](https://st3.depositphotos.com/6365072/15061/i/1600/depositphotos_150610254-stock-photo-naked-muscular-indian-man.jpg)
Several conversations with them, and over 300 other members of the community from across India, made Shah realise that, among the myriad problems they were grappling with, there was a deep sense of unhappiness as they tried to find partners with whom they could share their everyday lives. She met pioneering figures like Lakshmi Narayan Tripathi, a famous transgender rights activist and Manvendra Singh Gohil, the country's first openly gay prince, who came out in 2006, and hung condoms on trees in public parks to raise awareness about AIDS. She got in touch with a small group of transgender people in Ahmedabad, who connected her to other groups in the city and in other parts of Gujarat, and eventually was introduced to LGBTQ rights activists across the country. "I knew nothing about the community ," said Shah. Extended hours of internet research on her dissertation - creating a business idea that could mitigate a social problem - led her to the issues faced by the LGBTQ community. The daughter of an Ahmedabad-based businessman who runs a printing press, Shah was struck by the idea of starting the bureau three years ago as a post-graduate student at the Entrepreneurship Development Institute of India in Gandhinagar. He was even more surprised to learn that the bureau was run by a straight 24-year-old Gujarati girl, Urvi Shah. (Purvish preferred communicating via email, instead of the phone.) "Impossible! I thought it's probably a fake company," Purvish recalled, in one of his over-thirty emails to me. So, when he heard about the Arranged Gay Marriage bureau from a gay friend, his first reaction was disbelief.