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I am not the one here promoting a rotten scumbag dictator as a hero, am I?maybe all that pehelwani you did in sanghi akhadas slowed down your faculty of understanding.
I am not the one here promoting a rotten scumbag dictator as a hero, am I?
and I am pretty sure most here on the forum unanimously agree, whose faculties here are slow....
i don't give loyalty or credence to war-mongering religio-nationalists who obsessively chant "jai bharat mata ki" while their country is a true failed state.
edit your post and notify me to get the rating reversed, or contest the rating at thread related. @Slav Defence
Wrong...it originated in persian/afghan culture...and is mainly prevalent today in Afghanistan and Pakistan. In Pakistan possibly due to afghani refugees. And it is more commonly called bacha baazi
Bacha bazi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
At night, like a lot of homosexuals, he went into the streets. His objects of eroticism were essentially cycle rickshawwallahs who always have an “easy side” to them. It is, of course, the same in all major cities in India; the night drivers of taxis, rickshaws and even buses are forever looking for ‘mazaa and masti’, as homosexual sex is called.
In Professor’s case this was known to other gay men on the AMU campus. It is surprising how common ‘mazaa aur masti’ is in those parts. Mothers openly frighten their boys saying they would be “handed to the Mullahji”, if they don’t behave. Friends fool around and then plead with dosts to stop their ‘homogiri’. The words for gay men can be either positive ‘Gud’ (jaggery) or the derisive “G@#$du”. Aligarh Muslim University and Banaras Hindu University may be two ends of the communal spectrum in India but what they have in common is their turbulent, tenacious homosexual subcultures.