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RELATIONSHIPS
Friends As FamilyIt's choice not
genes that makes the New Indian Family. Friends now do what family did once: they cook
together and even buy property together. In tragedy or in celebration they become an
inevitable social support system. Like a traditional family, the peer group here plays
career counsellor. It's even spawning its own customs, rituals and value system.
By Madhu
Jain
Harish Kumar and Jeanine live in Dubai
and have been seeing each other for some time. When things got serious between them this
winter, Kumar, 31, a nightclub manager, e-mailed his gang of friends scattered over four
continents, telling them about it. "Welcome to the Byaand," most replied: it was
a word coined when the core group was in college in Bangalore during the mid-'80s. Jeanine
will, with a little trepidation, meet the clan in December when all of them assemble in
Goa to usher in the new millennium. Please note, there won't be any blood relatives
present for this momentous event.
A smaller group of five members -- comprising two couples and
a bachelor -- of this larger family of 17 lives in Delhi. Says Salil Kumar, 31, a
chartered accountant and group member: "We look at each other as a support
group." Salil has almost a hundred second cousins in the city but he doesn't meet
them. "I would rather spend my time with these friends who are my family. Our
silences are comfortable, the bonds are tested and we know each other's habits. This is
the comfort zone. If you want to be left alone, you are."
Welcome to the New Indian Family. It's
family by choice. Not genes. The friends-as-family seems to be replacing the traditional
family. Siblings are becoming like cousins. Cousins like strangers. And strangers like
family. Blood is no longer always thicker than water.
Take the Aligan family, as this group of eight families call
themselves. They live in a building called Aligan in Calcutta's Salt Lake. They had pooled
in for the land and constructed the building together in 1985. It all started with a group
of four college mates. They began their careers, got married and then enlarged their core
group with four couples drawn from acquaintances and business partners at the workplace.
The Aligan family functions as a joint family: all the rites
of passage from birth and marriage to death are a New Family affair. As are the rituals.
They celebrate festivals as a joint family would: there's a traditional division of
labour. And when somebody dies, the rest rush in to fill the vacuum. As happened a month
ago when Babli Pal, who had a kidney ailment, died. Piku, her 10-year-old son, is now
being brought up by all the families in the entire building. While Gopa Misra and Kum Kum
Roy get him ready for school, young Roshni Misra or Tubli Roy make sure he returns home in
time from school and play. They sit with him each evening while he studies.
It was all so natural: "The families spontaneously came
forward to help out and the building fell into a pattern around Piku's activities,"
says Sisir Misra, an Aligan family-member. In fact, when Babli's sister could not go to
Vellore last month where Babli was being treated, Gopa stepped in: she was by her side
until she died. The sister couldn't make it.
The bonds of friendship can at times also be stronger than
family ties. As happened when Rajan Chopra's father died. Four of his friends from his
days in the School of Architecture, Ahmedabad, camped in Delhi for a month. They took
charge of the final rites and helped their friend cope with the tragedy. And in offices
down and across the country colleagues are increasingly stepping in during moments of
crisis: donating or arranging blood and helping out with the Kafkaesque dealings with
hospital authorities. Just as the family would have once done. But today: cousins go
missing. Siblings are elsewhere or have unobliging spouses. Time, increasingly, is money
for the blood family.
The New Family is the latest stage in the mutating process of
kinship. The tribe or clan was the original family which evolved (devolved may be a better
word) into the sub-group of the joint family, explains Mumbai-based psychoanalyst Udayan
Patel who recently worked on group behaviour. The identity of the joint family was
fiercely protected, just as that of the tribe was earlier. A major badge of identity was
the food: you ate what the larger clan did, taking along the gastronomical habits wherever
you went. Individuals who moved away also carried with them the baggage of the rituals and
customs of the larger family.
Family was a need. It was a kind of cordon sanitaire: this
side of the hearth was safe as you huddled together against any of the threatening
elements outside. The joint family took in the weak and the strong, single women and
single men, the needy and the marginal -- like a good nanny welfare state.
The traditional, rooted family hasn't disappeared from
small-town India and persists in pockets of urban India. But the mobile, global family has
grown in numbers and created a need for the New Family. The joint family fragmented into
the extended and nuclear family, which in turn, has become more amorphous as people move
to bigger cities or overseas in search of a better life. Unmoored, they now look for new
moorings and new families. Ironically, the looser nuclear family is not family enough for
many. Couples and even small nuclear families need to bond elsewhere. There is a basic
need for "unequal exchanges" in relationships and marriages, which, as social
anthropologist Dipankar Gupta of Delhi's Jawaharal Nehru University explains, modern
marriages no longer provide. Couples today have more equal relationships and not what
anthropologists label as "generalised equation" (GE) where one person is
expected to do more than the other. Earlier, they were unequal. Today's scenario as Gupta
puts it is: "Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday I cook. Thursday, Friday, Saturday you cook
and Sundays we go out for pizza. Or I cook, you clean up." Like a barter. It tends to
be increasingly a relationship or marriage built on equality and respect, with no
"balance left over". So now you work for this GE outside. You can't always live
on the edge, you need psychological support. There's tension in equality.
So, couples need couples.
They distance themselves from their biological families but
end up forming new ones: the family instinct is still strong in India unlike western
societies. "Assimilating family to friends and friends to family is a very Indian
habit," explains sociologist Patricia Uberoi of the Institute of Economic Growth,
Delhi, adding "Friendship has to have a kinship idiom." Vasantha Patri, head of
the department of psychology at Lady Shri Ram College, Delhi and a practising therapist,
says that there is a big need for belonging and sharing in Asian society. "People
don't want to be individuals even when they are. When on holidays, they want to go to
somebody's house and just hang about or watch TV," adds Patri. So they substitute
family for, well, family. "It's home," says Amita Goel, who works in a
publishing house, about the residence of her colleague, Sunanda Ghosh, in Delhi's Hauz
Khas locality. "You can drop in anytime and just be."
Friends-as-family is a city thing. The new family cannot
survive in small-town India because the family influence is all pervasive. "There is
freedom in friendship and friendship itself has become so intimate that the boundaries
between friends and family have disappeared," explains Patel. Today's premium on
individuality loosens familial bonds while firming those between people with similar
tastes and personalities. Individual preferences and desires have normally been suppressed
within the extended family. Nandini Sachdeva, 45, a social activist, says that she has
really existed on her family of friends."In my own family I could not be me. With
friends I can. My inner self is being nurtured."
Family has become a bad word in the lexicon of many.
"Expectations from and rivalry among family members is responsible for people moving
away from the family," says Patri. In joint families they had to swallow their
differences and live together. But equations are easier in this family: siblings don't
carry the extra baggage of filial relations. Also, differences over family business or
property can transform siblings or even parents and children into enemies. "Sharing
is not conducive for friendship, nor is competition," Patri adds. Property disputes
are largely responsible for the unmaking of a blood family. But in the new family, there
is nothing concrete to fight over: "We are the property," says Rahul Verma, 42,
a trade-unionist and feature-writer.
On the other hand, the new family has begun to buy property
together. The Aligan building family may be somewhat exceptional. But there are many
groups of friends who have built second homes or bought land together. A group of five
couples -- including novelist Arundhati Roy and her husband Pradeep Krishen -- have built
houses next to each other in Pachmarhi, Madhya Pradesh.
Says Dr Rajesh Parikh, a neuro-psychiatrist: "There is
an urban need to manufacture extended families." When he and his wife Phiruza -- both
work at Mumbai's Jaslok Hospital -- are away on work, a number of friends take turns to
move into their apartment and look after their three children. Their home is a welcoming
nest for many unmarried girls and boys in the city.
"You need the support systems that friends provide
because we don't have creches or old homes," says Amrit Srinivasan, a Delhi-based
sociologist. Indians have to create their own social security net when the real family is
no longer able to do so. "You need the structure of protection and confidence
building," Srinivasan adds, explaining that women in some feminist groups even tie
rakhis on each other.
Also, with incidents of divorce increasing exponentially,
there is far more single parenting. For Rajni Gandhi, 37, who works in advertising, her
friends are her safety net, her saviours. "They pick up the pieces which a family
can't do. My family can only pick up the physical pieces, not the emotional ones."
The real family also tends to be judgemental and apportions blame. Friends, on the other
hand, are less likely to say: "I told you so." Family would. Family would also
tend to discriminate against the girl child and women. Education and the work experience
of professional women can alter personalities, making it impossible for them to fit into
the stereotypical roles of the traditional family in which "brother" always
knows best.
The notion of friendship is translating into family in
different age groups. The post-Independence Indian is now making his new family through
work, friendship and common hobbies. More disposable incomes are the glue for the new
pre-middle-aged and middle-aged family. Groups of families can now afford to go out
together: for meals, movies or picnics, even on pilgrimages, like the Aligan clan which
has gone to Amarnath and Badrinath together. Some women even plan their babies together so
that they can continue to go together on their holidays. Take this group of 30-somethings
who are determinedly moving up career ladders. Two of the women will have their babies at
roughly the same time later this year. The family members also track each other's careers
and help devise future moves on the chessboard of their professional lives. Just as a
patriarch would do in a joint family.
It's not only the young who need to form new families. The
emergence of the empty nest has fostered the need for the middle-aged and the elderly to
seek new groupings. When K. Narayan retired as director of the Kaiga Nuclear Power Project
in the north Karnataka town of Kaiga, three years ago he found Bangalore was no longer a
pensioner's paradise. People were busy. Relatives were hard to find. His children were in
the US and couples like the Narayans had to make do with watching videos of their children
in New Jersey or Rotterdam or London. And that's how India's first Non-Resident Indian
Parents Association (NRIPA) came into being in Bangalore last year. It now has 180
members: average age, 65 plus. They meet every month in one another's homes and provide
each other with emotional and practical support. Andal Ram, 61, NRIPA member, feels her
life has changed after the association was formed. "Now I know that there are so many
parents like me who don't have to live with an empty nest syndrome anymore. We have so
much to do and feel we are younger by the day," she says.
Members of the New Indian Family still want the rituals of
the family and seek it in friendship. Ironically, in rituals which bind. The informal
becomes formal. Verma had casually started throwing a large new year's party: for the last
ten years members of the core family and the larger family have flocked here. There's no
question of going anywhere else. Similarly, Raj Chohan, a Customs clearing agent and a
member of the Verma "family" has an annual sarson ka saag dinner. So and so's
birthday is celebrated in so and so's house without fail. And the Verma wedding
anniversary has become another annual event.
But there is a flipside to the New Indian Family of friends.
Often, they merely exchange one umbilical cord for another. And as happens with
traditional families, this one too can get claustrophobic. A patriarch or matriarch
inevitably emerges. And when one of the clan falls in love, the others tend to get
possessive, reacting much the same way a joint family would, to a new daughter-in-law.
They close ranks. And again, like a traditional family, each new entrant has a settling-in
period. Gradually, even this family begins to have its secrets which they keep from each
other.
Or in other words, the family is dead, long live the family.
-with
Labonita Ghosh and Stephen David |