Widow inheritance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Widow inheritance, also known as bride inheritance, is a type of marriage in which a widow marries a kinsman of her late husband, often his brother. It can have various forms and functions in different cultures, serving in relative proportions as a social protection for, and control over, the widow and her children. She may have the right to require her late husband's extended family to provide her with a new man, or conversely she might have the obligation to accept the man put forward by the family, with no real prospect of turning him down, if her birth family will not accept her back into their home. The custom ensures that the wealth does not leave the patrilineal family.

A form of widow inheritance existed in ancient Judaism. It is known in India [1]. It is common in certain African groups, for example the Luo in Kenya and Uganda around Lake Victoria. As it is a prime mechanism for the transmission of HIV within a given social community, women influenced with Western values challenge the obligation to do this custom as an abuse of their human rights.

See also: Levirate marriage, the term by which this practice is better known

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