Born in 1986, Kiran Naik grew up as the second of four siblings in a small village in Andhra Pradesh. At the age of three, his life changed drastically when he was diagnosed with severe poliomyelitis in both legs. The illness left him unable to walk, restricting him to crawling around his home through much of his childhood.
What followed was a life shaped by three simultaneous disadvantages: being Dalit, a person with disability, and being a trans man. Kiran’s journey reflects how deeply these layers of identity influence access to education, sanitation, dignity, and opportunity in India.