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The people of South Asia stand at the continual crossroads of the rich legacy of the past and new ways of living. The Farm and the CityTo an outsider, life in a South Asian farming village might look much the same as it did a hundred years ago. The unpaved streets usually turn to mud when it rains. Most houses have only one or two rooms and a kitchen, and some of the older ones have floors made out of dry cow dung. Many villages lack running water, and some lack electricity. Artisans still produce many of their crafts in their very own homes. Overcrowding is almost as much a problem in these villages as in South Asian cities.South Asia's economy relies on these farming villages. Over the centuries, intensive farming has robbed the soil of most nutrients, and the farmers struggle to eke out humble livings.
Population growth has strained South Asia's resources. In 2000 for example, India's population reached one billion. Today, South Asian cities are often overcrowded and dirty. The slums of these cities can grow vast as people from the countryside, unable to make a living with a rural occupation, move to the cities hoping to find some form of work. Unfortunately, they often find crime and violence instead. Disease, too, is a big problem in the slums. Class differences are more pronounced in South Asian cities than in the countryside. Not far from the slums live many elite families, who were fortunate enough to profit from the growing industrial sector. Although South Asian governments have sponsored factory construction, many of these nations lack the resources to build the infrastructure necessary to support heavy industry. In other words, it is difficult to sustain factories without an elaborate system of roads, railways, and power lines. Marriage PatternsMost South Asian marriages are still arranged by the parents sometimes before their kids are even born. Parents regard marriages based on love as dangerous, because the children may choose to ignore caste differences.
In the cities, self-selected marriage partners are much more common. In urban India, marriage for the sake of love without regard to caste is no longer rare. Still, even in the cities, higher-caste Indians strongly tend to wed within their own castes. However it is arranged, though, marriage is perhaps the most important experience in the lives of most South Asians.
A family is expected to pay for their daughter's wedding and provide a dowry, or payment, to the bride's new family. The marriage ritual itself takes several days and involves elaborate ceremonies, sacrifices, and feasting. And South Asians frown upon the practice of divorce, though it is legal in many parts of the region today. Women in South Asia
The Muslim system of PURDAH holds that a woman should never be seen in public. In fact, even in her own residence she must restrict herself only to certain parts of the house.
In 1991, Pakistan voted to make the Koran the supreme law of the land. Although not all aspects of Islamic law have been enforced there, traditional roles for women remain strong.
Throughout South Asia, women receive less schooling than their male counterparts. In rural areas, male children often receive better health care than females.
These gender differences are much more pronounced in rural areas of South Asia than in the cities. Education levels for males and females in urban areas are essentially the same, and women have emerged in some professions, such as medicine.
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