Sounding Circle: Sex Museum Seeks to Break Taboos

 Sex Museum Seeks to Break Taboos2 comments
picture24 Mar 2003 @ 19:01, by Raymond Powers

The painting that accompanies this article is from an interview GQ magazine did with me in 1997. Though some of my thoughts and ideas have changed I think it is still appropriate for today.

Sex Museum Seeks to Break Taboos

By Jayashree Lengade

BOMBAY (Reuters) - It tells you all you ever wanted to know about sex but were afraid to ask.

India's first sex museum in the western city of Bombay takes curious visitors on a journey into a world that is still considered taboo in the tradition-bound country.

Unlike similar museums in the West, the Bombay museum aims to tutor rather than titillate.

"This is not a place that will arouse passions," said Arvind Shah, a doctor and a founder of the museum. "We have designed the museum to educate and provide correct information."

Tucked away in a century-old building near a red-light district, the museum juxtaposes ancient texts with modern caricatures and models to educate people on a range of subjects from reproduction to the dangers of AIDS (news - web sites).

"For the first time I learned how a baby was born," said Sher Singh, 22, father of a seven-month-old baby.

The museum, named "Antaranga," or "Inner Self," begins with abstract drawings of entwined couples and verses from the "Kamasutra," India's ancient treatise on the art of love.

The exhibits are a mix of the academic and the explicit.

Apart from clay sculptures of sex godesses, the museum also uses fiber-glass models of human genitalia as well as Adam and Eve statues locked in a passionate embrace.

"What are we ashamed about?" asked Dr Shah. "Young people are usually confused. We want to clear their minds."

A 16-year-old student, Rahul Jadhav, said he felt awkward looking at the naked figures but the museum was a "storehouse of information."

Apart from providing sex education, the museum also seeks to build awareness about AIDS through real-life stories, explanations on how to use condoms and illustrations of the HIV virus (news - web sites) depicted like a vulture eating into the human body.

India has nearly four million people suffering from HIV (news - web sites)/AIDS, second only to South Africa, and health experts warn the numbers could spiral if urgent steps are not taken.

While critics say the museum is a bit too explicit, visitors say it is a good way of educating people in a country where people tend to shy away from any discussion of sex.


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2 comments

25 Mar 2003 @ 10:48 by sharie : AIDS in India
Thanks for the article, the info, and for sharing the shocking numbers of AIDS victims in India. I had no idea.  


19 Jul 2006 @ 12:11 by Deepak Ramnani @203.88.158.206 : visit to museum
I want to visit museum,kindly send the address of museum.  


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