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Just 5% of marriages in India are inter-caste, says report
In a nation where 95% marry within their caste, Mizoram has the most inter-caste marriages.
Image credit:
Narinder Nanu/AFP
Christian-dominated
Mizoram – 87% of the population is Christian – has the most inter-caste
marriages in India, a nation where 95% of Indians marry within their
caste, according to this 2016 report from the National Council of Applied Economic Research, a New Delhi-based think-tank.
Meghalaya
and Sikkim followed Mizoram, with 46% and 38%, respectively, of all
marriages inter-caste, according to The Indian Human Development Survey,
based on nationwide surveys conducted between 2011-'12.
The three north-eastern states were followed by Muslim-dominated Jammu and Kashmir (35%) and Gujarat (13%).
Source: Indian Human Development Survey 2011-12These data belie the perception that with modernity and economic progress, traditional barriers of caste have broken down.
The caste system
is an ancient relic of a social hierarchy once based on division of
labour. People are born into their caste. They cannot change it.
The inter-caste marriage findings are from IHDS-2 (2011-'12), a data set
put together by the University of Maryland and NCAER. A representative
sample of 41,554 households contacted for the study was spread across 33
states and union territories, in rural and urban India. How do people marry in the states of India?
As
many as 95% women surveyed said their husbands’ caste was the same as
their’s. This was the question NCAER used to determine the proportion of
inter-caste marriages: “Is your husband’s family the same caste as your
native family?”
Source: Indian Human Development Survey 2011-12In
Madhya Pradesh, almost all (99%) people were married in their own
caste, followed by Himachal Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, both at 98%.
Indians are legally
allowed to marry outside their caste. A law on inter-caste marriage was
passed more than 50 years ago, but those who do are still threatened or
attacked, often by their own families. Change is slow, but it is coming
As
many as 27% of respondents said they knew people in their communities
who married outside their caste. In cities, this number was 36%.
IHDS-II surveyors asked respondents: “Do you know anyone in your community who has had an inter-caste marriage?”
People are more forthcoming with perception of others than information about themselves, the researchers found.
“Think
of a village pradhan (chief) whom everyone knows… there is only one
pradhan in a village. Knowing someone, particularly someone who has
engaged in “unusual” behavior, like inter-caste marriage, is always
going to be higher than one doing it oneself,” Sonalde Desai, a
demographer, senior fellow at NCAER and Professor of Sociology at
University of Maryland, told IndiaSpend. “I am surprised that only one
in four individuals knows someone [in an] inter-caste marriage.” This article first appeared on Indiaspend, a data-driven and public-interest journalism non-profit.