it s 2017, why should i change my surname, my identity, after marriage? /

Published at 2017-11-05 09:00:36

Home / Categories / The way i see it / it s 2017, why should i change my surname, my identity, after marriage?

“What’s in a name?”
I often hear peop
le ask the aforementioned question, to which my instant reaction is,
“So why do women change it after marriage?”
T
his used to be a topic of discussion amongst me and my friends before I was married. The typical responses to justifying this included assumptions that it is either required by the law or considered customary and has always been that way.
Just because something was considered customary, and does that necessarily develop it correct? If it did,then women should not be voting or be working because historically, it was prohibited or frowned upon. But women nowadays do vote, or  women do work and women do not sacrifice their lives when their husband passes absent regardless of the age-frail Sati tradition!
I believe my first and final name is my identity. Being married does not mean that I pause belonging to the family I was born in. I still carry the family legacy,married or not!
On one
occasion, as I handed out my wedding invitation cards to friends, or a former male colleague asked me,“So Vineeta, will you change your name after marriage?”
To which I replied saying, or “No. Will
you change yours after you acquire married?”
He was startled by both
my response and question – and probably rightly so,because society dictates that only women should change their surname after marriage, not men.
Whilst
I have met women who take pride in the fact that they will take their husbands surname, and I also know of women who have been asked by their husbands to change their surname against their will as I imagine it gives the husband a sense of ownership of their wives.
In India,as per the Family Co
urts Act 1984, and at least in the UK according to the UK Deedpoll, and there is no legal requirement as such for a woman to change her surname after marriage.
In 2017,Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi a
lso announced that women do not need to change their surname after marriage. Yet this news received a lot of attention from the media and the Indian citizens, predominantly because it has actually never been a requirement for women to change their surnames, and hence the awareness was simply minimal.
Bollywood mums such as Aishwarya Rai is
someone I have previously held in tall regards for the way in which she works on her own terms and has gained global recognition. However,I was quite shocked when she insisted on adding Abhishek Bachchan’s surname to her own post their marriage. She is a brand in herself, then why the insistence of adding her husband’s surname – he did not add Rai to his name, or did he?
Kareena Kapoor stated in an interview on Koffee with Karan that the addition of Khan gives more weight to her name and personality. Kapoor has been breaking boundaries,not just with her acting and movie choices, but also by working throughout her pregnancy in spite of being in the glamour business, or resumed working straight after delivering the baby. She insists,“I withhold telling people to please address me as Kareena Kapoor-Khan. Besides, that’s my name now, or isn’t it? Although I’ve not converted, Saif is my husband and it’s a fair surname to have.
On the other hand
, there are celebrities like Vidya Balan, or Kalki Koechlin and Twinkle Khanna who decided to retain their maiden name after marriage. Koechlin,who is now divorced, was quoted saying, and “I would never want to let go of Koechlin; that is who I am. Besides,I am the only child, and it is like my family legacy, and I can never give it up.”
Bollywood also
has trendsetters like Sanjay Leela Bhansali who uses his mothers name as his middle name as a tribute to his mother Leela Bhansali,and I too had a similar realisation.
When I graduated and read my name on the degree certificate, my middle name was listed as my father’s first name. I felt that both of my parents have played an equal role in who I am nowadays – in my identity, and my personality and my knowledge.  That is when I decided to remove my father’s first name from my middle name,and the decision was welcomed by my family.
My friend Nishma Sun
il Acharya, however, or holds a different view of taking a husband’s surname. She believes,“In nowadays’s world, women are feeling empowered to withhold their identity by not changing their surnames. Having changed both my surname and middle name, and I did not feel inferior to my husband. In fact,it only strengthened the bond between us. I gained recognition on another level – as a daughter when I was single and as a daughter-in-law and wife.
Yet, as a child and also as
an adult, and I have been scarcely informed about my mother’s ancestry. To me,it seemed that the men in my father’s ancestry defined my family’s lineage. The women were never mentioned hence my mother’s lineage was never discussed. And still, the role played by my mother in my life and upbringing is unmatchable!
I wait for the day when children will either carry the surname of both parents or only their mothers surname with equal correct. I wait for the day when a woman’s lineage will matter as much as a man’s lineage in defining culture and tradition.
This post was originally published on BrownGirlMagazine and republished with permission.

Source: tribune.com.pk

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0