Most Popular

Recent Articles

Recent Articles by Silke Tudor

National Features >

  • Broward-Palm Beach New Times

    The Lost Season

    Here's how you become one of those people who screams at his kid's coach.

    By Bob Norman

  • Houston Press

    Deadly Evidence

    First, Houston's DNA lab became a laughingstock. Then its controversial director was murdered.

    By Randall Patterson

Giving You Some Lip

By Silke Tudor

Published on March 11, 2008 at 4:20am

The yoni is sacred in Hindu mythology. In Sanskrit, the word may refer to a vagina, a temple, a divine passage, or the seat of all creation. In India, offerings are left before deep clefts in rock, and temple doors are explicitly endowed. Real female sexuality is, of course, something quite different. Any woman walking through an Indian marketplace is fair game for a debasing brush-up, and a woman holding a man's hand in public is regarded as a whore. While authors, artists, and architects openly celebrate the sexual feminine, desi (South Asian) women are expressly warned to remain silent. Then along came Yoni Ki Baat.

Inspired by Eve Ensler's The Vagina Monologues, Yoni Ki Baat started with an open call for candid experience. The response was surprising, even to the desi feminists in organizing group the South Asian Sisters. Tales of rape, incest, pleasure, passion, discovery, and amusement filled their, uh, inboxes, broke taboos, and sold out halls. Now, in its fifth year, Yoni Ki Baat celebrates with an assemblage of its best monologues — everything from an Indian woman's adventures in S&M to a 10-year old's befuddling foray into the world of feminine hygiene products. Unlike at last week's El Rio show, men are welcome tonight as long as they can handle Pakistani and Bangladeshi women pronouncing the word "pussy."
Sat., March 15, 5:30 p.m., 2008



SF Weekly Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff
Backpage.com