By Melissa Schwab
HAIFA
—Arranged
marriages among Arab women are on the decline. Young Arab women are freer
today than in the past to choose their spouse. A new study conducted at the
University
of
Haifa
found significant differences between the young Arab family in contemporary
Israel
and the conservative Arab family of pre-state
Israel
.
"Almost 86% of women in the first generation had been parents who had
been involved to a large extent in choosing a spouse, in comparison to 52% of
the second generation and about 13% of the third generation," noted Dr.
Nasreen Haj Yahia Abu Ahmad from the School of Social Work,
who carried
out the study under the guidance of Prof.
Yoav Lavee.
The study findings showed that changes have occurred in various areas, from
the method of engagement, parental involvement in the choosing of the spouse,
and the character of the meetings with the spouse in the process of
engagement. The study included 537 Arab women, half of them Muslim and half of
them Christian, from 179 different families and from three generations.
Among many explanations, the researcher suggested one reason the young
generation has seen changes. "The more a woman finds herself intensely
exposed to the Jewish population, the more her views and behavior will be less
traditional."
"Young Women in Arab society are more educated than their mothers and
their grandmothers and are employed more outside the house," explained
Dr. Haj Yahia Abu Ahmad, about the trend in changes and differences among the
generations.
The traditional arranged Arab marriage was common among the first generation
(39%), but has become very rare among the second generation (10%) and among
the 3rd generation it has almost completely disappeared.
Arab women now meet their grooms before engagement more than before. The
researcher noted there is also a significant decrease in match-making (shidduch)
and getting to know the spouse only after engagement. In the first generation,
match-making occurred about 51% of the time, while it occurs approximately 18%
of the time in the third generation.
According to Haj Yahia Abu Ahmad, the data show a significant increase in
acquaintance before engagement. "This acquaintance was very rare in the
first generation (less than 1%) and has completely turned around to be more
common among the generation of grand-daughters (61%)" she noted.
The
University
of
Haifa
study also indicates a significant decrease in the selection of a partner from
the same family. "73% from the 3rd generation married a
partner not from the same family compared to 56% of their mothers and 45% from
their grandmothers," said the researcher. This change is reflected in a
decrease in marriage among the same clan, among family relatives and among
cousins.
It was also found among the youngest generation that the younger the woman,
the higher the age of marriage. Women from the first generation married on
average at age 16, women from the second generation at age 19, and women from
the current generation married at age 21 on average.
Also, young women reported that the division of labor with their partner was
more shared than the division of labor had been with their parents. Husbands
took on some of the tasks associated with running the house and taking care of
the children. The study also found that the process of decision-making for
more traditional couples was less in their hands, and more with their parents.
The researcher believes that the study findings illustrate an incorrect
picture of the Arab woman as weak, inferior, dependent, and confined within
traditional patterns that are resistant to change. This description doesn't
reflect the reality of Arab women's lives in
Israel
. "The gloomy picture of the pseudo-depressing situation of the Arab
woman and description of her as submissive and dependent to the male and
subordinate to him is not correct," she concluded.
Schwab is an intern in the external relations department of
the University of Haifa
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