The battle for same-sex marriage is essentially a fight for civil rights

In a nation where an estimated 90% of marriages are arranged, it wasn’t surprising that the government chose to go against same-sex love. After all same-sex love doesn’t fit in to the template, structures, laws and social norms that define a marriage. The fluidity that comes with choice, love and passion that drives such affection, the honesty that is attached to breaking the norm, are hard for a government to engage with.

If choice is offered (and therefore equality), what would happen to the whole system of arranged marriages fixed over the years on the basis of caste, class, colour, economics, regions, religion – much of what one sees in mainstream classified matrimonial ads?

A battle for civil rights

Last week, in response to a batch of petitions, the government stated in the Supreme Court that any change in the current laws that govern marriage would lead to “complete havoc with the delicate balance of personal laws”. Now, all that the petitioners had…

Exit mobile version