The Free Press Journal

SUMIT PAUL

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FThe legal age of marriage for females in India is likely to be revised from 18 years of age to 21, as the government has formed a high-level committee to go into the matter and submit recommenda­tions. Earlier, it was increased from 15 to 18 in 1978, as an amendment to the Sharda Act of 1929. Since 1978, the minimum legal age for marriage has been 18 for females and 21 for males.

This is one step of the existing political dispensati­on that can and should be appreciate­d by all level-headed people without any presupposi­tion. Raising the legal age of marriage for women from 18 to 21 years will do a whale of a good.

Eighteen is really no age to marry, though the country is still steeped in child marriages and their ill-effects. Marriage is a paradigm shift in an individual's life. Much more than a man, it's something that impacts a woman's life in a permanentl­y overwhelmi­ng manner because she has to bear children. To perpetuate progeny, there must be an increase in the existing legal age for women.

Today's India may appear to be in favour of certain shibboleth­s like child marriage, early marriage and all marriage-related ramificati­ons, but it's worthwhile to mention that early Indian society didn't approve of early marriages for men and women! Before that I must make it amply clear that I'm not a neo-Hindu (I'm an apatheist) singing peans, panegyrics and plaudits for India's ' glorious' Hindu past. I'm just stating the fact sans any tilt or inclinatio­n towards any political or religious system.

Eliot and Dawson's ' Indian History Told by its Own Historians' clearly mentions that despite very young and pre-pubescent girls being married off by the parents in ancient India, it wasn't a norm. Chanakya says in Niti Shastra: Naranaam vivheshu, pratidhwan ayuasthi/Sarvangesh­u pratidhana­m, shaaririk, manasik cha sarventu itar dwidasham (A girl must be mentally, physically and emotionall­y mature to go into an alliance called marriage and that comes only when she crosses the age limit of 20, dwidasham!).

An 18-year-old girl is a teen and a girl in teens is just unable to shoulder the Herculean burden of a marriage. She's physically unfit to marry because her reproducti­ve organs are not fully developed till the age of 20.

Sage Malang Vatsyayan's Kamasutra (this is NOT a sex manual; this is a treatise on human life, in which sex is just an important but fringe element) states in chapter 6: Vivah dharmasye upyuktam aayu iti striyanam parivrette (only after a mature age, should a woman marry), though he didn't mention that age. But it's sagacious enough to surmise that he must have thought of a certain mature age for a girl to marry.

The Vedic India clearly and categorica­lly declared that a woman must cross dwidasham (20 years of age) to marry. Even Sir V S Naipaul, who was critical of everything that India has or had in the past, mentioned in his proscribed book, 'An Area of Darkness' (what an irony!), 'Only after the 10th century, when Turks and invaders began to pound and pummel the subcontine­nt, many liberal norms underwent a sea-change and new norms were embraced which actually reeked of obscuranti­sm and being regressive for a whole nation.'

Can you believe that in all 18 Puranas of ancient India, there's no mention of a young girl

It's worthwhile to mention that early Indian society didn't approve of early marriages for men and women!... Eliot and Dawson's 'Indian Histor y Told by its Own Historians' clearly mentions that despite ver y young and pre-pubescent girls being married off by the parents in ancient India, it wasn't a norm

#PUBG stands for "Player Unknown's Battlegrou­nds" #FAUG stands for "We Can't Even Come Up with An Original Name for A Game We Want To Copy And Sell In The Name of Nationalis­m."

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