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Society
There was a time when it was unthinkable for a woman to give up custody rights over her children during divorce proceedings. Increasingly, though, women are beginning to consider the questions 'Do I really want custody?' and 'Is this best for the child?' Mothers find that, in the current social dispensation, when they have custody, it almost frees the fathers from all responsibilities. "My marriage hasn't been working for sometime now and we have decided to go for a divorce. While Vipul might not have fulfilled my emotional needs, I do realize and appreciate that he is a great father to my four-year old daughter. This is why I am seriously thinking of giving up custody rights over Sonalika. The only issue in my mind is that she might feel that her mother abandoned her to follow her own dreams," says Deepanjali Sarkar*, 34, a Delhi-based media professional. This raises another
pertinent question: Do women opt for custody due to social pressure and
internalization of gender roles? Maybe the biggest evidence of this is
that all the women this reporter spoke to were ready to talk
off-the-record but had reservations about being quoted. "While I believe
that that my decision to be a non-custodial parent is in my son's best
interests, I will always have to be apologetic about it. This is
probably the reason that I still am thinking about it," said Aparna
Sachdev, 30, a human resources development executive living in Delhi. There is also been an increase in the number of divorce cases and the growing acceptability of divorce in India, certainly in urban India. According to a recent survey conducted by 'India Today', a prominent weekly magazine, in four metros - Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata - almost 70 per cent of divorce cases now involve couples below 35 years of age, driven apart by stressful lifestyle and intolerance. The survey also found a dramatic increase in the number of cases filed by women. "I feel that I am hardly there for the kid anyway because of my long working hours. But we had a good support system at home with my in-laws. With our marriage breaking up, I just feel that my son is very attached to his grandparents, and that I should probably not take that away from him. This makes me feel that it might be better if I am the non-custodial parent. However, I must say that this is possible only in situations where there is no animosity between the couple. I know I can visit my son anytime I feel like it," says Sachdev. The law highly favors
women when it comes to custodial rights. "In most cases, custody is
awarded to the mother with visitation rights to the father. Unless the
mother is unable to look after the child, she is most likely to get
custody. Of late, there are at least some instances where mothers give
up custody rights. A case that comes to mind is of a mother who went to
the US to pursue further education. Initially she wanted custody, but
later realized that it would not work because the child was being pulled
in two directions by his parents. Finally, the father got custody of the
child," says Osama Suhail, a lawyer dealing with matrimonial cases in
Delhi. Lawyer Mayuri Singh of
Lawyers Collective, however, has not observed this trend in her area of
work - perhaps suggesting that it might still be restricted to a certain
socio-economic strata. "We give legal advice to anybody who needs it, so
mostly people who come to us are the ones who cannot afford it. So, in
the less financially secure strata of society, I have not come across a
woman who willingly gives up custody rights over her children. They do
so only when they are unable to financially support the child for one
reason or another," says Singh. April 2, 2006 The Week of April 2, 2006
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