Saturday, May 10, 2014

Arrange Marriage Material or Love Marriage Immaterial?



Love marriages around the world are simple:
Boy loves girl. Girl loves boy.
They get married.
In India, there are a few more steps:
Boy loves Girl. Girl loves Boy.
Girl's family has to love boy. Boy's family has to love girl.
Girl's Family has to love Boy's Family. Boy's family has to love girl's
family.
And after all this if there is any LOVE remaining between girl and boy.
They get married.
-           Chetan Bhagat's 'Two States'

This has been happening for quite some time. Wake up in the morning, log on to your facebook and you see one more notification of someone getting engaged, someone getting married. And obviously so, this is the marriage season on in India, and I belong to this group or this age, where people do generally get married. So, it is nothing but obvious that my friends are all getting hooked.
Interacting with many of recently married, or soon to be married couples, gives me one good insight. Get an arranged marriage, and it is fine. Dare a Love, and there are lots of things to be arranged. The biggest of them all, convincing parents
More the differences, more time consuming it is.

1. Different caste?

The most common problem. Everyone, right from your mom and dad, mama,mami,mausi, mausaji also all other relatives whom you hardly know who just meet during weddings, the kaam wali bai, also wants to know why are you getting married to someone outside your caste. All of sudden you become the centre of universe for your relatives , relatives I feel are like ants J when they see a sugar cube they gather in thousands ,torturing you parents asking questions about when you are marrying your kid .

2. Different language?

Again a big obstacle, and a very common one! Come on now, India has about a 1000 languages ( 18 official languages approved by constitution of India), and liberalization has allowed us to travel across the country. It is obvious that a Rajput girl would fall in love with a Punjabi guy, or a rajasthani girl being married to Marathi guy! But well, parents on either side would sure be dead against it. Why? Dude, you want your father to be able to at least communicate to your father in law! Living in both Rajasthan, and Maharashtra, the difference in life style could not get starker. They could have been two completely different countries all together. Iraq and America would have more similarities, in every walk of life!
How do you convince you parents? Show them the beauty of multi cultural interaction learning new things ,food habits,cultures,languages all these brings newness and new means happy.

3. Different religion?

The whole sky falls on you ! WHY? Why? And after many more doubts on proper downloads of sanskar, the mother still asks WHY? Why on earth you, a marathi boy, who does not eat anything apart from chicken and mutton at home want to get married to a vegetarian girl? WHY?
These questions from your mothers are hard to answer , I don’t feel eating habits has anything to do with marriage ?
Remember Veer-Jaara, convince your parents that you are doing all this in for the betterment of the Indian society, and to ensure cross-cultural exposure to your kids! Or maybe, you can just tell them, it is necessary like MBA students has a necessary international exposure!
Beware, they might just slam you back with Sonia Gandhi’s example, and try showing you logic that only if Rajiv Gandhi had married a hindu girl, the country would have been a lot better now! No Italian dope to the dying BJP!( yeah, and who know, No Bofors case for the CBI. No Q)

4. Ego clashes?



Mohabbatein! If you remember seeing the SRK romantic movie of early 2000’s, you would realize that there is no solid reason for the father Amitabh bacchhan to reject SRK’s candidature. (This is what marriages have become, one more job opening!). It was just his ego, which he could not let go!
I wonder, why are most of the parents against the overall concept of a love marriage? I know of a friend, who loved a girl from his same caste, and everything. If he would have applied for an arranged marriage, a good possibility that his parents could have selected the same girl! But they were against this alliance? Surprising!

It is more to do with the inherent right that parent seem to be losing than anything else. At the birth of a child itself, the parent takes this ordeal of selecting a bride for their son, as their innate right. Now when you, the son, gets a girl on your own, your are stealing them of this right, and they do not want that.
No parent would accept this, but this seems to be the inherent truth!
Again, here, persistence is the only way guys!



Culturally and socially, we have been a nation with a close-knit family structure where parents play a large hand – and till much later in their children’s adult lives – in decision-making. From the subjects children choose in school, to the college they go to, who their friends are, to living arrangements, marriage and even when naming grandchildren, parents are/ have been an integral part of our decisions. Often when children – now adults – take decisions without consulting their parents, it is taken as an ‘insult’ or a sign of disregard.
“You don’t care for what we think,” is a line many an Indian parent will use when they find their adult-children taking independent decisions. This is not to say that parents are (necessarily) wrong. If parents see their 19-year-old daughter wanting to marry a jobless boy from her college, they have all rights – and ARE right – in stating what they think of the alliance and perhaps not extending their support. Love is not only blind but also regretful too in some situations. Having parental guidance is of utmost importance in certain scenarios.

However, it might not be such an open-and-shut case all the time… Like when it’s a question of inter-caste marriages. We have had parents killing their children? – because they married outside their caste. A number of criteria make a good, stable, happy marriage. Perhaps belonging to the same religion, community, caste or faith adds to a marriage. But does NOT belonging to the same religion, community, caste or faith take away from a marriage? Or reduce the chances of a happy marriage?


What if everything is suitable between two people and they belong to different castes? WHY should parents oppose such an alliance? What makes more sense: Parents forcing their children to marry within their caste where the children will be unhappy or parents supporting it when their children do make an earnest choice that will make them happy?

 While a number of men and women would take the traditional route, read: by settling down with an arranged match, there would also be those who are `brave` enough to defy the age-old norms and choose their own partner. Well, this ceaseless, pointless and bothersome debate of `Love marriage vs arranged marriage` has been done to death in India where the custom of arranged marriage was once considered an unchangeable norm come what may.

The trend of arranged marriages began ages ago, when child marriages in India were rampant and children were married off by ignorant parents. And yes, the new bride would especially be drilled with the words `compromise and adjust` in her head by the patriarchal society when problems owing to compatibility arose in the consortium. Even when the concept of child marriages was disregarded by the new judicial laws, the idea of arranged marriages was too good to be let off by the Indians. That is why we have families who make it obligatory for their child to tie the holy knot with whoever they pick to suit the clan`s taste.


In our `purist` society, the approach of love marriage or better say marriage by one`s choice still remains an anathema, thanks to the feudal mindset of those who fail to change with the changing times. Proposals of love marriage are met with raised eyebrows, endless curses, and every attempt is made to thwart the possibility of a union solemnized without acceptance of the elders of the respective families.

However, there are families who are accepting the new trend showing a ray of hope to change India`s future for the better. Parents perhaps understand that things don`t work by shoving their choice down the throat of their children but rather by giving the latter freedom to choose their soul mate – either all by themselves or from the given choices.

I won`t go further into the territory of making arguments in support of love marriages and I am not even against arranged matches. Arranged marriages work for many people as same cultural/social/economic backgrounds help people adjust more easily in the new fit to a large extent. But I would like to urge my country`s men and women to abide by their heart in the matters of heart. Whichever way you choose to marry, it is important to nourish the relationship with mutual love, respect and understanding because time tests both types of marriages. And if divorce and separation on petty issues keep breaking matrimonial ties, then soon the future generation would lose faith in this institution called marriage.