essay
The Vice of Child Marriages
Balyo-Bibaher Dosh
Balyo-Bibaher Dosh
Sarva Subhakari · Calcutta · 1850
7 pages
Summary
Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar’s essay ‘The Vice of Child Marriages’ (Balyo-Bibaher Dosh), originally published in 1850 in the Calcutta-based Bengali periodical Sarva Subhakari and presented here in English translation, mounts a sustained reformist attack on the custom of marrying off pre-pubescent girls. Vidyasagar opens by dismantling the scriptural rationale — the Smriti-Shastra’s promises of Gouri-daan and Prithvi-daan for parents who marry off eight- and nine-year-old daughters — arguing that the rigid corollary that an unmarried menstruating girl damns seven generations of ancestors makes child marriage socially coercive rather than spiritually meritorious. He then catalogues the human costs: marriages contracted before the boys and girls are capable of love or consent, conjugal misery, families riven by ‘discord and disaffection’, and a culture in which young couples ‘practise the arts of titillating’ instead of receiving education.
The essay’s distinctive move is to fuse moral, physiological, and what would later be called liberal-developmental arguments into a single chain. Vidyasagar appeals to medical opinion that children conceived by parents who are not physically mature die in infancy or grow up infirm; he then generalises this into a racial-historical claim that Bengalis and Odias — among whom child marriage is rampant — are ‘feeble’ and ‘cowardly’ in body and mind compared with the warrior peoples of the western parts of the subcontinent and with Europeans, whose children are ‘well-educated and civil in disposition’. The shastric typology of eight marriages is invoked only to note that the older Gandharva and Swayamvara forms presumed adult brides and grooms; the present custom, he argues, is a degeneration, not a tradition.
A significant portion of the essay is devoted to women’s education and to widowhood. Vidyasagar contends that mothers are children’s most influential teachers and that a society which marries girls off the moment they learn the alphabet cannot educate its women at all — so reformers campaigning for female education must simultaneously campaign against child marriage. He closes with an extended denunciation of the cruelties imposed on child-widows: enforced fasting without water, shaved heads, starvation, and the suspicion that drives some young widows into ‘secretive, licentious relationships’ and even feticide. The piece ends self-consciously as a beginning rather than a conclusion, promising further writing on the subject.
Key points
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Attacks the Smriti-Shastra’s framing of child marriage as a sacred ‘gift’ (Gouri-daan, Prithvi-daan) by showing how the threat of damnation for unmarried menstruating girls turns merit into coercion.
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Argues that marriages contracted before children can love or consent produce loveless households marked by ‘discord and disaffection’ and replace education with the ‘arts of titillating’.
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Invokes medical/physiological reasoning: children of immature parents die young or grow up infirm — a primary cause of what he claims is the ‘feeble’ physical and mental condition of Indians compared with Europeans and with people of the western subcontinent.
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Reads the shastric typology of eight marriages (Gandharva, Asura, Rakshasa, Paishach, swayamvara, etc.) as evidence that ancient forms presumed adult brides and grooms; present custom is degeneration, not orthodoxy.
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Couples the reform of child marriage with women’s education: mothers shape children most deeply, but girls married off as soon as they ‘learn the alphabet’ cannot be educated, so the two causes must be pursued together.
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Dedicates the closing section to the cruelties of child widowhood — penances, fasting without water, social stigma — and ties young widowhood causally to feticide and to clandestine relationships born of bodily compulsion.
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Frames the essay as the opening salvo of a longer campaign, conceding that ‘much of logic and reason, as well as exemplary, anecdotal and empirical expositions’ remain to be written.
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Originally published in 1850 in the Bengali periodical Sarva Subhakari; per the editorial footnote, identified by Gopal Halder (1972) as the earliest of Vidyasagar’s reformist writings.
Notable passages
"Vidyasagar opens by dismantling the scriptural rationale — the Smriti-Shastra's promises of Gouri-daan and Prithvi-daan for parents who marry off eight- and nine-year-old daughters — arguing that the rigid corollary that an unmarried menstruating girl damns seven generations of ancestors makes child marriage socially coercive rather than spiritually meritorious."
"mothers are children's most influential teachers and that a society which marries girls off the moment they learn the alphabet cannot educate its women at all"
"enforced fasting without water, shaved heads, starvation, and the suspicion that drives some young widows into 'secretive, licentious relationships' and even feticide"
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