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    Emily Mullins

    11/29/07

    ENG 310C Watts

    Paper # 3

    The Gender Roles of Traditional Hindu Culture in Kamala

    This story of a Hindu child-wife is one of persecution, oppression, and degradation. In

    the novel, Kamala, Krupabai Satthianadhan writes of a young girl trapped in the confines of her

    traditional socio-religious Hindu Caste System and locked in a marriage as a mere child.

    Kamalas new life within her husbands home is depicted through the authors critical opinion of

    gender relations within a traditional Hindu community. Kamala is a young girl living in a

    patriarchal society encumbered by the sexist opinions and restrictions of her society. The gender

    roles of the hegemonic period of Nineteenth Century British Colonialism in India are represented

    by the author as a realistic example of the religious and cultural traditions engrained in a

    patriarchal society juxtaposed against the creeping New World ideologies. The author represents

    Kamalas life experiences and those of whom she interacts with, so as to resonate with the social

    consciousness of the reader. The author shows how the gender roles within the novel are not only

    stereotypical and part of the uncompromising orthodox Hindu society, but their existing

    traditional scope of degradation, injustice, oppression, and victimization towards women is in dire

    need of a reform. Satthianadhan, through a Christian critique of Hinduism, depicts Kamala as a

    realistic and distressing representation of a woman of the upper-caste Hindu system and the

    prescribed gender roles wives must adhere to within the house of their in-laws and in society.

    The gender roles of husband and wife within this Hindu society are unusual and other-

    worldly to a Western reader. The Hindu wife is scarcely allowed to exchange words or looks with

    their husbands, and they often act like strangers in one anothers presence. Women are made to

    keep silent, and to cover their head when their husband enters a room or approaches them.

    Women are to stand aside, out of the way, and even when spoken to, they are to answer in the

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    most distant manner possible. Kamala was not allowed to even lift her eyes in her husband,

    Ganeshs presence. Women are thought have any feelings or to have anything of use to say aloud.

    Kamala was treated similarly to other wives, as a sort of chattel made to give him pleasure and

    minister to his wants (Satthianadhan 99). As his property, she was a creature to be despised and

    ill-treated (Satthianadhan 62). Kamalas friends even informed her that future beatings were

    normal, and that it was a womans lot. Bhagirathi tells Kamala that one day not a day will pass

    without her getting a good beating from her husband, and Rukhma informs her it will be for her

    misconduct, of course as she is the evil influence (Satthianadhan 45). However innocent the

    daughter-in-law is, she will always be the one to be punished.

    Kamala, during her time in her in-laws house, recognizes her duty as a child-wife to put

    before her own self. Her domesticity is wrought by her low position in her new household and

    she is to be kept behind closed doors. Kamala is thought of as less than a servant in her husbands

    eyes, having to submit to both mental and physical anguish. It was but the old rooted prejudice

    in the Hindu mind against women, a prejudice Kamala didnt understand from the people

    surrounding her (133). From The Margins of Hindu Marriage emphasizes how the world of

    women literally becomes their household, and the only two basic roles for women [are] daughter

    and wife (Harlan 13). Kamala and other Hindu brides must devote themselves to their sacred

    religion and to serving their new homes, as they have no control in their marriages and in their

    lives. Hindu child-brides are confined and oppressed in a mans home and world.

    Kamala is not just a woman, but her new family thinks she is penniless, leaving her

    doubly colonized (Satthianadhan 54). Women were only esteemed and respected in their culture if

    they had money. Moreover, women in Kamalas society were confronted and confined by

    artificial barriers, designed to force the wife to submit to every tyranny within her in-laws house

    and to suffer silently as fate and circumstance would have it. It was Fate who minded human

    affairs and even though she sometimes felt God wasnt there, she had to trust in His plan and the

    devices he uses to challenge her (Satthianadhan 85). And however she tried to dream and hope for

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    a better life, whims and wishes were extreme thoughts to a Hindu girl, and Kamala had to rely on

    her faith to escape in her mind her prison-like home.

    Kamala, as a child-wife, is helpless, ignorant, and confused by the degrading behaviors

    and indifferent attitudes towards her presence. Her experiences within her new home portrays

    how these traditional gender roles function in the humiliation and disgrace of Hindu women in

    their specific socio-religious customs. Kamala depicts the mental state of a Brahman class girl

    fulfilling her role in the form of domestic help in an orthodox Hindu home. Her place in the house

    is shown most explicitly when looking at the Cinderella-esque relationship with her mother-in-

    law. Kamalas mother-in-law, along with others, only showed Kamala hatred when all she craved

    was love. Ganeshs mother was very ill-natured and tyrannized over the little girl in a

    shameful manner (Satthianadhan 60). Indian mother-in-laws are so terrified they will lose their

    sons and that he will come to only care for his wife, they do their best to execute all sorts of evil

    methods to crush the young girls spirit and to come between their son and daughter-in-law. This

    mother-son relationship is most unusual because it seems to represent a matriarchal power within

    a patriarchal house and society. The son wants to do his best to please his domineering mother.

    Ganesh often sat by his mother, petted by her, indifferent to his wife who hung back in the

    shadows (Satthianadhan 63). Her mother-in-law was so jealous of Kamalas relationship with her

    son in the beginning, that she prohibited the couple from having any liberty of speech or action in

    her presence.

    Tradition is the means of trapping Kamala in an unhealthy state of being, as well as in an

    unhappy home and marriage. Convention and custom are apparent in the institutionalized

    patriarchal ideals of their Hindu culture. The expectations of Indian women are to be passive,

    silent, feeble, yet virtuous while being physically imprisoned, emotionally and mentally

    degraded, and made to grapple with the blame for any unhappiness displayed by her husband.

    Ganesh, selfish and indolent, at first breaks the mold while he desires to teach Kamala when he

    sees her knack for learning and remarkable talent for reading, but then, similar to the rest of his

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    family members, changes in his attitude towards his wife, becomes indifferent, and ceases to

    teach her. He has not the courage, nor the wisdom to see past the subservient nature of his

    traditional Hindu culture. And as many other Indian men do, he sees women as mere appendices

    of their great selves (Satthianadhan 7). He uses Kamala to fuel his ego, and only his own self-

    involvement ignited him to awaken her mind. In the end, he becomes convinced that traditional

    wives were not to be cleverer than their husbands, for he was the one who should be allowed to

    study and gain knowledge. These new-fangled ideas of a reform of gender equality of British

    ideology were absurd and not to be acknowledged within a traditional society.

    Hindu socio-religious convention doesnt allow for womens intellectual development, as

    well as Kamalas desire to break the bonds of orthodoxy (Satthianadhan 9). Kamalas short

    childhood was also different from other girls, in the respect she had a father who was vastly

    knowledgeable of the world around them and taught her as well as loved her. This love was not

    common place in a traditional Hindu father daughter-relationship, and neither was her informal

    education. Education was mainstay in a mans world. Kamala, having been raised by her father, a

    sanyasi, gathered some awareness of the world, through her fathers teaching. She was, before her

    marriage, brought up in the innocent freedom of her mountain home, [where] she could feel free

    like the air around her and was untrammeled by caste superstition and fear (Satthianadhan 86).

    Her new family though, saw her as having lost all the instincts of a civilized life as she behaved

    differently than other girls her age (Satthianadhan 63). Her Father, Narayen, was all she had since

    birth, as he was her nurse, her confidant, and her instructor (Satthianadhan 32). His cultivated

    mind, however overshadowed by the dominant English learning, allowed him to see the

    importance of his daughters learning. His love of nature and wandering was also passed to his

    daughter, and he expected her to be happy in any condition with the peace and calm she received

    from nature.

    Kamala faces the many adversities of a child-marriage. In their restrictive culture, women

    of this caste are not to have access to education, or to a career, or even to have knowledge of the

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    world beyond what lies in their house and yard. Education, being the most important attribute in

    life, is also found to be the most lacking in the Indian women demographic. Satthianadhan

    opposes the orthodoxy of their culture, and acknowledges the social and cultural reform the

    British imperialism could bring about. Female education was seen as a vehicle for womens

    liberation, and those who believed a womans place was in the home did not see fit for women to

    have their intellect awakened. The British colonialists, however, saw the downtrodden and

    helpless Indian women, and thought they could bring them out of their degradation through

    education (Satthianadhan 3). This new view did not blend well with that of the traditional

    Hindus, who rejected the colonialist ideologies that would promote individualism and self-

    awareness among their women. British principles represented a movement towards developing

    womens intellect, but Indian men wanted their wives and children to remain inferior and

    subsidiary. Kamala, who wanted so badly to be educated, or at least to gain some form of

    knowledge of the exterior world, serves as a symbol for protestation against the norm. Yet Ganesh

    crushes her desire for intellect by failing to continue his teaching, and handing the reins to his

    mother and sisters.

    Ganesh represents a traditional Hindu male. He is heavily patriarchal, self centered and

    spoiled. He is also impetuous, indulging, vain, and sexist. In this critique of the Hindu culture, he

    is the stereotypical male, who only uses his wife to administer to his needs, and who uses his

    female family members to fuel his ego and vanity. In Kamala and Hindu culture, the wife, child

    or not, is seen as the property of her husband. In a Hindu marriage, the silken knot, never to be

    untied, which untied them for life, was tied. Living or dead she was the property of the man

    whoever he might be and this law was never to be broken (Satthianadhan 37). Their marriages

    become like living grave[s] (Satthianadhan 59). There is an inner turmoil which exists in the

    heart of a Hindu child-bride. She is separated from her husbands family by artificial barriers of

    tradition and caste, as she is forced into womanhood and her innocent childhood is prematurely

    ended.

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    Fate deals greatly with an Indian womans conviction to maintain and abide by the

    prescribed gender roles of her community. Kamalas crude religious convictions and acceptance

    that it was her fate to suffer amongst those who showed no love or care for her, provided her

    with the will to maintain a moral code to abide by and to always behave well and have love for

    others despite the ways other treat her (Satthianadhan 58). In this great lesson of humanity she

    saw how good deeds were rewarded and bad deeds punished even in the next life, how humility

    had its reward and how one always had to be virtuous and respectful, even in trying times

    (Satthianadhan 58). Child-brides, even of upper caste status or of wealth had to submit to their

    fate and were unable to acquire their due in the world.

    Kamala as the protagonist woman is again and again let down, and neglected by men in

    her life. And after feeling so much hatred and neglect, she at first resigns herself to fate, silently

    accepting her place as a servant wife in her husbands familys home until it becomes too much to

    bear. At a certain breaking point, Kamala defies these stereotypical female roles, and begins a

    small journey of self-liberation by defying her husband in an act of tumultuous rebellion. She

    steps out of the normal passive gender roles, and does not suppress her feelings towards her

    husbands lover, Sai, a woman who also defies the prescripted female roles of a Hindu society.

    Sai, who used intellect, scheming, abrasive and non-traditional feminine wiles to make Ganesh

    fall for her was unusually allowed to behave in such a way. Ganesh, when confronted by Kamala

    while he is with Sai, even asks her, Who are you to interfere with my pleasure? (135). This

    would be a most unusual question under most circumstances to ask ones wife, but not in a Hindu

    household. According to From the Margins of Hindu Marriage, only if the wife takes a lover it is

    considered adultery, a violation of religious laws, but if a man takes a mistress, it is simply the

    way of the world-the mans world (Harlan 161). Yet even after Kamala has confronted her

    husband, she still wonders if she is to blame for his actions, displaying a truly Hindu woman

    mindset.

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    Nature played a large role in this novel, as Kamala sees the winds, the rivers, and the

    sands as representing movement and freedom, a liberation from her current state of traditional

    domesticity, ensnared in a life without love and happiness. The fields, the rocks, and the flowers,

    brought quietness and peace to her and filled her heart with a calm joy (Satthianadhan 54). She

    yearned for a happy home and a peaceful mind, as well as the love of those around her. Yet, she

    was neither happy nor peaceful nor content. The freedom and happier existence the air and other

    forms of nature presents, gave her hope in the midst of her struggle and conflict. From her father,

    she was taught that nature was kinder to [them] than human beings (Satthianadhan 120). Nature

    indicates to her a sense of freedom and the promise of escaping the confines of her existence. The

    young physician, Ramchamber tried to use her love of nature to convince Kamala into coming

    away with him, and even though the thought of being as free as the air and having a man to love

    and cherish her, she lets her religion [have] its victory in the end, and tradition wins out

    (Satthianadhan 155).

    At the end of the novel, Kamala has purged herself of the sexist encumbrances of her

    Hindu patriarchal society, yet she chooses to live her life within the parameters of her long-

    established tradition. It is difficult for her to entirely cleanse herself completely of the religion

    and the way of thinking she has become accustomed to, that which has been engrained in her

    mind and soul. Satthianadhan writes of a young child-bride of the Brahman Caste in the Hindu

    Caste system in an attempt to challenge readers usual ways of thinking and to show the need for

    a reform of this traditional system. Women of the Hindu society are treated poorly and given no

    respect, with their only life fulfillment to be a slave in their new familys homes, and to behave as

    a servant bending to the every whim of their husbands. These feelings and notions are purely

    Hindu, and are the outcomes of wrongs committed for generations on the poor unprotected Hindu

    woman (Satthianadhan 114). Kamala, in the end, comes out still different from other girls, as

    she had learned to think and to feel, and to acknowledge what existed outside of male

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    indifference, and a prison-like existence, confronted by traditional socio-religious constructed

    barriers, placed between genders.