Wicked Widows GÇô Tanika Sarkar
Wicked Widows GÇô Tanika Sarkar
Wicked Widows GÇô Tanika Sarkar
The colonial state had to bear the brunt of the legislation, too.
The remarriage law was perhaps one of the triggers of 1857.
The Queen’s Proclamation of 1858 assured no more religious
interference.
Ultimately, the 1856 Act failed socially – it did not enable renewed
conjugal-sexual life for the majority of Hindu widows.
By the 1860s, the number of widow remarriages had tapered
off – only 60 in Bengal in all this time. (Interestingly, most were
in upper caste families where the prohibition was the
strongest.)
In Bombay + South, the returns to intense reformist widow
remarriage campaigns were disappointing.
In North, Swami Dayanand tried to force childless widows and
widowers to meet and breed, and then forgo all connection
(authoritarian, non-consensual). His Arya Samaj did not
encourage remarriage of this or any other form.
In 1872, a radical marriage regulation was introduced – inter-
caste, consensual, adult remarriages between partners who
had to renounce their religious denomination. Many widows
married under this 1872 Act instead of the 1856 Act.
The state acted much more quickly on the issue of widow remarriage
than sati (where the debate went on for sixty years). Perhaps
because sati debates happened in the orientalist phase of scriptural
exploration, whereas widow remarriage was discussed in a climate of
utilitarian impatience with traditions.
2.
Colonial authority only came into picture for reform when
community leaders could prove that an existing law contravened
more authentic religious prescription.
To stamp out infanticide, Sir John Shore and Sudder Diwani Adalat
suggested criminalizing concealed pregnancies, rejected by law
commission-make a suspected offence into a positive offence.
It was suggested that a solution to this would be to formally legalize
widow remarriage-was strongly advised against by courts as doing so
would interfere - widow’s ‘life of chastity and privation’ was both
‘religious and a moral obligation’.
While some Indian reformers spoke of gender equality and reform
that detached itself from scriptural injunctions-colonial rulers were
satisfied in consolidating a patriarchy in India that was even more
extreme than Victorian morality.
Perhaps, India was a playground to them for a different social
imagination, something they could not do back home. So what
caused the change in 1856?
While Sat abolition took 60 years, widow remarriage fairly quick-
though initially rejected in 1830s, revived again with Vidyasagar’s
plea to have a legislation in favor of it.
Sati was abolished in an orientalist phase, whereas widow remarriage
was in an impatient utilitarian phase with traditional institutions
having the upper hand at the moment.
Scope was modest making it easier to pass, (not binding like sati on
those who didn’t agree with the terms) + Vidyasagar’s scriptural
arguments were included and not utilitarian transformative designs
and social intervention.
Unlike Sati, remarriage campaign was rather entirely an Indian
initiative (Missionaries were more involved in the cause of peasants
of indigo plantations as well as focused on the lower castes as there
was much more scope for conversions there).
Although there was discussion of direct representation of Indian
opinion, especially in issues such as remarriage, it was decided that
Indian opinion will be consulted representatively indirectly.
3.
There is a distinction between transgression and prescription:
defiance from prescription does not invalidate normativeness of
prescriptive laws- people who have defied prescriptive laws came to
constitute a minority group-‘social outcasts’-rarely claiming explicit
terms for their transgression.
Norms are stratified-lower castes are not required to observe upper-
caste domestic practice. Eg. Higher chaste model amongst upper
caste and alternatives said to imply lowliness. Upper-caste gender
rules continuously encourage lower castes to move up towards them
if possible.
Marriage was sacramental-girl had to be married off, lose her
childhood, when the husband dies she is supposed to be condemned
to a life of abstinence but! Widower is expected to marry again to
conduct rites of a householder.
Hindu marriage did not depend on consummation for formalization-
complete the moment when rituals are performed (still the same
today :p).
Wife expected to be subordinate to father in childhood, husband in
youth and son in old age.
Manu: Wife-Ardhangini-half-body of her husband =>even after his
death wife lived on through him, hence marriage never ended. Harsh
regime of self-deprivation, renunciation from all pleasures of life.
Texts mention that thus, good woman does not remarry and
marriage rites apply only to a virgin.
Vidyasagar: 5 conditions: ‘if husband was ruined, dead, renunciate or
impotent or outcast, under such special circumstances wife is
allowed to take another husband’: Parashara.
Nandapandita commentary: these conditions are contingent, do not
apply to a married woman.
Woman is defined as embodying lack of self-possession and
autonomy.
4.
Child marriage-widespread amongst all castes: 1891 census-widows
under 10 years formed 6 per cent of total married girls (most of the
widows for sure)
An elaborate mechanism was constructed for ensuring a regime of
depravity.
Strict scant diet devoid of apparent ‘aphrodisiac’ containing
properties, denied of many pulses to avoid the body from going into
heat.
Dress: white, no jewelry (symbolize status as non-wife).
Debarred from all rituals and auspicious ceremonies. Some children
sent back home, married mothers would enjoy good food and jewelry
and sleep with their husband to demarcate her absolute difference
from the widow.
Paradox within widowhood regime: expected to do this on her own
will at the same time to be coerced.
Like the Thugees- crime was not due to individual action but social
status
Male guardians could sexually exploit the widow-no stigma arose
here.
5.
Familial policing stringent-societal pressure –loss of caste for entire
family for such shameful activities.
Secret abortions or infanticides, increasingly common among
widows. Often such widows were even poisoned for illicit
pregnancies and many went missing.
A Calcutta Coroner reported: A widow who was married at 10 and
widowed at 13 had been thrown out of her matrimonial home and
somewhere during her search to shelter she had become pregnant.
She received no help from any family members or neighbours and
eventually ended up coming to her old ancestral home dying due to a
miscarriage or self-induced abortion.
Although there was a law that regardless of her chastity, a widow
could inherit her deceased husband’s property, the act had not
disrupted the penal regime of social ostracization. Colonial law feebly
tried to interfere in the normative order.
6.
Although customary law allowed her share in husband’s property,
she was more often cheated than not and there was no property she
could inherit from her father.
Normative discipline protected itself further owing to her economic
vulnerability.
Further, childless younger widows were worst off. Reformers were
embarrassed to find a disproportionately large number of widows in
Calcutta’s brothels
Later anxieties developed over losing the Hindu population if widows
were to elope with Muslims (who permitted remarriage) or through
conversion.
Inheritance rights to sons born out of remarriages: such sons were
polluted and so could not be allowed to override superior claims of
pure born even if more distant male heirs.
Hindu marriage, succession and inheritance-collective lineage
decisions. Law? Operated on narrow, individualistic basis thinking it
only concerns 2 partners.
The only category of sons who could inherit: dattak-adopted or
auras-born out of legal father. (pournabhabas-second marriage son)
Vidyasagar: the ancient times did not recognize pournabhabas, but
now they are engrossed under the category of legal heir (auras) and
so should be entitled to property. Colonial government accepted this
idea.
BUT: tried to disarm opposition (orthodox) by laying down that the
remarried widow could forfeit all her rights to the first husband’s
property on remarriage, even though lower castes may allow for it.
There was opposition for this, law should be most ‘enabling’,
conferring new rights not abolishing old ones.
Further! The remarried widow would lose all custodial rights to the
children from her first marriage. Surprisingly no opposition to this.
(because they should along with forfeiting sexual desire and property
rights, also forfeit custody of children in the first marriage).
Above two parts of the law indicate the strong hegemony of
orthodoxy.