Research Paper
arrange marriage has been a significant part of Indian culture since the 15th century. However, since its inception, India has undergone immense periods of national growth, causing the country to evolve into an increasingly westernized nation. Because of westernization, India has become a nation that can compete with other countries on a secular scale economically, socially, and politically. This nationalistic fervor amongst India’s youth and because of westernization within cinema, music, literature and art, many of India’s youth have begun to question ancient traditions and religious practices that have been at the foundation of Hindu identity; particularly arranged marriage. As Laila Garda, author of Romance and Sex: Pre-Marital Partnership Formation with Young men and Women of Pune District of India states: “Young people of India are at a crossroads of opposing forces (indiamarks.com)”. Many of India’s youth firmly believe that the concept of an arrange marriage is more of an obligation to family and Swami (Tamil word for God), rather than the preservation of culture. It is a clear violation of human nature to force love between two individuals who have not experienced what love truly is. The obligation to a “dying practice” is the source of turmoil within most Indian households and is a hindrance to social progress.
The Essay on The Perceptions Of Arrange Marriage
The Perceptions of Arrange Marriage by Young Pakistani Muslim Living in a Western Society especially the United and Canada was in part was written by Arshia U. Zaidi who is the Assistant Professor at the University Windsor Ontario Canada. The article will examines about the perception of arrange marriage by the second generation females Muslim from Pakistan who happened to live in the western ...
There are multiple sources of conflict between India’s youth and arranged marriage, the first being a conflict between parent and child. In the Indian culture, it is the parent’s responsibility to find a suitor for their child when he or she is of marrying age; the father’s for his daughter and the mother for her son. These searches are very meticulous. In some instances, some arrangements are nullified because the horoscopes do not match. Most successfully paired arranged marriages occur only within members of the same caste or social class, if both families agree that either child is somewhat attractive, the income of the potential son-in-law and the homeliness of the potential daughter-in-law. The necessary criteria parents follow in order to search for potential matches for their children is also mainly based on their own opinions. For example, Anita Jain, writer for the New York Times recalls a personal experience in which her father placed ads in Indian newspapers in search of a potential suitor:
“Match for Jain girl, Harvard-educated journalist, 25, fair, slim.” I took it as a personal victory that they didn’t include the famous Indian misnomer “homely” to mean domestically inclined. Depending on whether my father was in a magnanimous mood, he would add “caste no bar,” which meant suitors didn’t have to belong to Jainism, an offshoot of Hinduism with the world’s most severe dietary restrictions. Root vegetables like carrots are verboten. Still rather prejudiced against meat-eaters, my father immediately discards responses from those with a “non-veg” diet. There is, however, a special loophole for meat-eaters who earn more than $200,000
This unnecessary pseudo check list places a huge constraint and pressure on many of India’s youth. Young Indians are strongly encouraged not to engage in pre-martial relationship, especially women. Men and women however, do in fact engage in pre-martial relationships and sometimes sex not necessarily in defiance, but human instinct. It is human nature to find something attractive about another human being, to withhold that reaction because of familial pressures and cultural obligations is unfair.
Another conflict that ensues between India’s youth and arranged marriage is on a much more personal level; duty and ambition. Arranged marriages are a child duty to their families, cultural, and to Hinduism that has been an unshakeable fate until recently.
The Essay on Love Marriage Is Better Then Arrange Marriage
For my opinion love marriage is better then arrange marriage. First of all I am telling you arrange marriage. If you are going with arrange marriage there is lot of question coming in your mind. Like what is the nature of your partner, you don’t know anything about your partner, and more important is that you don’t know her past, all that things creates a big problems in your life. But ...