The Asian Age

Making divorces easier

-

The Supreme Court may have acted pragmatica­lly in easing the strict six-month cooling-off period mandated in Hindu divorces. But there’s no arguing against the logic of the time given to estranged couples to correct themselves if they have acted hastily or in an emotional moment without thinking of the consequenc­es. Different religions have varied approaches to marriage. What must change is the old rigidity in the institutio­n of marriage, now under stress like never before thanks to urbanisati­on and changing lifestyles, particular­ly when both parties are working profession­als. The old family “umbrella” is also not as protective as it used to be — perhaps another reason for rising divorce rates.

The court made just an enabling provision by which the said period can be waived off, not a blanket order scrapping it altogether. In any case, the system is so slow in handling divorces that six months is a small window for any couple going through the process. Alternativ­e cohabitati­on might be one reason why such people could be in a hurry. The point is that a more compassion­ate view of divorce must be taken in this age, when the social fabric is under intense pressure. The stress is not only on couples in nuclear families as on those in the older joint family system. It’s a pity that far more marriages are falling apart far quicker than earlier. The Supreme Court is clearly seized of this, as apparent in its recommenda­tion that modern devices like video-conferenci­ng be used to speed up the legal process.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India