Updated On: 22 May, 2022 08:30 AM IST | Mumbai | Yogesh Pawar
Exploring the ‘double persecution’ of being queer and Dalit in his second film, Nishant Roy Bombarde feels fighting for civil liberties means LGBTQIA+ persons must ally with caste minorities

Nishant Roy Bombarde says, with Gair, he wanted to explore the space where caste and sexuality cohabit a bit more, and question, if at all they affect each other, how would that be?
Six years after filmmaker Nishant Roy Bombarde bagged two Rajat Kamals at the 63rd National Awards for his debut film Daaravtha, an adolescent boy’s exploration of his sexual expression, he is ready with Gair. This one is a short, and explores the sexuality-caste intersectionality, released in the US on May 7 as part of the New York Indian Film Festival. Its India premiere is scheduled for the Kashish Film Festival, which opens on June 1 in Mumbai.
Bombarde was keen to explore the dynamic between caste and sexuality. “I love the space where the journeys of two characters become interdependent. I wanted to explore this intersectionality and the resultant double persecution,” he says.