nown as ‘Manvendra Singh Gohil’, ‘Manvendrasingh Gohil’, ‘Manvendra Gohil,’ ‘Manvendra Kumar Gohil,’ or ‘Manvendra Kumar Singh’; born 23 September 1965 in Ajmer, belongs to the royal family of the former princely state of Rajpipla in India. His parent attempted but failed to disinherit him after he revealed his homosexuality, and since then there has been a question mark over his relations with the family. He is the only known person of royal lineage in modern India to have publicly revealed he is gay. In January 2008, while performing an annual ceremony in Rajpipla in honour of his great-grandfather Maharaja Vijaysinhji, Manvendra Gohil announced plans to adopt a child, saying: “I have carried out all my responsibilities as the prince so far and will continue as long as I can. I will also adopt a child soon so that all traditions continue”. If the adoption proceeds, it will be the first known case of a single gay man adopting a child in India. In June, 2009, in São Paulo, he told: “Adopting a child is easy in India, and there is no problem because of being openly gay. I hope to be with my son soon after my return from Brazil”. Manvendra is the son of Maharana Shri Raghubir Singhji Rajendrasinghji Sahib, who inherited the title of Maharana of Rajpipla in 1963. The princes were derecognized by the Republic of India in 1971. Manvendra had a traditional and conservative upbringing. He was educated at Bombay Scottish School and at Amrutben Jivanlal College of Commerce and Economics, Vile Parle, Bombay. In January 1991, he married Chandrika Kumari from Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh, because, he claims, “I thought after marriage I will be alright because I never knew and nobody told me that I was gay and [that] this is normal. Homosexuality is not a disease. I tremendously regret for ruining her life. I feel guilty”. The marriage ended in divorce when Manvendra revealed his homosexuality to his wife. “It was a total disaster. A total failure. The marriage never got consummated. I realized I had done something very wrong”. Several years after his divorce in 1992, he became involved in a social network to help gays in Gujarat. “ It was difficult to be gay in my family. The villagers worship us and we are role models for them. My family didn’t allow us to mix with ordinary or low-caste people. ![painting_of_manvendra_singh_gohil[1]](http://5magazine.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/painting_of_manvendra_singh_gohil1.jpg)
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