Thursday, March 25, 2010

Arranged marriage


A cousin of mine recently got married. People are always surprised when I mention that arranged marriage is still a vital part of Indian culture, and that smart, attractive young people, raised and educated in the West, still choose an arranged marriage when trying to find a mate.

To give some background, India is a nation obsessed with weddings. As a young person, when people meet you they will ask you two questions: your name, quickly followed by “Are you married?” If the answer is No, then they immediately offer to set you up with someone they know who's looking (usually a neighbour's friend's second cousin), and if you remain unmarried past a certain age, you relegate yourself to the status of Social Pariah.

Arranged marriages have been occurring since the dawn of Marriage itself. They have been used to unite families, broker diplomatic relationships between nations and ensure pure bloodlines in matters of inheritance. Today, they occur for far more simple, human reasons--to find a mate that's compatible.

To me, it makes perfect sense. Arranged marriages are founded on those things that help a relationship last: similar family backgrounds, shared values and goals, common ideas on what you want from your family and how you wish to raise your children, a shared cultural heritage, mutual respect, and a completely realistic view of what a marriage is. Moreover with the support of both sides of the family, and the ongoing help of a community around you, it's much harder for those marriages to fail because there is a network to rely on when the going gets tough, as it inevitably will for all relationships.

The idea that love is more important that any of those things strikes me as not just ridiculous, but naive in the extreme. When one in three marriages ends in divorce in Australia (higher in other Western countries), its staggers me that we still believe this is the best way to find a life-partner. Anyone that's ever been in love can attest to the volatility of its character, the swiftness with which it can appear and evaporate and the effect it can have on one's ability to make intelligent choices regarding a mate.

In modern-day India, arranged marriages are still about choice. Like parents everywhere else in the world, Indian parents want what's best for their children. They attempt to choose mates they think their son or daughter would like and be able to build a life with, and of course, the final decision lies with the children. And yes, love has no place in that initial foray, but most people will tell you that after a time, founded on qualities like trust, mutual respect and the building of a shared life, love grows. A lovely idea when you think that often, it's the other way around.

7 comments:

  1. You get lucky if you can fall head over heels then reinvent your love time and time again as you both learn, change and evolve – together. Fingers crossed! SOPPY MUCH!

    I like that you pointed out all the common factors that makes it easier to last in an arranged marriage – but life shouldn't be easy as pie now should it? :)

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  2. Thought provoking blog... and being one of your aforementioned failed marriage statistics, you would think that I was be all for arranged marriages since I obviously can not make a good choice on my own.

    Like an arranged marriage, my marriage did look good on paper, all the right future directions, family approval and that essential ingredient that yes, this is the man I want to spend the rest of my life with. And then when my marriage started to fail, I did have all the support of my family and being Catholic we are very much of the mindset, marriage is forever and its hard work so you don’t jump ship at the slightest ripple.

    That being the case, we did go through rounds and rounds (and rounds) of counselling, fresh starts, trying again, moving countries to try again, talking about issues, trying to relax and not talk about issues so we could just get on with it everything. But still it failed. All that trying and failing took 7 years.

    Having lost so much of late twenties and early thirties trying to make it work, I almost wish I hadn’t had so much family support and pressure to stay together because it extended the inevitable by 6 years. And that’s an exhaustingly long time.

    Marriage is hard but surely it shouldn’t be all hard work? And if you don’t have that passionate evolving love Ivana spoke of to fall back on when the going gets tough then what do you really have but what constitutes a business partner?

    A x

    PS. Also sometime the most unlikely candidate is the only one that makes you feel truly loved.
    (To use Ivana’s vernacular “SOPPY MUCH”...)

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  3. Fantastic post. I am an Indian, and (Arranged)married for the last 12 years (my parents are married for 40+ years now). When it comes to arranged marriage you have one wonderful thing with you that is "Support from parents" to make sure the marriage life goes in the positive direction. Ex: If I am angry or upset and do something to my wife, my father is the first guy to pitch in and say son you are wrong, look at the problem from the girl's angle and so on so forth. Its the same way with my wife, if she is upset, her parents will pitch in and calm her, end of the day as a living thing ( too crude) we are trying to survive and reproduce.

    Am I here to sell Indian Stuff here NO
    Yes we do have polygamy ( multiple marriages)
    Cheating partners
    High divorce rate (50 % of love marriages fails and end up in divorce)

    However when it comes to Arranged marriage I get the support from my family and she gets the same from her side, Result ?? next generation is well of , they are safe, secured, emotionally stable and so on.

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  4. This is a great post and enjoy the look of your blog very much. Thanks for sharing.

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