THE INDIAN HINDU WIDOWS' STIGMA (FINAL PART)

If you haven't read the first & second part, read it here:
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When my Mom was about to be subjected to the heartbreaking ritual during my father's funeral, I stirred up a hue and cry, forbidding the damned women from laying a finger on my mother. I made so much fuss along with my siblings, that the priest finally gave in and the ritual was aborted.



Likewise, us the younger generation of educated, progressive Indians should call for the abortion of such redundant, partisan rites and conforms that are irrelevant to these times.


We should be able to draw the distinction between which cultural rites that we should stick to and those which belong to the dumpster of the present. Garbage has more value than such practices. 

Culture should be ever evolving, not ever devolving or stagnant. If one is adamant to live in the past risks his or her present and future's advancement. I mean, what kind of human being could eschew a woman who has lost her husband who is their mother, aunt, sister, niece, cousin etc? Definitely not an exemplar.

The overall aim of life is to be as happy as we could be and no one has the right to steal the happiness of others. Hindu Indian widows deserve the felicity they had in their maiden and married days. They should flaunt their bindi, wrap themselves in gaily colored sarees, adorn their hair with flowers and make themselves look beautiful. Those are basic human rights and those who think otherwise are nothing but sadists.
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