Polygamy 411

Polygamy in Russia

by on Nov.15, 2009, under World Polygamy

polygamy 411
“Family gathering in rural Siberia, where life can be very hard for women on their own. Photograph: Caroline Humphrey”

A study of polygamy in Russia suggests we have a lot to learn about how to beat the recession.

A study of polygamy in Russia might not seem an obvious place to look for insights into how the financial crisis might play out in suburban Kent or rural Yorkshire. But Caroline Humphrey, Sigrid Rausing professor of collaborative anthropology at Cambridge University, says central Asia and Russia have much to teach us.

“In the 1990s, Russia and central Asia experienced huge economic change: what a bank was, how your career was going, what you could expect from life, everything changed overnight,” she explains. “And of course it had a huge impact on people’s lives, from family life to politics, and polygamy is part of that whole scene. So far, we haven’t had such dramatic change in the west, but you never know.”

Humphrey specialises in the anthropology of communities on the edges of the former Soviet Union, and has spent much of her career studying the Buyrat people who live north of the Mongolian border in Siberia. Humphrey says that anthropologists slowly build a deep knowledge and understanding of a place and culture, but nevertheless, her discovery that there is a polygamy lobby was a surprise.

“Friends of mine in Siberia told me that their friends were lobbying parliament to legalise polygamy,” she says. “I always knew that there were men who like the idea of polygamy, but what I found fascinating was that women were also in support.”

So is the recession going to turn the good burghers of Tunbridge Wells into polygamists? It’s unlikely. But it remains the case that the reasons why men – and, even more interestingly, women – are advocating polygamy in Russia and Mongolia are as much about economics as they are about sex. The critical issue is demography. The Russian population is falling by 3% a year – and there are 9 million fewer men than women. Nationalists, such as the eccentric leader of the Liberal Democratic party, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, claim that introducing polygamy will provide husbands for “10 million lonely women” and fill Mother Russia’s cradles.

Elsewhere, in the former Islamic regions of Russia, men argue that polygamous marriage is traditional and will encourage men to take greater responsibility – thereby alleviating poverty and improving “moral” education.

Improbably, for both groups, this is polygamy as a solution to contemporary social ills – and, according to Humphrey, is appearing outside Islamic regions. In rural areas the “man shortage”, exacerbated by war, alcoholism and mass economic migration, is even more serious. But when it comes to polygamy, rural women have a quite different agenda from their nationalist male counterparts.

“A lot of women live on what were collective farms, which are often deep in the forest and miles away from the nearest town,” Humphrey says. “You live very close to nature, and life can be very hard – your heating is entirely through log stoves, there’s no running water and inside sanitation is rare. If you are lucky enough to keep animals, you must care for and butcher them yourself. So if you are looking after children as well, life can be near impossible for a woman on her own.”

Perhaps unsurprisingly then, Humphrey’s investigations have uncovered women who believe that “half a good man is better than none at all”. “There are still some men around – they might be running things, with a job as an official, for example, or they might be doing an ordinary labouring job, but either way, there aren’t very many of them,” she says. “Women say that the legalisation of polygamy would be a godsend: it would give them rights to a man’s financial and physical support, legitimacy for their children, and rights to state benefits.”

Legalising polygamy has been repeatedly proposed and discussed in the Russian Duma, or parliament – and always turned down. For the urbanites of Moscow and St Petersburg it is a step too far.

In Mongolia, too, the legalisation of polygamous marriage is anathema. Yet in Ulan Bator, the thrusting capital city, well-educated women are combining traditional and modern to create something that looks suspiciously like a form of polygamy.

Surprisingly, it starts with the dowry. Eschewing the traditional gifts (horses, cushions, clothes), successful Mongolian families are increasingly giving their daughters a good education in place of a dowry. In contrast, their brothers often have to leave school early to either manage the herds or run the family business.

“In Mongolian culture, the bride’s family are the senior family; and a bride should be clever. And they had 70 years of communism, so the idea that women should be well-educated is not new,” Humphrey explains. “Since Mongolia, in common with Russia, also has a problem with alcoholism, there is an imbalance between urban educated women and the number of men these educated women deem to be suitable husband-material.”

The solution is simple: they just don’t get married. Instead, they take what is known as a “secret lover” – usually a well-educated man who just happens to be married to someone else. Any children resulting from the union are brought up by their mother and the maternal family.

“It is completely accepted. These women are among the elite of Mongolian society – they might be a member of parliament or a director of a company and they are tremendously admired,” Humphrey says. “They would be horrified by the idea of polygamous marriage because they don’t want to risk their independence.”

So what does this mean for marital relations in Russia and central Asia? Humphrey says it’s unlikely that polygamous marriage will ever be legalised in Russia – but perhaps that doesn’t matter.

“An insufficiency of men, educated women who want to realise themselves, rural women who want to protect themselves, all these things are going to give rise to arrangements like polygyny,” says Humphrey, “whether it’s called that or not.”

Credit for the above info: By Mira Katbamna- The Guardian,Tuesday, 27 October 2009, guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2009

4 comments for this entry:
  1. Ana

    I’d like to thank u235sentinel for providing us with the interesting, informative article above. It was very thoughtful and kind of him to share it with us.

    Wow, that is a huge amount of women without husbands in Russia. I can definitely see how some women would give into temptation and resort to taking secret lovers under the conditions and circumstances. It’s very sad. I in no way would want to be put to the test of having to undergo the hard labor and work that was described. I’m thankful more and more for being in America. Sometimes we don’t realize or appreciate how good our lives actually are. I always appreciate it for a moment when something like this is brought to my attention, but then I fall asleep again. I must try to stay awake.

    This is an open house. No need to knock. Just come on in.

  2. Haji Rafiq

    In fact I would take the liberty to compare the situation of unmarried women today, whether in Russia or the western countries, to the aftermath of a major world war. While in Iraq and Afghanistan we do have ‘genuine’ war widows aplenty in Russia and the West there are so many unmarried ladies due to totally different social and economic reasons. The result is the same: The world needs us kind of men!

  3. Ana

    Haji Rafiq, I completely agree with you. War is war, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan included, and widows and children are left uncared for and unprotected. Some want to say polygamy was only permissible for a particular time and due to a particular battle only, however, I beg to differ.

    I think many people grasp at straws to find whatever they can to support their position, specifically their dislike of polygamy. Nonetheless, everyone is entitled to voice their views. Polygamy is just not that complicated as some make it out to be.

    There’s a lot of good in polygamy and I think there are men out there that are practicing it for the good of humanity, despite the overwhelming number of men that are abusing the right.

    This is an open house. No need to knock. Just come on in.

  4. Omar Zaid, M.D.

    Salaam,

    I would like to endorse Haji Rafiq’s position. Men are born to war, not just physically but also spiritually. For the last 3-400 years, Secular Humanism has been at war with common sense, which is what Muslims call “fitrah” … The Russian women are just being practical, which is common sense. However, the danger of the laison comes into play when there are no social rules to govern it, which is what these “professional ladies” are afraid of. What’s more, is we must ask: “Why are they afraid?” and the answer has to be because of the quality of men available. A good woman with “common sense” doesn’t really mind being accountable to a good man even if shared. So … the problem is compounded; not only aren’t there enough men, but the quality of the remaining phallic weilders is questionable at best. This is the result of spiritual war: the war of ideas that demeans religion and especially Islam and it’s wonderful Shari’ah, whcih has fallen into the hands of rather “Questionable” men. So yes, brother Rafiq, the world needs us, and so do it’s women and children. They need us to fight for their right to be under our protection and guidance as we are under God’s. May Allah grant us His refuge guidance and wisdom.

    Wasalaam,

    dr omar

Leave a Reply

Looking for something?

The "Search" feature currently is not working. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused:

Archives