Testimony of Child Brides:
Child Marriage and the Role of Institutions in Nine Regions in Indonesia
Lies Marcoes and Fadilla Dwianti Putri
Introduction: A few of the lucky ones
I'm from Gili Iyang (Island), around five hours by boat and then another
hour by bus to Sumenep (Madura). When I was 12 years old, I was married
off to a man chosen by my mother. My mother was afraid she wouldn't be
able to take care of me. But if you ask me, she wanted to collect on the
katompangan—the debt owed us by our neighbours who she had
previously helped with their children's wedding preparations. The custom
in our village is that parents marry off their daughters so that the
neighbours can mabeli copa [return spit / promise / debt], no
matter if the child is still very young, or not even menstruating yet. I
cried and cried, I didn't want to do it, I rebelled. I refused to eat.
Better just to die, I thought. I wanted to go to school. My mom said
that after I got married I could go back to school. But how? I was
embarrassed and quit school. But in my village I had some friends who
were studying at the pondok [boarding house] of Nyai Dewi
Khalifah, the head of Pesantren Aqidah Usymuni in Sumenep [the religious
school]. I insisted that I wanted to join them even though I was
already engaged. My mother said, 'Don't embarrass your mother and your
family.' But my in-laws said, 'Yes, OK, you can go to school first.' I
asked for three years, so I could finish high school [aliyah.] But my husband would only allow me one year. I couldn't accept this. I was happy at the pondok.
I had a lot of friends, including four other girls who shared my fate. I
was so glad: here I didn't have to be embarrassed, even though I was
married. Ibu Nyai said, 'No matter if you're married—the important thing
is to continue your schooling.' But my husband didn't want to wait, and
he told mother I was opposing him. When the holidays came, I refused to
go home, I hid at the pondok. What's the point of only finishing
the first year of high school? My husband and his mother couldn't
accept this. We separated. My mum cried and pleaded with me to come
home, because she'd heard that I had asked for a divorce. I told her
'no', that he was the one who didn't want to wait. Nyai Eva gave my
mother some advice, and finally she gave in and said, 'Well, if that's
what you want, I give you my blessing, but don't embarrass me a second
time. I'm very ashamed, but the shame will disappear if you can finish
school and become a scholar like Ibu Nyai Eva. Just don't embarrass your
mother a second time,' she said. And I promised I would keep studying
so I could go to university, because I want to become a teacher.[1]
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Dozens of testimonies of young girls like Indri, who have been forced into marriage, are presented in the report The Testimony of the Child Brides prepared by the women's rights organisation, Rumah Kitab.[2]
Fifty-two case studies of child marriage were collected by eight Rumah
Kitab researchers from nine districts in five provinces in
Indonesia—Banten, West Java, East Java, West Nusa Tenggara, and South
Sulawesi.
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Sadly, those, like Indri, who were fortunate can be counted on the
fingers of one hand. She was lucky in that her insistence on continuing
her schooling was welcomed by the policy of a pesantren (Islamic school)
that cares about girls' education. The pesantren headed by Ibu
Nyai Dewi Khalifah—familiarly known as Ibu Nyai Eva—has an
organisational policy that favours the education of girls. The pesantren does not prohibit girls who have been married from staying at their pondok
(boarding house) and studying there. According to Ibu Nyai Eva, in a
strong culture that favours child marriage, this cultural problem needs
to be countered with a strategy that does not explicitly oppose it.
If parents come and want to take their child away to get married, I will
ask what the reason is. Insofar as possible, I stretch it out and say,
'Wait, not now, exams are coming, or wait, let her finish a cycle of
reading the Qur'an'. If they accept this, it means there's a
postponement, even if it's only temporary. So then after the harvest
season, they come again, ask again, and I negotiate again. If we reach a
deadlock, I let the child go, but with a promise that after the
traditional wedding, she will be brought back to the pondok pesantren.
I also offer a scholarship for her husband, because often the husband
is also underage. Child marriage is a cultural issue, so we have to be
wise in negotiating with the parents, with people who think child
marriage is not a problem; that's how we deal tactfully with the
culture.
We're often tempted to make regulations. Of course that is important,
but we also need to understand how the local tradition interprets child
marriage. Here, child marriage is sometimes just like playing at
marriage, because the motivation is to collect on a social debt, or to
raise social status, or to strengthen social solidarity. Without an
understanding of the culture, rules to postpone child marriage will
simply be rules written on paper. To negotiate with the culture, we have
to work within the framework of that culture, even while maintaining a
critical stance against it. Myself, I use the framework of justice in
Islam, Islam as rahmatatan lil alamin, a blessing for all the world, not just for males but also for females, and for those who are kept weak by the culture itself.[3]
Situational analysis of child marriage in Indonesia
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The story of Indri and Ibu Nyai Eva provides some hope. But how many
educational institutions actually care about and insist on ensuring
equal access for girls who are married to continue their schooling? Most
of the other stories we collected are about adolescent girls who
entered the world of marriage while still children, and parents who
simply gave in to custom or pressure. Many mothers acknowledge that it
shouldn't have happened like this, but they still prepared their
daughters for their wedding day, after the men around them had made a
decision 'for everyone's good'. As Ibu Norma explained:
When I think about it, I regret that my daughter was married off while
still a child. Now her friends who graduated from high school are able
to work, but not her. I even have to take care of her kids. What can she
do? If she wants to socialise with her friends, she's ashamed, and her
husband certainly wouldn't let her go out, and her father prohibits it
as well. She's scared that if she keeps the wrong company, her father
will be angry with her.[4]
In the case above, Ibu Norma intervenes by taking care of her
grandchildren and cooking for her son-in-law, Edi. In nearly every child
marriage, the mothers on both sides, and especially the mother of the
bride, will bear some of the burden of their children's new household
—not just by providing guidance, but also by taking over some of the
everyday burdens. Otherwise, the new households would certainly break
up. And in fact, a large proportion of the marriages involving children
in this study have failed. Many others continue but with guidance and
help from the parents, especially the mothers, and with difficulties
that never seem to end.
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In another case, Rida from village G, Jonggat Subdistrict, Central
Lombok, had just graduated from primary school in July 2014 at the age
of 13. In September that same year, Rida was 'carried off' (merariq)
by Jona, a boy she had met just three days before. With the assistance
of village-level officials, Rida and Jona were married two weeks later.
During those two weeks, her mother had to run around arranging the
celebration, including paying for it. Her own husband had abandoned the
family after their sixth child was born. The traditional elders and
others in the village argued that, even though Rida was under age, her
parents and other senior figures had an obligation to 'marry her off'.
The law requires that Form N5 is used for couples who marry
without their parents' consent; the village officials used this as the
parental permission document to allow the marriage and delegate the
right to act as guardian to an official of the Religious Affairs Office
(KUA). In this way, Rida and Jona's marriage is valid in the eyes of the
religion and the state, even though it violates the Marriage Law[5] and the Child Protection Law[6] as Rida was under the legal age of marriage; they were still able to get a marriage certificate from the local KUA.
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But four months later, Rida, at that time in the early stages of
pregnancy, was returned to her mother. The sub-village head, as a
representative of the husband's family, conveyed news of the divorce.
Although she now has a child, Rida herself is still a child. Her mother
often gets annoyed because Rida is unable to care for the baby. Rida's
mother admits she often gets so angry with Rida that she beats her with a
broom; when this happens, Rida runs off for several days and stays at
her grandmother's or her friends' houses. And so her mother was left
with the task of caring for the baby (who was eight months old at the
time of the interview), while still taking care of her other children
and trying to earn a living as a farm worker. And because her daughter
has a baby, she must also pay for baby milk formula.
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Our research aims at understanding why child marriage still exists and
is even on the rise, despite all the efforts that have been made to
combat it since the colonial era. The theory of modernisation, put
simply, assumes that child marriage will inevitably decrease as society
is subject to social changes generated by the shift from an agrarian to
an industrial economy. With industrialisation, it is assumed that
general education levels will rise, which will automatically help to
decelerate marriage in childhood. It is expected that after girls finish
their education, industry will absorb them into the labour force,
thereby extending their unmarried years. Thus, from the perspective of
modernisation, the world of education plus industrialisation is expected
to be able to postpone the marriage age for females.
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In reality, the rate of the underage marriage of girls remains high and
is even accelerating in the era of industrialisation. The situations
that bring this about vary, but the most prominent of these is
unintended pregnancy, which is followed by a young person being forced
to marry. Since the only purpose of the marriage is to obtain legal
status for the child who will be born, these marriages are not
necessarily intended to last very long. Another reason is a match set up
by the parents, or the parents pressuring the girl to marry her
boyfriend quickly so that the parents can feel relieved and are not
worried that she will get pregnant. Another reason is pressure on the
parents from relatives and neighbours who are concerned about a girl
having too much freedom in her social relations. To all of these
concerns, marriage is the primary response proposed by the existing
institutions. Yet another reason is that the girl is no longer in school
and has no job. In a smaller number of cases, girls are forced to marry
after being raped. There are also cases that do not fall into any other
categories, such as marriage arranged by the leader of a religious sect
to which the girl's parents are adherents.
Child marriage and social change
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In this study we explore the phenomenon of child marriage by looking at
social changes, including those related to the thesis of modernisation:
Why is deceleration of child marriage not occurring in the modern
post-agrarian era?; why do we instead see its reverse, an acceleration
of child marriage?
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Using two clusters of questions broken down into four themes, we sought
to discover the main causative factors in the practice of child
marriage. The clusters are as follows:
* What kinds of changes in socioecological space serve as the background for the occurrence of child marriage?
* Do these changes affect gender relations in the family?
* Which institutions in the community are involved in the process of child marriage?
* Are social religious views also used as a justification for such marriages?
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From these cases, we can ascertain the girls' sociological
characteristics such as age and educational background, the features of
the regions, as well as information on the marital status and economic
circumstances of their parents. Aside from this sociological and
demographic data, information was also collected on the causes of child
marriage, which we divided into eight categories, discussed below.
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Previous studies on child marriage have tended to be limited by looking
at the direct causes of the practice of child marriage without linking
them to the broader structural and cultural contexts. As a consequence,
the solutions offered are often ad hoc and fail to resolve the
fundamental problems. Here are the common threads of the findings of
this study.
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First, all the practices of child marriage in the seven rural and two
urban regions studied show a strong correlation between changes in the
organisation of social space, whether explicit or symbolic, and the
practice of child marriage. Shifts in land ownership or changes in the
functions of land have restricted work opportunities in the villages.
When the community in a rural area loses its land, this forces parents
to go elsewhere to seek work. Although this has been happening since the
1970s when Indonesia started applying the agricultural intensification
project known as the 'Green Revolution', it became much more evident in
the 1980s, and reached its peak in the 1990s during the national
economic crisis. Rural residents' access to land was reduced or even
lost, while no adequate replacement work was available. This situation
forced people into urban areas. But, at the same time, there were very
limited work opportunities in urban areas for uneducated workers except
as household servants, low-level factory workers in the informal sector,
or as overseas migrant workers.
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The higher the level of environmental damage, whether in coastal or
interior regions, the higher is the rate of child marriage. Every
region, in which there has been a change in the function of land that
restricts local residents' access to land and forces parents, especially
mothers, to become circular or semi-permanent migrant workers, is at
high risk for child marriage. That is, when a region undergoes a change
in the organisation of living space and socioecological changes that
lead to changes in gender relations in the family, the region will show a
tendency towards a high rate of child marriage.
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Children who experience child marriage are always faced with a
social/ecological crisis, and at the same time a crisis in the social
bonds that (should) protect them. We can call them 'social orphans'.[7]
In social terms, they have no fathers and mothers because their
parents are physically absent, or because the parents lack control over
the rapid changes that impact on in their children's social behaviour.
At the same time, the social-support capacity provided by the community
is inadequate to replace the role of the parents, except with regard to
social sanctions, which we discuss below.
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Second, the changes in living space, and the lack of economic access in
rural areas due to the changes in function and ownership of land, have
altered the allocation of work and roles for women in the public sphere,
without being accompanied by a change in the role of men in domestic
spaces. When many young women with families go to work in the cities,
they leave their children behind in the villages. Some men also
periodically migrate to the cities, while others stay in the village.
But the men who stay behind are culturally unprepared to take on the
role as substitute mothers in the running of their households. As a
result, daughters have to take over the roles of their mothers; they run
the household, and in many cases are forced to drop out of school. This
in turn motivates them to get married quickly and set up their own
households, because they want to be relieved of the burden of running
their mothers' households and caring for their fathers.
If I get married, I'll only have one person to take care of: my husband.
At home now, I get so tired. I have to take care of my younger siblings
and my dad. I have to do the washing, cook, carry the youngest one
around, and it's even worse if I'm sick. I'm tired of it. I can't hang
out with my friends. I'm also bored in school; nobody likes me, nobody
cares about me. So it would be better to get married.[8]
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Third, child marriage is a consequence of the increasing rigidity of
moral values resulting from the loss or weakening of the traditional
authority of local leaders over the economic resources and assets in
their villages. Nearly all the localities where this research was
carried out have undergone socio-ecological changes in living space.
Village officials and traditional leaders who live in rural areas have
lost their authority over the village assets that were traditionally
their sources of revenue. Some of them have survived by joining up with
those who took over the village land—by working as plantation foremen,
factory foremen, sharecroppers, or watchmen for empty land. Others are
simply unemployed. But the energy of their authority has not thereby
been dissipated; instead, it is increasing.
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In reality, practical political activity only takes place around
election times. Apart from religious activities, there are no other
social activities in the villages that can be relied on to engage and so
manage the local political energy. As a result, the control by local
leaders over moral issues, the only area in which they still have some
power, is steadily increasing. Every moral violation becomes an
opportunity for them to gain additional revenue or to reinforce their
position as guardians, as if they are the saviours of the community. The
treatment of moral issues is becoming increasingly rigid and coercive.
In many situations, these local power figures force the occurrence of
child marriage.
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The situation at the local level is also influenced by changes at the
global level with regard to communication technology and demand for
female workers, which have upset the defensive spaces of a culture based
on patriarchal values. When many women of married status go off to work
elsewhere, their husbands take advantage of the privilege granted to
them by traditional values, for example by engaging in polygyny. At the
same time, the culture shock as a result of economic globalisation has
resulted in religious views and values becoming increasingly
conservative and rigid, oppressing women by secluding them into
closed-off spaces, manifested symbolically through the use of the hijab (modest clothing covering the woman's aurat, the parts of the body required to be covered by Islam) or at least the jilbab (tight veil), as well as other new prescriptive norms that draw them back into their homes.
Here, in the past, women would even go out to sea, or at least wait for
their husbands to come home from fishing. Now it's harder to find fish,
so women have to help earn a living as travelling traders. Others just
stay at home. They seldom associate with others; they say they're afraid
of slander. Nowadays many women are wearing hijab here, and
their daughters are kept tightly controlled. They say they're worried
about associating with the wrong people; they're only allowed to gather
when the murobbiyah [Islamic teachers] come from Makassar.[9]
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Fourth, another significant finding is the strengthening of religious
viewpoints in the current era of an increase in public piety. Religious
proscriptions are often placed above the law of the state when it is
decided to marry off a girl even though she is under age. These
religious views serve as a legitimisation for the existing institutions
to reinforce their actions in smoothing the way for child marriages.
Phrases such as 'the important thing is that it's valid' or 'religious
law takes precedence' are used as justification for violating the laws
of the state that regulate marriage, such as Law number 1 of 1974,[10]
which limits the minimum age for marriage to 16 for girls. In many
cases, marriages in childhood are simply not recorded, because what they
are seeking is not 'legality under the law', but 'religious moral
legality' which is supported by a highly patriarchal perspective.
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Behind this strengthening of cultural involution and the use of
religious views as a justification for child marriage, many
institutions, both formal and non-formal, are at work. In their overt
role, they practice child marriage for various reasons, such as
maintaining the morality of the community. They also do it covertly, by
not giving children options so that they can seek alternatives in social
relationships, which should not necessarily lead to marriage.
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The existing institutions—whether traditional, religious or other social
institutions (such as culturally prescribed marriage rules)—seem to
provide no other options than to force adolescents into marriage, in the
name of protecting the reputation of the family or the clan. This is
especially the case for girls who are pregnant or perceived as too
'free' in their social relations. The existing institutions also seem to
tolerate the behaviour of parents who force their children into
marriage on grounds that are decided unilaterally by the parents. With
the demand, often based on religious teachings, that children must obey
their parents, the culture does not provide a space that is open for
girls to choose healthy social relationships for adolescents that are in
line with the changing times.
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There are four issues that we have identified as the fundamental reasons
why the practice of child marriage is not merely persisting but
actually increasing. The thesis that child marriage is associated with
poverty is confirmed by this study. But not all child marriages occur
in, or are caused by poverty. Seen in terms of some of its causes, such
as unintended pregnancy, child marriage can occur in well-off as well as
poor families. Ultimately, what differentiates cases is how the parents
address the impact of child marriage. In poor families, there are
almost no good solutions for the girls involved: they quit school, have
none of the expertise needed for work, have no one else who can help
care for their children, and have no power to extract themselves from
poverty. In wealthier families, there are some other options, such as
the parents taking over the care of the baby, and letting a girl who has
had a child continue her schooling by moving her to another town.
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The girls themselves, who most usually assert that their children are
'just fine', often dispute another thesis, that child marriage has had a
negative impact on their reproductive health. In a few albeit limited
cases, we did find that there had been extreme impacts caused during
childbirth, such as a baby who experienced brain damage due to being
stuck in the underage mother's birth canal and its head being 'squeezed'
too long in the birth process. And in some cases we encountered, young
girls who had miscarriages or even died in childbirth. However, the
scope of this study did not allow us to investigate the extent of the
impact of the pregnancy on the health of young mother herself due to a
'competition for nutrition' between the mother and her baby.[11]
This gradually affects the growth and development of both the mother
(who is in fact still an adolescent) and her child, and of her
subsequent children as well. The most obvious problem that we were able
to observe is in the growth and development of the babies who were
typically born underweight.
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As a study using a feminist approach, this research also identified
efforts that are being undertaken by various parties to reduce or
eliminate the practice of child marriage. Most of these efforts are
through local regulations to delay the age at marriage, in the form of
government decrees or decisions of heads of regions issued through local
government work units, such as the Agency for Women's Empowerment Child
Protection and Family Planning. As might be imagined, these efforts are
ad hoc, and offer limited programs on tiny budgets. Another effort
undertaken by certain pesantren as mentioned above is through a
cultural approach: they extend an opportunity to girls who have been
married to continue their schooling, without making an issue of their
marital status. The current policy solutions show that the reading of
the issue of child marriage is extremely simplistic, reactive, and not
based on the fundamental problems underlying the practice of child
marriage.
Characteristics of 52 child marriage cases in nine regions
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In this section we will elaborate on the characteristics of the case
studies that we have analysed from all the regions. We divide them into
eight sociological categories.
Age range
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The age range of girls involved in marriage across our research sites
was from eight to 19 years. The youngest case we found was a girl aged 8
who was still in the second grade, although, even at this young age,
she had been through the tradition of matchmaking and kawin gantung
(unannounced/unconsummated marriage). That said, the average age at
which girls married was 14 to 15 years, with 16 cases at 14 years old
and 10 cases at the age of 15. The figures drop at ages 16 through 18,
then rise again at 19. This last group was found in urban regions—the
educated middle class— where the girls had at least a high school
education. The age range of the husbands was on average much older,
except for cases of unwanted pregnancy, in which both the boy and the
girl were typically both very young.
Reasons and causes of marriage
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Certainly, child marriage is synonymous with being forced to marry. Of
the 52 cases examined, 36 were due to pregnancy. These girls were aged
between 13 and 19. The second main reason (12 cases) was attributed to
the girl's 'own choice', where she was no longer in school and the
parents felt burdened by having an unemployed child in the house, and so
encouraged marriage. In the remaining four cases, the girl was married
through an arranged match or chose her own partner because she did not
want to be forced into an arranged match.
Educational background
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The educational background of the girls who were married was typically
either that of a primary school graduate or someone who had not
graduated from junior high school. Around 95 per cent of the girls who
were interviewed had completed primary school. From the statistics in
nearly all the research regions, it is known that the participation rate
of girls drops as they enter junior high school. Among the cases we
studied, some had completed junior high, many had not finished junior
high, and some had not even finished primary school.
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This tendency to discontinue schooling is even greater when they enter
high school. Thus, the most critical period for child marriage is during
junior high school years. However, none of the girls who married while
in senior high school had completed their schooling. For example they
had not taken the high school equivalency adult education package known
as 'paket C'. In contrast, some of those who married while in junior high did continue their education through the paket C program t school or at private educational institutions such as pesantren.
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For the educated urban group, who married on average at 17 to 19 years,
most finished high school first and then got married. This also did not
interfere with their participation in university studies, though they
faced many obstacles along the way, such as being prohibited from using
contraception, taking frequent breaks from their studies, graduating
late or simply dropping out.
Location
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Most of this research for this paper was done in rural areas. This
relates to the thesis of this study that the practice of child marriage
commonly occurs in rural areas. In fact, however, the practice also
occurs in urban areas such as the capital city, Jakarta, and Makassar,
South Sulawesi, which we sampled. This study shows that geographically,
the practice of child marriage exists in both rural and urban areas,
with nearly equal trends.
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However, the meaning of 'urban areas' in this context is not the city
centres, but rather the outskirts of the cities which are adjacent to
rural areas. These regions are typically characterised by the arrival of
symbols of modernity such as electronic gadgets, motorcycles, and
houses with brick walls. These regions are also characterised by the
gradual loss of the local people's land and rice fields as they are
replaced by solid buildings such as shop-houses (shops with a residence
on the upper floor) and hotels. In line with this, the occupations of
the original residents are also eroded, as the loss of their land forces
them to work in the informal sector in the cities, or to migrate. In
these regions, referred to as urban buffers, slums often emerge.[12]
In some other urban areas, there are slums right in the city, as we
found in Depok, West Java. For these urban groups, the main driver of
child marriage is not so much a change in living space, which causes
structural poverty, but rather a change through a narrowing of
imaginative space due to conservative religious viewpoints.
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Conditions vary as well in the villages. Some locations are in remote
regions with semi-permanent buildings and rocky roads that cannot be
traversed by motorcycles, let alone cars. There are less remote
locations, such as Babat District, Lamongan Regency, which is a centre
of trade and where the residents earn their livelihood as small-scale
traders or labourers. Specifically for the cases in Makassar, child
marriage also occurs in islands off the coast of the city of Makassar.
The welfare of these communities is low due to the change in the marine
environment, which has made fishing less lucrative and led to a culture
of debt.
Background of parents
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The 52 case studies and their stories show a wide variety of family and
parental backgrounds. In terms of marital status, most of the girls'
parents were still in 'intact' marriages; only eleven of the mothers
were widowed or divorced. However, of these mothers, a majority (37)
were women heads of households who acted as the breadwinners, whether
their husbands were still at home or had abandoned the family. Some
parents (father and mother) were tenant farmers in rural areas, or the
father worked at odd jobs as a labourer or coolie. Some of the others
worked as traders or had become migrant workers (male or female). In
several cases, the girl's mother had a level of education just as low as
her daughter's—primary school graduate or not finished junior high.
There were also some mothers who themselves had married as children,
just like their own daughters. In interior regions, we found that some
participants in child marriages were illiterate. However, there were
also parents (mothers) who worked in the formal or educational sectors,
such as teachers at pondok pesantren. There were also some girls
whose fathers were members of the national parliament or aristocrats.
This shows that the practice of child marriage is not limited to poor
families.
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One thing that bears emphasising is that in all the research regions,
where the parents (father and mother) of the girls concerned were
farmers, they did not own their own land but were tenant farmers on land
now owned by someone else, though they had previously owned land
themselves. Likewise, for those who herded cattle, the cattle belonged
to someone else under a profit-sharing arrangement. And although the
cattle were left in the care of the father, it was often the mother who
had to seek the fodder; yet the proceeds from the paron (share to
the farmer) would be controlled by the father, as the head of the
household. Daughters, whose parents had cattle under this arrangement,
often took over the household work, as both parents were far away,
herding the cattle. The sons in these families would also go off with
their mothers and/or fathers herding the cattle. In the profit-sharing
arrangement, the adult sons would receive a share of the proceeds, but
the daughters and their mothers received no direct share from the paronan (share arrangement).
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Girls from the middle to lower classes whose fathers worked in the
informal sector typically had mothers who also supported the family—as
farm workers, itinerant vendors, tempeh sellers, household servants,
children's snack sellers, and often as migrant workers.
The role of institutions
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All the child marriages documented in this study indicated the
significant role of informal and formal institutions. There were at
least six patterns through which these institutions were involved.
First, parents who wanted to make a match for their daughters, or whose
daughters were already pregnant, requested help from a local religious
authority—kiyai kampung / habib / amil / lebe at the kampung
or village level—to formalise their daughter's marriage 'religiously'.
An underage girl's marriage is foiled by the administrative procedures
in the KUA, since she is not yet of legal age. Therefore, the option of
being married before the kiyai kampung (village religious leader) is chosen. In other words, the girl has only what is termed a sirri
marriage, that is one that is performed before a religious authority
and hence legitimate according to Islamic precepts, but not registered
by the state and with no official marriage certificate.
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Second, the parents, as an institution that has authority over their
daughter, work together with the village head or hamlet head to arrange
the requirements for marriage at the KUA. They use the N5 form
from the KUA to state their permission for their child to be married. In
law, this form is intended for cases of marriage that do not have the
blessing and approval of the parents. But in practice, the parents use
the N5 form to allow their daughter to be married below the legal
age. In this way, the girl can be officially married at the KUA and
receive an official document.
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Third, the parents work together with a kiyai kampung to marry off their daughter in the sirri
way. They postpone the registration of the marriage until the girl is
officially old enough. When she has reached the official age according
to the law, they first apply for an isbat nikah hearing at the
Religious Court, which is the procedure to obtain permission for the
marriage from state authorities. Once this is granted, the permit is
taken to the KUA and the couple is officially married.
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Fourth, the parents and the amil desa (Muslim village official)
work together to register the marriage at the KUA with whatever age data
they have. The KUA will typically reject the application and recommend
that they seek a dispensation for marriage from the Religious Court. If
the request is granted, they will receive an official document; if it is
rejected, they will perform a sirri marriage.
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Fifth, the marriage is performed by the leader/ imam of a group
as the representative of the parents. In one of the cases we found the
girl's marriage was officiated by the 'commander' at her pesantren,
and all the household matters were arranged by him — who she married,
when and how many children they had, and even when they must divorce.
This pattern is followed in groups that for whom marriage is firmly
understood in religious terms.
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Sixth, the marriage is effected by falsifying the girl's age on her
identity card (KTP). Often the KUA officials actually know this, just by
looking at the physical condition of the girl who is to be married. But
since the KUA follows the guideline of the age as stated on the KTP,
they do not make an issue of a bride who is still 'piyik' (little).
The role of religious interpretation
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Because child marriage is a violation of the law, the parties that are
involved in such a marriage constantly rely on arguments from religious
perspectives. The most common argument is that children must obey their
parents, birr al-wâlidayn. This seems to be the magic key phrase
to dissolve the daughter's resistance. Second, the parties (adults), in
both formal and informal institutions, use the concept of baligh,
referring to physical maturity (i.e. menstruation) as the practical
foundation of readiness for marriage. That is, they prioritise a
religious basis for determining the appropriate age of marriage of a
child, even though the law sets the minimum age for marriage at 16 years
for females and 19 for males. The third religious argument is actually
entwined with a cultural perspective —protecting the family's dignity.
This occurs mainly in child marriages due to unintended pregnancy or
where the couple have eloped. Although there is actually no religious
argument used here, they say that this is associated with values of
proper behaviour that must be upheld. Informal religious leaders such as
lebe, naib, or penghulu kampung who officiate at sirri
marriages also use religious arguments such as the obligation to
address an emergency. In certain cases in the region of Cisarua, Bogor,
the practice of child marriage is officiated by naib, lebe, or local kiyai even though they have to use a practice legitimated by a different mazhab (school of Islamic jurisprudence) than the Syafi School which is the norm in Indonesia. In particular, they perform a sirri marriage as applied in the Shia tradition, or misyar
marriage as it is known in the Wahhabi tradition, which allows both
husband and wife to renounce some marital rights such as living
together, and the wife's rights to housing and maintenance. These
customs are new to religious thought and practice in Indonesia.
'Agency' of girls
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Cases of child marriage do not occur due only to tradition or poverty,
but they are also sometimes due to the 'desire' of the girl herself. We
mapped several cases in which it was actually the girl who compelled her
parents to marry her off immediately. The agency of the daughter
forcing her parents to allow her to marry can occur in several ways. One
girl claimed to be pregnant so that she could marry her boyfriend. In
another story, a girl wrote a letter to her parents containing religious
arguments that urge a girl to marry immediately if the right man comes
along. In yet another story, the girl coerced a man to approach her to
marry immediately.
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Nevertheless, in this group there were some parents who tried to prevent
their daughters' marriages so that they could finish school first
(usually junior high school level). But these girls had many ways to
overcome their parents' objections, such as using religious arguments.
If the religion says that this is the best way, then there is no other
recourse for the parents than to marry off their daughter, even if
reluctantly.
Mechanisms of children's resistance
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In the 52 cases we studied, most of the girls gave in and accepted their
fate as child brides. In these instances, the largest number of cases
of child marriage occurred when parents arranged a match for their
daughter or asked her to get married quickly. This shows that parents
have a strong authoritative influence over their children, and the
daughters tend to 'have to' give in and follow their parents' wishes.
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But when we look more closely, there are in fact many ways in which the
girls resist, such as running away, leaving their village to work as
household servants, or refusing to go to school. But very few of them
succeeded in this resistance and avoided marriage. Out of the 52 cases,
we found only two stories in which the marriage was prevented before the
wedding ceremony, and these involved long and difficult processes.
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In some other stories, even though the marriage had taken place, the
girl's strong resilience enabled her to continue her education, despite
many obstacles. These included being expelled from the family, not being
given school fees, having to live with the operator of the pesantren
or with paralegal advocates to obtain protection. These girls seem to
be alone in fighting for their rights, and experience life as social
orphans. In many cases, they resist even though it is already too late
(already married or already pregnant).
Conclusion: Back to school
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In reality, it seldom happens that a girl goes back to school after
getting married unless she has a very strong determination to do so and a
high level of agency, as well as support from her environment. In one
case, for example, a girl who was married pleaded with the school
principal to allow her to take the final junior high school exams even
though her pregnancy was advanced. In another story, a pesantren
served as a way out by accepting married girls as students. But this
struggle remains unsystematic and ad hoc without support from local
government or from regulations. Apart from pesantren, there are
few school institutions that will officially accept girls who are
pregnant, except in a few cases where they have the support of
pioneering teachers who engage in practical advocacy with the principal.
Compared with state schools, private schools have a bit more leeway to
allow girls who are married to come back to school, unless the young
mother is clearly pregnant.
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Efforts to return to school also occur sporadically, depending on the
resilience of the girl concerned and the acceptance on the part of the
school. At the same time, when a school allows a girl who is married
and/or pregnant to return to school, it often encounters opposition from
the parents or the husband. Girls returning to school also often face a
stigma—'already a mom but still in school?'—especially when they have a
child or are divorced. In many cases, girls who are married have
virtually no opportunities to resume their eduction.
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The government always blithely states that children can continue or complete their schooling by taking the extra-school paket B and paket C,
designed for adult education of people who have not completed school.
But in fact, in the cases we studied, only two girls took paket B to receive their junior high school diplomas, and only one took paket C.
All the rest simply quit school, especially if they were pregnant or
had children. But in several cases girls who have returned to school
with the full support of educational institutions like the pesantren,
have succeeded, mainly in Madura and NTB. The problem is that this
non-systemic approach is temporary and entirely dependent on the
internal policies of the institutions invloved.
Notes
[1] Indri, Sumenep, 16 February 2016.
[2] Lies Marcoes and Fadilla Dwianti Putri, Testimony of the Child Brides (Jakarta: Rumah Kitab, 2016).
[3] Ibu Nyai Dewi Khalifah, Head of Pondok Pesantren Aqidah Usymuni, Sumenep, Madura, 16 February 2016.
[4] Ibu Norma, Pulau Kodingareng, South Sulawesi, 29 March 2015.
[5] Law No. 1 of 1974 on Marriage.
Article 6 states the minimum age of marriage for males and females is 21
years. Article 7 states with parental consent, males can marry at 19,
females can marry at 16. Parental consent is proven by the N5 form,
which sometimes is violated by someone who wants to marry a child below
16 and 19 years. In fact, permission to marry someone off before 16 and
19 years should be granted by the court.
[6] Law No. 35 of 2014 on Child
Protection. The law states anyone under 18 years is considered a child
regardless of their marital status, language, race, ethnicity, and other
background.
[7] Lies Marcoes and Nurhady Sirimorok. Introduction to the Monographs of Child Marriage Studies in 5 Provinces: Social Orphans and Disguised Power, Jakarta: Yayasan Rumah Kita Bersama, 2016, p. 19.
[8] Yunita, Mataram, 10 February 2016.
[9] Ibu Guru Ratna, Pulau Kodingareng, Makassar, 30 March 2015.
[10] Law No. 1 of 1974 on
Marriage. Article 6 states the minimum age of marriage for males and
females is 21 years. Article 7 states with parental consent, males can
marry at 19, females can marry at 16.
[11] The West Lombok Health Department Office, 2015.
[12] Lies Marcoes, A Journey Against Defeat, Jakarta: INSISTPress, 2014.
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