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National Award-winning filmmaker Hansal Mehta, who is delighted at the Supreme Court striking down the law against homosexuality, has urged the society to practice the change by showing equal respect to the LGBT community.

Mehta, who directed the film Aligarh, inspired by the real-life story of a professor who was suspended from his job because of his sexual orientation, told IANS: “I am delighted to know the Supreme Court’s judgment. The wordings of the judgment are very significant and humane in the present time to establish equality.”

Hansal Mehta: “Court Can Only Make Laws, But Change Can Come If People Practice It”

“I think this is just the beginning. It is our responsibility as a society to treat the LGBT community with equal respect,” added the Shahid famed director.

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According to Mehta, the court can only make rules and laws, but a change in society can come if people practice it.

“The majoritarian morality is not necessarily inclusive in our society and the problem is lying there. So I think the thought of the majority needs to change, needs to open up to build a society where equality is largely celebrated,” he said.

Mehta’s widely acclaimed film Aligarh features Manoj Bajpayee. It is based on the life story of Ramchandra Siras, a professor from the Aligarh Muslim University who was suspended from his job while caught in his room having consensual sex with another man.