Child Abandonment and Homes for Unwed Mothers in Ancient India: Buddhist Sources. Child Abandonment and Homes for Unwed Mothers in Ancient India: Buddhist Sources.

Child Abandonment and Homes for Unwed Mothers in Ancient India: Buddhist Sources‪.‬

The Journal of the American Oriental Society 2007, July-Sept, 127, 3

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Publisher Description

Much is known about ordinary family life in ancient India, and about the rituals and practices that were expected to order life cycles, at least ideally and for those who belonged to classes whose routines were recorded or referred to in literature. In particular, child-bearing and associated practices receive focused attention in a variety of Indian literatures. Less is known, however, about the unusual, about borderline cases or things that societies generally seek to hide (perhaps above all, from themselves)--about what happens when things go wrong. Nevertheless, sources do occasionally indirectly provide information of interest. The two related cases examined here introduce some Buddhist evidence touching upon issues of family life beyond the normal social structures. Specifically, they concern what might happen when pregnant women lack the usual support networks of family, and what might be done with unwanted infants. In the first case I will introduce some Buddhist references that I believe suggest the existence of "homes for unwed mothers," places of refuge to which a pregnant but unprotected woman might flee. Less speculatively, Buddhist examples make clear that there existed established procedures for the abandonment of unwanted infants, designed to facilitate their discovery by others, as well as similarly stereotyped methods of less benevolent abandonment. While I will not suggest any necessary historical link between these two cases, that of the "home for unwed mothers" and child abandonment, there is a strong thematic affinity between them, since both concern what may happen when pregnancy and childbirth do not follow their normatively sanctioned and expected course. Obviously, not all the attitudes, institutions, and practices to which I make reference coexisted, nor were they necessarily shared by groups in different times and places. Rather than positing broad claims, the present paper seeks simply to draw attention to a range of ideas, institutions, and practices that may have been present, somewhere at some time, in ancient Indian society, (1) with the expectation that once such issues are raised, further relevant materials might be recognized. While the evidence for the existence of formal procedures for child abandonment is considerably stronger than that for the existence of specifically tasked "homes for unwed mothers," it makes sense to begin with the latter from the perspective of the temporal sequence of the birth process. In this light, then, let us look first at a suggestive passage in the commentary to the Theravada Therigatha. This text begins its rendition of the tale of the nun Uppalavanna as follows: (2)

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2007
1 July
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
46
Pages
PUBLISHER
American Oriental Society
SIZE
247.3
KB

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