Tug-of-love Indian wife passes away (China Daily) Updated: 2006-01-05 06:25
It is the tale of a wife torn between two husbands. One was a soldier who
returned from a Pakistani jail after being missing for years. The other had been
a longtime friend of the 26-year-old woman, Gudiya, who was eight months
pregnant.
Gudiya's dilemma hit newspaper front pages in September 2004 and her life
immediately caught the public imagination.
Journalists from India and abroad descended on the small village of Pataudi
near the capital New Delhi where she was living, vying for interviews. Her tale
was even being turned into a movie due for release this year.
The soldier, Mohammed Arif, turned out to have been a prisoner-of-war in
Pakistan for five years after being captured in 1999 when Indian and Pakistani
soldiers came close to war over Kashmir.
After waiting several years for Arif, Gudiya, with the blessing of her
family, wed another man, Taufiq, a childhood friend and was carrying his child.
Arif, with whom she had spent all of 10 days before his unit left, wanted her
back but not her unborn child.
The heavily pregnant Gudiya refused to return to Arif unless he would accept
the baby. Her new spouse wanted her to stay with him.
Newspaper headlines asked: "Kiski Gudiya" or "Whose Gudiya?" Gudiya means
doll.
The conservative Muslim community in which she lived ruled that as there had
been no formal divorce her second marriage was invalid under Islamic law and she
must go back to Arif.
Finally Gudiya and the two husbands were persuaded to appear in a bizarre
reality TV show on India's private Zee network that drew huge ratings.
The channel also assembled in the studio village elders, Muslim clerics and
scholars to discuss the fate of Gudiya. She agreed to follow their decision.
By the end of the show, Gudiya said she would return to Arif after he said he
would also accept the baby, but she was clearly in torment.
This week, the story came to an end. Gudiya died at a military hospital
Monday from multiple organ failure triggered by an auto-immune disease.
"Gudiya's sad story ends in quiet tragedy," the Times of India newspaper said
in a headline.
On Tuesday, crowds turned out for her burial in Arif's farming hometown of
Mundali.
(China Daily 01/05/2006 page6)
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