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India allows a child bride to annulle her marriage that began when she was just 1 yr old

Posted by on May. 4, 2012 at 12:33 AM
  • 11 Replies

Child Bride Has Marriage Annulled. Laxmi Sargara is Our Hero of the Day


Laxmi holds up her hard-won annulment. (AFP)At an age when most kids are learning to walk, Laxmi Sargara was already married. Her husband, Rakesh, was just three-years-old when family sealed the deal on their fate. She was one.

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Now seventeen years later the couple have set a history-making precedent by having their marriage annulled. But the real hero of this story is Laxmi, now 18, who took remarkably brave steps to reverse the archaic tradition and opened the door for more child brides to follow.

Though technically illegal in India, poor families living in rural areas often rely on these types of partnerships, using kids as pawns in order to provide more financial stability to those who can't afford to feed their children long-term. The fall-out is hardest felt for child brides, plucked from their parents' homes in their teens and forced to live with the husband they wed as a toddler and his family. The girls are expected to play the role of obedient wife and daughter-in-law, and in some instances, are beaten into submission by members of their new family. 

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Just days ago, Laxmi's was informed of her own marriage obligations, promised almost two decades before by her
 Rajasthani elders, and given a move-in deadline of April 24 from her in-laws. 

"I was unhappy about the marriage. I told my parents who did not agree with me, then I sought help," Sargara told AFP. 

She reached to a social worker in Jodhpur who advocates for children's rights through an organization called the Sarathi Trust. The social worker contacted the groom, who was prepared to go through with family arrangement. After some persuading, he finally changed his mind and agreed to an annulment, influenced by the fact that he'd be marrying a woman risking everything to live without him. 

"It is the first example we know of a couple wed in childhood wanting the marriage to be annulled, and we hope that others take inspiration from it," Kriti Bharti, the social worker who orchestrated the annulment, told AFP. 

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A joint legal document signed by both Rakesh and Laxmi made it official and provided a road map for other young brides to do the same. 

"Now I am mentally relaxed and my family members are also with me," said Laxmi, who beamed as she held up the document for photographers. She plans to continue her education in hopes of landing a job so she can maintain her independence. But Laxmi's newfound freedom comes with risk. 

In India, where an estimated 50 percent of girls are married before they're 18, opponents of arranged child marriages can face serious threats, including gang rape, beatings and maiming. On the same day as Laxmi's annulment became official, protesters trying to stop a mass child wedding in Rajasthan were attacked and injured by villagers. When a 13-year-old refused to wed her arranged husband in 2009, her parents withheld her food for two weeks. Amazingly, the young girl prevailed and gained international attention and support for her stance. This week Laxmi moved the needle even further; hers is the first legally-binding child marriage annulment in India's history. 

Child marriages are a worldwide phenomenon, particularly in rural areas with high poverty rates and closely-guarded ancient traditions. In parts of Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, The Middle East and even the U.S. underage children are forced into marriages at the behest of their families. In recent years, American officials have cracked down on fundamentalist polygamist sects in Utah and Texasknown to pair adult grooms with child brides. Other countries provide less legal clout needed to protect young girls. In Yemen where, there is no punishment for families who marry off an underage daughter, about half the country's brides are under 15. In Saudi Arabia, there is no minimum age for marriage at all. An 8-year old girl found this out in 2009, when the Saudi courts denied her annulment request. At the time, her husband was 58. 

Posted by on May. 4, 2012 at 12:33 AM
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Replies:
websorceress
by on May. 4, 2012 at 3:15 AM

wow how sad............how can a 1 yr old be married?? in any country?? this is so sad........but glad she is out......bravo for her and shame on her parents.....

itsallabtthem84
by ~B~ on May. 4, 2012 at 8:33 AM
I find it disgusting that the do this type of stuff.
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mommybug77
by Crystal on May. 4, 2012 at 8:38 AM
Ummm okay. Not even sure what to think
Starleet
by Bronze Member on May. 4, 2012 at 8:41 AM

 Im very happy for her that she was able to do that.


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kanake
by on May. 4, 2012 at 10:34 AM

Good she was able to have it anulled.

sarahjz
by Platinum Member on May. 4, 2012 at 6:13 PM

Good for her!

Ladyisis
by Jennifer on May. 4, 2012 at 8:02 PM

I find child marriages to be disgusting. They are kids and should not have to worry about being wives or husbands. I am happy that she had it anulled. Now maybe when she is ready to get married she can find her own man.

kerryket
by Kerry on May. 5, 2012 at 12:57 AM

That's great!

abernathyvanna
by Vanna on May. 5, 2012 at 2:02 AM

that's awful that her parents forced her into that. But great that she was able to get an annulment

EbonySnow
by Desiree on May. 6, 2012 at 1:59 PM

 that is great for her, hopefully  it is the start of a trend

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