Family
relation, A world problem
The problem of family relations in
our age is not so simple and trivial as may be resolved by filling up
questionnaires by boys and girls by holding seminars — like the seminars I saw
and heard of, and the level and standard of intellect that was displayed in
them, which is not peculiar to our country. Other nations have also not been
able to find a solution to the problem, nor do they claim to have found one.
The philosopher Will Durant, the
well-known writer of The Story of Civilization, writes: “If in imagination
we place ourselves at the year 2,000, and ask what was the outstanding feature
of human events in the first quarter of the twentieth century, we shall
perceive that it was not the Great War, nor the Russian Revolution, but the
change in the status of woman. History has seldom seen so startling a
transformation in so short a time.
The ‘sacred home’ that was the
basis of our social order, the marriage system that was our barrier against
human passion and instability, the complex moral code that lifted us from
brutality to civilization and courtesy, are visibly caught in that turbulent
transition which has come upon all our institutions, all our nodes of life and
thought.” (The Pleasures of Philosophy New York, 1953, p.l29)
Today, similarly, when we are
living in the last quarter of the twentieth century, the lamentations of
western thinkers are all the more articulate when they witness around them the
break up of family ties, the weakening of the foundations of marriage the
evasion of young people in accepting the responsibilities of marriage, the
dislike of being a mother, the dwindling of paternal and maternal affections,
indulgence in the satisfaction of temporary passions instead of love, the
ever-increasing incidence of divorce, the galloping increase in the number of
illegitimate child with unity and sincerity being very rare thing in married
couples
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