Whispers in Stone: Delhi’s Queer Past, Our Pride That Never Died

Delhi has always been a city of echoes — of emperors and poets, rebellion and devotion.
But listen closely, beneath the clang of history and the weight of empire, and another voice rises.
It speaks softly at first — of love that defied rulebooks, of bodies that lived beyond binaries, of pride that refused erasure.
These are Delhi’s queer stories — long buried, now breathing again.
The Forgotten Lineage of Love
Long before Pride flags waved in the streets, queerness already had a home here.
It lived in the verses of Sarmad Kashani, the 17th-century Sufi mystic who loved a Hindu boy named Abhay Chand so deeply that his devotion shook empires. His tomb still stands near Jama Masjid — quiet, unguarded, yet radiant. It’s not just a shrine of faith, but a monument to fearless love.

And then there was Javed Khan, a khwajasarah — a transgender courtier whose grace and authority shaped Mughal politics.
In a time without labels, Javed lived with power and poise that transcended gender altogether.
They weren’t exceptions; they were part of a larger, fluid world where desire and divinity once spoke the same language.
Erasure and Resistance
As the tides of history shifted, new rulers and new laws redrew the lines.
Colonial codes entered the land — and with them came silence.
The spaces where queer love once flourished were rewritten, renamed, or erased.
But silence doesn’t mean absence.
The carvings still remember.
The poetry still hums.
And the walls — they still whisper: “We were always here.”
Today, as queer historians, artists, and guides walk these paths again, Delhi begins to speak — not as a relic, but as a living archive of resistance and belonging.
The City Still Breathes Us
Wander through Mehrauli at dusk or along the Yamuna’s edge, and you might feel it — that pulse beneath the stone.
Every ruin is a witness.
Every monument holds the ghost of someone who dared to love freely.

Delhi’s queerness isn’t borrowed or imported — it’s indigenous.
It’s woven into its architecture, its verses, its people.
It’s in the way we claim space, tell stories, and reimagine the sacred through queer eyes.
Reclaiming What Was Always Ours
To reclaim queer heritage isn’t just to look backward — it’s to remember how deeply we’ve always belonged. Every Pride march, every chosen family dinner, every self-portrait and love letter — they’re all continuations of the same lineage.
Our visibility today isn’t defiance.
It’s homecoming.
The monuments of Delhi are not ruins — they are reminders:
That love once moved freely through these corridors.
That queerness was once sacred.
That it can be again.


