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Arranged marriage

(58 Posts)
glammanana Fri 16-Mar-12 08:55:49

bagitha

bagitha Fri 16-Mar-12 08:37:09

That story shows what it's really about: the supposed parental "ownership" of children. It's easy to justify what works, even if people are essentially coerced, but there is no justification for the kind of abuse that carol's story and greatnan's have highlighted. It may not matter (note the word 'may') if marriage is about love or 'just' a social structure for raising kids, but forcing people into relationships is wrong in my book. I agree with greatnan that not all cultures are equal. Some practices are not acceptable however traditional they might be. Or, to put it another way, some attitudes are simply less civilised than others.

I shall now duck out of firing range.

Carol Fri 16-Mar-12 07:58:51

I read in the news a couple of days ago that a young girl being forced to marry her rapist had killed herself. I wonder if this is the same story being misreported as usual?

Yes, I agree with you Greatnan - there is a world of difference between young girls being exploited and those being allowed to choose.

Before I retired, I was involved in a case where a mother had sent her two daughters, 12 and 14, over to Pakistan to be married off. They disappeared from school and the head teacher contacted the police. The girls returned after a month, both 'married' and their husbands still in Pakistan arranging to travel over here. The girls were interviewed at the Rape Crisis Centre and placed with foster parents, then the mother was prosecuted and given a 2 year sentence for conspiracy to allow her children to be sexually abused. Her younger children had to live with their auntie and were given no explanation as to where their mother was, nor were they allowed to see her, as she was judged to be likely to groom them for sexual abuse. No mention was made of their father throughout all this - he just disappeared!

glassortwo Fri 16-Mar-12 07:50:38

In my last house the couple that lived next door were products of arranged marriage, the husband British born and the wife Indian born. The wedding was arranged he went over for the wedding and brought her home, her first memory of England was being taken for fish and chips she was appalled by this favourite British meal.

They have 2 boys and appeared very happy, she ran the household and stayed at home with the children while he went out to work, as they years went on she grew more independent but she always bowed to him.

But added into the mix his Mother also lived with them and I think she was the head of the household.

He appeared to have great respect for his wife and they made a good couple but I would not say they loved each other and she said that was by far the better way in a marriage than to have the heart making decisions.

Personally I would have hated that choice being made by my Parents, heaven forbid the choice that would have been made, the mind boggles.

Greatnan Fri 16-Mar-12 07:40:01

A woman who is educated and independent might accept an arranged marriage and be perfectly happy, but what about the very young girls who are married to much older men, often relatives, for family reasons or to get a visa for someone. We are talking about the most intimate of relationships and some women get to see their husbands only days before they have to sleep with them.
If the woman is given a free choice of several possible husbands, I suppose it is not much different from using a dating agency - it is the element of compulsion I find abhorrent.
In Morocco, a 16 year old girl has been forced to marry her rapist to save the family's 'honour'. In too many cultures, women are still treated as commodities to be traded by men. I am sick of hearing that I should respect all cultures equally - some are not worthy of respect.

Carol Fri 16-Mar-12 07:16:02

I have two friends whose marriages were arranged. Both are British born and their parents lived in Pakistan until the 60s. One friend says she has been brought up in a culture where attachment and bonding are seen as a bi-product of a good marriage and she doesn't really accept the concept of love. She is happy and has three children, whose marriages won't be arranged. She says her parents would have given her another choice if she had been very unhappy about their choice of son-in-law. The other friend says it's a good job she loves her husband, because her parents gave her no choice - they sent her to Lahore to be introduced to her prospective husband and relatives, and she was married within a month, at the age of 16. She has two children. Both are professional women with higher degrees, they dress in western clothes, go to the mosque and they regard themselves as equal heads of the household with their husbands.

Who's to say which culture has got it right? I wouldn't want to have had a marriage arranged for me, and my marriage lasted 15 years but ended in divorce. I have noticed that my friends don't spend too much time with their husbands, who work very long hours and are busy outside work with community responsibilities. Perhaps they have found a balance that works well for them.

bagitha Fri 16-Mar-12 06:48:54

They have presumably been brought up within a culture of arranged marriages which would predispose them (a bit at least) to acceptance. I wouldn't have wanted my parents to arrange anything like that for me and I wouldn't have wanted to arrange anything for my daughters.

I think the problem with the culture of arranged marriages arises when the parties are not happy with the arrangements. Their choices are limited if the parents insist on the arrangement.

I think my vote will always go for doing it oneself or, expressed in a different way, for thinking parents should accept that their kids grow up and let them make their own choices. OK so you might get it wrong but so does half the rest of the world. That's life.

grannyactivist Fri 16-Mar-12 00:53:50

My last lodgers were a couple from India who recently got married. It was an arranged marriage, but they both agreed to it after having been introduced and each being told about the other. Their families thought that it would be a good match and by the time the couple came to stay with me it was obvious that they were both very pleased with the pairing. They were both very supportive of arranged marriages - I was wondering what Gransnetters think?