Showing 20 of 55 results for “widow remarriage”
What they say
Sati (widow burning) was a core Hindu practice that all widows were forced into.
The Truth
Sati was NEVER a Vedic practice. The Vedas explicitly condemn it. It was a rare, often voluntary act during Islamic invasions — widows chose death over being sold into slavery. The British banned it but also killed millions of cows and destroyed gurukuls.
नैतद् विधितम् आचार्यैः न श्रुतौ न स्मृतौ क्वचित्
“This (sati) is not prescribed by the acharyas, not in Shruti, not in Smriti anywhere.”
— Medhatithi on Manusmriti
The Rigveda (10.18.8) explicitly tells the widow: 'Rise up, O woman, come to the world of the living.' The practice became more common during Mughal rule when widows had no protection. The British used Sati to justify colonization, while they themselves committed far greater atrocities. In most of India, remarriage of widows was common and encouraged.

Susan Shapiro Barash

C. W. M. Hart

Martha Denlinger Stahl

Erika A. Kuhlman
William F. Finnegan

Betty Neels

Ann Major

Nijole V. Benokraitis

Meg Cabot
Gulvadi Venkata Rao

Penny Richards

Samuel Waje Kunhiyop

Mary Balogh
Harriette Ryder

Meg Cabot

Paul Bohannan
Clarissa Start
Lee Darrow
Saint John Chrysostom
Saint John Chrysostom