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Friday, May 16, 2025

Interreligious marriages and upbringing children

by

Vijay Maharaj
305 days ago
20240715
Secretary General of the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha Vijay Maharaj

Secretary General of the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha Vijay Maharaj

ABRAHAM DIAZ

Though we had taught our chil­dren about our re­li­gion, we failed to teach them the prac­ti­cal as­pects of in­ter­act­ing with young peo­ple from oth­er faiths. In the West­ern world, it is quite com­mon that young adults date those from oth­er faiths dur­ing their col­lege years. In al­most all cas­es where a life part­ner is se­lect­ed, the de­ci­sion is made by our young adults with pre-emp­tive ad­vice, guid­ance, or con­sul­ta­tion with their par­ents. Re­li­gious dif­fer­ences could bring com­plex­i­ties in their mar­ried life, start­ing with an un­in­tend­ed re­li­gious con­ver­sion to the faith of his/her in­tend­ed spouse.

For this rea­son, it is in­creas­ing­ly im­por­tant for our young adults to un­der­stand po­ten­tial com­pli­ca­tions be­fore en­ter­ing in­to a se­ri­ous re­la­tion­ship dur­ing the years in which they still re­side un­der their par­ents’ roofs. While in­ter­faith re­la­tion­ships should be based on mu­tu­al re­spect for re­li­gious di­ver­si­ty, some­times ma­jor dif­fer­ences in fun­da­men­tal be­liefs pose dif­fi­cul­ties in find­ing a com­mon ground.

Hin­dus car­ry this tol­er­ant at­ti­tude from In­dia that all re­li­gions are good, all help you at­tain through God, and every­one should re­spect not on­ly their own re­li­gion but oth­er re­li­gions as well. But this tol­er­ant at­ti­tude is not uni­ver­sal. Many fam­i­lies in oth­er re­li­gions be­lieve in their ‘monothe­is­tic’ dog­ma.

Their holy books re­ject what they con­sid­er ‘poly­the­is­tic’ be­liefs of Hin­dus who are of the opin­ion that al­though the ul­ti­mate re­al­i­ty is sin­gu­lar, name­less and form­less; its qual­i­ties can be wor­shipped in many forms. But, this prac­tice is for­bid­den in Chris­tian­i­ty, Ju­daism and Is­lam and pos­es a se­ri­ous is­sue when it comes to pu­ja which is con­sid­ered very bad with the wor­ship of ‘idols’ by Hin­dus.

Is­lam for­bids mar­riage with a non-be­liev­er (in Al­lah). Non-be­liev­ers are ex­pect­ed to con­vert to Is­lam by tak­ing the Sha­ha­da oath, the de­c­la­ra­tion that there is no God but Al­lah and Muham­mad as his apos­tle. A sim­i­lar prac­tice al­so ex­ists in some Chris­t­ian sects where there is of­ten in­tense pres­sure from fam­i­ly mem­bers and the cler­gy to per­form a re­li­gious con­ver­sion of Hin­dus by bap­tism be­fore the church wed­ding. Re­li­gious con­ver­sion may be a mat­ter of just a brief cer­e­mo­ny but do not un­der­es­ti­mate this rit­u­al as a triv­ial mat­ter.

Com­mon in­ter­faith mar­riage prob­lems in­clude, not talk­ing about re­li­gious dif­fer­ences, and in-laws try­ing to im­pose their own re­li­gious be­liefs. One per­son in the mar­riage feels pres­sured to con­vert, mak­ing joint de­ci­sions about re­li­gion and one per­son in the re­la­tion­ship be­comes more re­li­gious. Most con­flicts in in­ter­re­li­gious mar­riages will sur­face af­ter you have chil­dren. For Hin­dus, it is vi­tal that chil­dren from their mar­riage fol­low on­ly the rules of their in­di­vid­ual holy book. A Mus­lim spouse and the com­mu­ni­ty may ad­vise cir­cum­ci­sion and some­times an Ara­bic name. A Jew may not ask for a re­li­gious con­ver­sion for the spouse, but may not be com­plete­ly open to chil­dren fol­low­ing an­oth­er faith.

A Chris­t­ian spouse may re­quire the bap­tism of chil­dren and re­quire them to at­tend church, while you may wish to take your chil­dren to the mandir. Some re­li­gious lead­ers and com­mu­ni­ties would like to use the wed­ding as a tool for their am­bi­tion of re­li­gious ex­pan­sion. There was a case in the USA where in the ab­sence of Sha­ha­da and an Is­lam­ic wed­ding (Nikah) the mar­riage cer­e­mo­ny was de­nounced by a lo­cal imam and most of the rel­a­tives al­so did not at­tend the wed­ding re­cep­tion par­ty.

While ex­per­i­ment­ing with re­la­tion­ships with those from oth­er re­li­gions, be sure to find out if there is go­ing to be any pres­sure to con­vert for you, and your fu­ture chil­dren, from not just your fu­ture life part­ner, but al­so his or her fam­i­ly mem­bers and re­li­gious com­mu­ni­ty.

If some­one you are dat­ing can­not show you the same re­spect and ex­pects you to for­sake your re­li­gion for mar­riage, even for name sake, you must ask your­self, if you are pre­pared to tol­er­ate the in­tol­er­ance be­ing prac­tised against you. Be­fore en­ter­ing in­to a re­la­tion­ship, one should have an open di­a­logue about re­li­gious ex­pec­ta­tions and recog­nise the far-reach­ing con­se­quences.

Though deal­ing with this is­sue ear­ly on will ob­vi­ous­ly be im­por­tant for the well-be­ing of the cou­ple, it is al­so a sig­nif­i­cant is­sue for their chil­dren. As per Hin­du tra­di­tion, a mar­riage is an ir­rev­o­ca­ble, pure and re­li­gious re­la­tion­ship. Through mar­riage, two in­di­vid­u­als sac­ri­fice their in­de­pen­dent iden­ti­ties to form a unit­ed fam­i­ly where both ben­e­fit from each oth­er through their abil­i­ties and emo­tion­al sup­port, just as two wheels car­ry a ve­hi­cle for­ward with ease. Mar­riage is a union of two souls. The pur­pose is not re­strict­ed to sen­su­al plea­sures that mar­riage of­fers but ex­tends to cre­at­ing the foun­da­tion of a home, of hav­ing chil­dren and rais­ing a fam­i­ly.


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