The Life of Hinduism

(Barré) #1

marriage. 75


law, her husband cannot take her side without shaming himself before his elders.
Thus she quickly learns the behavior appropriate to her role as a young bahuin a
strange household.
Virtually every new bride longs to return to the security of her natal home. Even
though she may be secretly thrilled by her relationship with her husband, a bride
rarely enjoys being sequestered and ruled by her mother-in-law. Songs stress the un-
happiness of the young wife in her new residence, and young girls eagerly seize any
opportunity to return home. Sometimes a young wife is so unhappy she commits
suicide, typically by jumping in a well. Few girls can go home when they wish; a
young wife must be formally called for, with the permission of her in-laws, and es-
corted by a responsible male from her natal household.
For the village bride, marriage does not mark attainment of independent adult-
hood but signals the acquisition of a new set of relatives to whom she is subordi-
nate. Her actions had previously been guided by sometimes indulgent parents; with
marriage and gauna, they fall under the control of adults who are far less likely to
consider her wishes. She herself can attain a position of authority only by growing
older, becoming the mother of children, and outliving her mother-in-law. Until she
is at least middle-aged, a woman is usually subordinate to and protected by others.


NOTES


  1. Country-wide legislation has set the minimum legal marriage age for girls at
    eighteen and for boys at twenty-one. The average age at which village girls in the Bhopal
    area marry is gradually rising, and many brides are now in their late teens.

  2. Oscar Lewis, Village Life in Northern India (New York: Vintage Books, 1965),
    160–61.

  3. Tara Krishna Basu, The Bengal Peasant from Time to Time (Bombay: Asia Pub-
    lishing House, 1962), 100.

  4. Among some high-status groups of Central India, dowries are currently increas-
    ing in size and importance. Such a trend has been noted in many parts of the country.

  5. D. N. Majumdar, Himalayan Polyandry (Bombay: Asia Publishing House, 1960),
    124–32; Gerald D. Berreman, Hindus of the Himalayas (Bombay: Oxford University
    Press, 1963), 171–73.

  6. Mildred Stroop Luschinsky, “The Life of Women in a Village of North India”
    (PhD diss., Cornell University, 1962), 350–51.

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