Crosswords6 mins ago
Arranged Marriages
What are the benefits? the setbacks?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The benefits are the political and social bonuses from knowing in advance that your daughter/son will marry into wealth or privilege or at least security.
The setbacks are that such practises should have died out in the Middle ages and no amount of bleating about culture will ever convince me differently. If people are not free to choose their own partner they are not free. If they are not free then they are a form of slave even if they do not realise it. It is an archaic and horrifically small minded practise. Outlaw it and ensure those who practise it are punished. We must progress and not be held back by absurd outdated practises.
I agree with you Clanad. Its just not possible to generalise arranged marriages and term it "emotional and physical blackmail". Arranged marriages work for some and they don't for others, just like there's a probability of a so- called "love marriage" either breaking up or surviving.
The same goes for generalising mixed-race/caste/faith marriages, and marriages where the partners have a wide age difference between them - works for some, doesn't for others.
I personally believe the values to which I alluded, human dignity, freedom of choice, the right to choose your partner, are some of the basic entitlements of human beings. If there was a culture that espoused slavery, and the slaves that were part of that culture were perfectly happy in that role because they knew no different, would you be happy to sit back and allow their culture its freedom? what about cannibalism? Or child sacrifice? There are some values that transcend culture and indeed all differences between the various creeds, colours and customs of humanity and I am far happier standing for them than sitting on the fence and refusing to pass judgement while people suffer.
As for whether the arrangement works, it's completely irrelevant (e.g. slavery) if there are infringements of basic human rights. There is not need to arranged marriage in civilised society, ban it, exactly the same as the caste system. These people are relics of medieval belief systems - time to move on.
The divorce rate is completely irrelevant, except as an example not that they are more stable, but that they are more of a convention than western marriage in this day and age. What matters is the freedom of choice subject to no pressure from parents or otherwise. Yes, as I have already said they are free to enter into arranged marriages should they make the choice, what I do not agree with is the pressure placed on them, both culturally and socially, to make that choice.
My partner comes from a culture where marriages are arranged and he was the only one out of his five siblings who did not marry in that way. It caused many years of anguish for him and his family and I think he would agree with El D on many points. We recently read an article about girls as young as 12 and 13 being forced into marriage, in India, to avoid their families having to look after them. That isn't about two people growing to love each other. I feel sick when I think of the girls and women living in such servitude. El D, remember though that you and I are also exposed to cultural indoctrination and are basing our judgments accordingly.
justineo - I'm totally against that type of marriage where underage people, ie. children are married off because their parents can't look after them.
Also at whatever age, the two parties must be attracted to each other. Its only the other aspects like checking family backgrounds (so the two parties know that they are not getting married to an axe murderer) that are left upto the parents/older people.