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Coming south in search of a bride

SrNair

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Photo: The Hindu
PUZZLING TREND: “Despite Haryana’s infamous skewed sex ratio and terrible treatment of women, Malayali women are marrying Haryanvi men.” File photo shows a Haryana panchayat.







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The strange case of how women from Kerala are wedding men from Haryana in what often turn out to be disastrous marriages.
Some trends seem astonishing at first, but begin to make sense when closely examined. The case of Kerala women marrying Haryanvi men is one such example. Why would women from a State known for its excellent social and human development indicators, particularly its treatment of women, marry men from a State infamous for its skewed sex ratio?

Recent newspaper reports show that in the context of a huge sex ratio imbalance and an imminent shortage of brides, several Haryanvi men are heading to Bihar, West Bengal and Kerala in search of brides. In order to understand the nature of these marriages and the motivations of these women, we visited Kerala recently.

Women incur the costs

In a hegemonic and heteronormative society, not being married carries a huge cost, as desperate Haryanvi men seeking wives know only too well. In our study, we found that several men who may not have been seen as marriageable in the local context have made their way to Kerala with no expectation except that of getting a wife. Typically, the brides came from very poor families with more than one daughter. And when the women are above a certain ‘marriageable’ age, it is considered better for them to be married than remain single. It is these women, priced out of marriage in Kerala, who marry Haryanvi men. As the father of a recent such bride put it, “If the family was well off, the girl would not be married away in Haryana”.

The case of Rani (name changed) points to the troubling aspect of this arrangement: how marriage is regarded as indispensable, and how women, in particular, incur the greater costs in the process. Rani, about 32 years old, has studied up to Class 8. About eight or nine years ago, she married a man from Haryana and now has two children. She was introduced to her husband through a relative (also married in Haryana to a Haryanvi but returned to Kerala to marry a Malayali). But Rani did not see her fiancé or even his photo until the day of the wedding. “He was quite old,” she recalls. Rani’s wedding was not registered in the temple or in the Panchayat, as is the norm, as it took place on a holiday. She and her husband left for Haryana in a hurry and she does not have a photo of her wedding or even one of her husband and her together. Upon her arrival in Haryana, she discovered that her husband was an alcoholic, and he would regularly abuse her. Thankfully, with the support of her two brothers and her mother, who paid her train fare, Rani was able to keep coming home.

Finally, last year, Rani decided that she had had enough. She fought with her husband and returned to Kerala permanently. Soon after, her husband fell sick and died. When she went back to Haryana and asked for his death certificate, his elder brother convinced her to sign a blank sheet of paper and gave her a photocopy of the death certificate. She realised that the document would be used to cut her off from any claim to her late husband’s house and the little property his family owned, but signed it anyway. True to her fears, she has not heard from them since.

Several other cases show a pattern in the treatment of women in such marriages. In one, a woman tried contacting her Haryana husband’s family after his death, but she was told there was no one by that name. In another, a woman suffering from cancer died in Kerala, but her Haryana husband did not come to see her, either during treatment or after her death. Her mother told us, “We spent on her treatment because she is our daughter. Who else will do it?”

Ticket to a good future

All the families we spoke to said the same thing: that they had agreed to their daughters’ marriage to complete strangers and going away to a distant place so that they would have someone to take care of them in future. This underlined a bitter fact: that marriage in India is still believed to be the only route to a good future for a woman. If the marriage goes well, this wish is fulfilled; if not, she bears the consequences. Many families rush into such marriages with little knowledge about the groom or his circumstances. Some family members rationalised these marriages away as the woman’s ‘destiny’ —“whatever is written in one’s fate is what one gets” said a maternal uncle, whose niece married a Haryana man who turned out to be a different person from the man they saw in the photograph.

In all these marriages, both the family and the woman agree reluctantly to the marriage because the woman is desperate to reduce the “burden” on her family and the family is desperate to find her a good life in the form of a happy marriage. It was distressing to listen to how these women agreed to venture into the unknown, to settle in places where they didn’t speak the local language, where the food was unfamiliar, social norms restrictive, and where discrimination based on skin colour are prevalent. At the same time, their courage is equally startling. The only silver lining was that in some cases, the women managed to come back to Kerala along with their husbands, and both settled down there.

Recent research pointed out that development may have contributed to a rise in the age of marriage in India, but the institution remains strong and is unlikely to break down in the near future. Our study just reinforced this point.

(Sharada Srinivasan is Canada Research Chair in Gender, Justice and Development at the University of Guelph, Canada. Email: sharada@uoguelph.ca. S.Irudaya Rajan is Professor at the Centre for Development Studies, Kerala. Email: rajancds@gmail.com.


A bit old article.
But now we can see situations of girl child in Haryana is far worse than expected.

@ranjeet What is your opinion ?
Is there any change in the mentality of old people in Haryana .




@nair @kurup @Levina @SpArK @acetophenol @Iggy @Marxist @Viny @Syama Ayas
 
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How brides from Kerala are transforming society in dusty towns of Haryana


Sep 22, 2015 11:07 IST

#Girl child #GoodNews #Haryana #India #Kerala Brides #Life #Sex Ratio

20 Comments



  • PRI's The World

    In India, there are towns and villages with a drastically higher number of men compared to women. The northern state of Haryana has the worst gender ratio in the country: 879 women for every 1000 men.

    That’s because of the illegal — but still practiced — sex-selective abortion of female fetuses. In Haryana, many families see daughters as a burden, especially economically. They often have to pay a dowry, sometimes thousands of dollars in gifts, to the son-in-law’s family. Demanding a dowry is now illegal in India, but still a strong tradition.

    When sonograms became available here in the 1970s, some families opted to use that technology to selectively abort female fetuses. The resulting shortage of females really started to be felt a couple decades later. In short, there aren’t enough women in Haryana for men of age to marry. So matchmakers have been setting up marriages with brides from other parts of the country. In an intriguing twist, some of these brides have come from Kerala, a much more progressive state far to the south.

    kerela-bride-PRI.jpg

    Priya and Manish Kumar outside the tea shop where Manish works. Sonia Narang PRI

    Almost eight years ago, I read a Times of India newspaper article about brides who left their hometowns in Kerala to marry men 2,000 miles north in Haryana.

    They had voluntarily agreed to these marriages because they were unable to find grooms locally, mostly because of an unlucky horoscope or their family’s inability to afford a wedding. I made a documentary film about three women from Kerala who had moved to one of India’s most patriarchal regions. And last year, I returned to Haryana to meet them again, seven years later.

    An unlikely pairing

    Priya Kumar lives on the top floor of a building full of shops in the small Haryana town of Hansi, about 100 miles northwest of Delhi. As soon as I arrive at her home, she instantly recognizes me and greets me with a big hug. She tells me she’s kept all the photos I took of her years ago.

    I first met her when filming the documentary, and she had introduced me to some of the women featured in my film. Priya’s husband Manish works at a tea stall nearby.

    He’s shy and soft-spoken, almost the opposite of the jovial Priya, whose giggling is infectious.

    They make me a cup of tea before sitting down to talk about the circumstances of their marriage.

    “I got married in Kerala because I wasn’t getting a match here,” Manish says. “That’s why I had to go there. The rest was written in my destiny.”

    “I didn’t get any proposals in Kerala,” Priya says. “If I did, I might have stayed. Some people said my family wasn’t good or I was fat — they say those kind of things there.”


    A local Haryana man who had married a bride from Kerala found a way to exchange pictures between the two.

    “The boy looked good in the photo,” Priya recalls. “When I saw him in person, he looked good too.”

    After the wedding, Priya took a three-day train journey, her first, from the lush, green fields of rural Kerala to begin a new life in the dusty, crowded towns of Haryana. Manish and Priya’s worlds couldn’t be more different. Kerala has the highest literacy rate in the country, and most women get an education there. Haryana has a deeply patriarchal culture, and women often don’t leave their homes or villages unless they’re with a male relative.

    “In the beginning, I was really upset,” Priya says. “When someone is new here, it’s a given [that] they’ll be upset. There’s a problem with the language, difficulties with the food.” To make matters worse, Priya didn’t know Hindi, the predominant language in Haryana. “I started learning slowly, slowly. In five to six months, I learned Hindi completely,” she says, laughing.

    A network of brides

    This trend of Kerala-Haryana marriages was in full swing seven years ago when I first visited. The number of such couples swelled to more than 200 in this small town and nearby villages. Priya has a network of friends from Kerala here, and she often spends time with them, talking and sharing stories in their native Malayalam language.

    Today, her friend Pushpa has come over to socialize for a few hours. The friends say these Kerala marriages came to a halt a few years ago. Some brides even returned home permanently because of marital issues, including alcoholic husbands or controlling in-laws. But I found that the women who stayed here have slowly transformed their communities.

    Daughters in a region full of boys

    The Kerala brides brought with them values that put daughters on equal footing with sons. In Kerala, sex-selective abortion is practically unheard of. The imported wives aren’t pressured into them here, either, because their in-laws worry they could leave if they’re unhappy. The women return to Kerala to give birth, and come back to Haryana when their babies are a few months old. Both Priya and her friend have one daughter each.

    “My husband was so delighted when our daughter was born,” Priya says. “He distributed sweets to everyone in the neighborhood. There’s really no difference for us to have a girl.”

    “My mother and father think the same,” I tell her.

    “All mothers and fathers should think this,” Priya says, with a cheerful laugh. “They should all have a girl. She is the most valuable. I explain my message to others and tell them there’s no difference. A girl brings honor to the family."

    Because their daughter Kartika is staying with her grandmother in Kerala right now, I ask Priya and Manish to see some photos of her. They pull out a heavy album and flip through the pages of colorful photos.

    “Here’s our little girl,” Manish says. “We celebrated her birthday and called all our friends over.”

    I ask Manish what he thinks about having an only daughter.

    “Everyone has their own way of thinking,” he says. “For us, our daughter is like an image of god.”

    Watch the documentary Kerala Brides below:

http://www.firstpost.com/living/how...ociety-in-dusty-towns-of-haryana-2441696.html


Some are in good condition ,others are not .

And the lady anchor of this program also faced some marriage question in Haryana .:lol:
 
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@ranjeet What is your opinion ?
Is there any change in the mentality of old people in Haryana .

Things are changing but it will take a long time to undo the damage done in the last couple of decades. People of haryana are reaping what they sowed, they are looking for brides everywhere from Bihar, west bengal and now down south.
@Levina started a similar thread to this one few months ago if am not wrong.
 
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I did?
I am not sure i started a thread but i remember having a discussion about it.....with you.
Its usually mallus versus Jaats on PDF. :P :lol:
i have managed to p!ss off quite few of them alone. :oops:
 
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Northerners should stick with Northerners. Marrying a southerner is bound to end in tragedy. Ricken Stark got involved with the South Marriage arrangements, and look at the starks now. Didn't go to well for him did it?
 
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Arent jats not supposed to marry out of their caste? With families openly doing inter caste marriage, its like wow.
 
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its not easy to find a good looking girl in south... although they are more homely...
 
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Even if they had to serch for girls in other states they will still prefer baby boy over baby girl.
 
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Arent jats not supposed to marry out of their caste? With families openly doing inter caste marriage, its like wow.

It's due to lack of options back in the home state, had it been voluntarily I would also welcomed it. It's the ugly reality we Haryanvis have to accept.
 
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