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Indian-American Dad Raising A Toast At His Gay Son’s Wedding

A video of Indian-American man raising a toast at his gay son’s wedding is doing rounds on the internet in which he reminisces how his son came out as gay.

A video of Indian-American man delivering an emotional speech at his gay son’s wedding is doing rounds on the internet in which he reminisces how his son came out as homosexual in high school. Dr Vijay Mehta, a resident of central Texas, raised a toast to his son, Parag Mehta, and talked about his journey as a parent in accepting Parag’s decision to marry Vaibhav Jain.

During his speech, Dr Mehta speaks about the need to be braver and more compassionate while seeking truth and spreading love. He said that he was one of the luckiest fathers around in 1997 when his son was valedictorian, spelling bee champion, and doing a great job as a Romeo in plays.

“On 27 March, at 4.25pm on that Friday night, Parag had a very small speech - ‘Dad and Mom, I am gay. I have known it since I was 10 years old’,” he added.

Dr Mehta added Parag revealed to him that he had known it since he was 10 years old but earlier he was confused. Parag told him that he thought he will hide fact until his father’s death so he won’t be embarrassed by his son’s sexuality. He also confided that he attempted suicide during his high school days but didn’t succeed.

Dr Mehta said that their life went from “the best of the time” to “the worst of the time”. In his speech, Dr Mehta acknowledges that he was a homophobic person and decided to find the best “treatment centre” in the country and find the cure for it. After the revelation, he went to a medical library and found out that there’s nothing to be cured because it is not a defect or disease.

“I asked a simple question, ‘Do I love my son any less at 4.31 than I loved him at 4.25?’. And a long pause and the answer was, ‘No, I still love him the same’,” he said.

Netizens loved the toast raised by a father for his gay son and many of them shared their own of story. “It's really rare for an Indian dad to be so accepting. Well done to him ❤️,” commented a user. “My son is gay...... there I have said it. Feels a lot better to acknowledge it openly in front of the whole world. I'm lucky to have a son who is intelligent, funny and has a whole lot of friends who accept him for what he is,” commented another user.

Video of the toast inside thread

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by Anonymousreply 6May 24, 2020 10:14 PM

Video of the toast

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 1May 23, 2020 11:14 PM

Wonderful OP. thanks for sharing.

by Anonymousreply 2May 24, 2020 12:08 AM

"We're just happy he didn't marry a white boy."

by Anonymousreply 3May 24, 2020 1:09 AM

I'm Indian. My mum is constantly trying to set me up with other Indian guys. She posted this video on my FB wall already. LOL.

by Anonymousreply 4May 24, 2020 10:28 AM

I have a Sikh friend, who I have known since school (mumblemumble years ago). He had the balls to come out before me, although he did it in a rage when his parents wouldn't stop trying to match him with a "nice girl who will make a good wife, and has good prospects". His family were shocked, then angry, then gave him the silent treatment for about six months. Then his grandmother made contact, ostensibly to see if he was doing okay, but actually because she knew another Sikh family with a gay son, who was studying to become a doctor, and perhaps they ought to get to know each other. That seemed to open the floodgates, and his parents went from trying to find the right girl, to trying to find the right boy, as if the intervening six months hadn't happened at all. In the end they did find him a match (they're both doctors), and they've been together ever since. It seems that what grandmother cannot tolerate, above all else, is grandchildren who are not married off.

It doesn't happen very often, sadly, but when it does, it's beautiful.

by Anonymousreply 5May 24, 2020 10:37 AM

This is an especially huge thing for their culture to not only accept them as they are but to embrace them. Congrats to the grooms.

by Anonymousreply 6May 24, 2020 10:14 PM
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