In a worrisome development, nearly 50,000 women of Kashmir have crossed the age bar of getting married owing to the society made unnecessary trends and rituals.
Among the total women having crossed the marriageable age limit, more than 10,000 belong from district Srinagar.
In a survey conducted by a non-profit organization Tehreek e Fala-Ul-Muslimeen, authorities informed the news agency—Kashmir News that nearly 50,000 women in Kashmir valley have crossed the age limit of getting married because of the unnecessary fashion and trend.
Co-founder of Tehreek e Fala-Ul-Muslimeen, Abdul Rashid Naik said that in 2016 the NGO tried to reach out for a particular group of unmarried girls who were not able to get married because of the financial constraints but in ground they found some strange reasons for their late marriages.
“In our scheme we had projected that we will search for a group of 100 unmarried women but during the survey we found thousands of women that were either belonging from the underprivileged families or were destitute and have fall the prey of the new social evils pertaining to the marriage,” Naik said.
He said, “In our survey, we found that most of the women that were not getting married even after attaining the maximum age limit were belonging from the South Kashmir.”
In the survey, the NGO found that “The main reason for the late marriages, especially in the Downtown area of Srinagar, is lack of financial sources and on the contrary, the families of grooms are demanding dowry.”
He said that another important reason for the late marriages is the competition set by a group of people wherein the underprivileged families try to compete with their neighbours belonging from the well-to-do families in give-take formalities.
“Irony is that most of the grooms prefer to marry educated and employed women,” Naik said.
Meanwhile, Chairman of the Jammu and Kashmir Yateem Trust Zahoor Ahmad Tak told KNO that on average the trust conducts 400 marriages of underprivileged destitute and widows across Kashmir every year and almost every second girl has crossed the age of marriage.
“Ninety percent of the women that seek financial help from us for their marriages are over-aged and in most of the cases some have even crossed the maximum age limit of getting married,” Tak said.
Tak said that in the trust, they try to provide assistance to each needy women who seek marriage financial assistance, and in most of the cases who turn up for help belongs from the families that are headed by widows or have no source of income—(KNO)