Tuesday, 25 April 2017

When culture&religion become barrier to fulfill the dreams

Culture or religious practices have been preventing our citizens for many decades from reaching in their most glorious place in India. it's a fate that continues due to fear. Such fears created by people or society in order to protect their distinct beliefs (disbelief?). Those beliefs may not be acceptable in many other societies. If culture or religion does not let you go to your dreams, break the chain of culture and religion and go ahead. "If you can't break the culture or beliefs to achieve your dreams, you can't break the history and you can't reach your destination". "Dreams come to reality only when you break the barriers". If you are fear to break the obstacles, you remain as who you are not really".

WATCH THE VIDEO HERE


 
 In Indian context, within some religious perspectives, women are not allowed to come publicly as men do. The story of Fareeha Tafim is one of its kind. These kind of traditional/religious/cultural beliefs have affected and chained thousands of women to end up their lives within the house and in their kitchens. The consequences of women's home stay have led many Indian men to stay abroad alone as an expatriate which continues many years and even decades. If the woman also comes out as man to work and take financial responsibility as men by earning money, the expatriate husband can come back and stay along with family. However, even if the women work in their native place, many husbands do not allow them to go for employment due to religious/cultural disbelief. Similarly, some husbands give more importance for money than family life and working abroad while wife working in home country.

To conclude, cultural and religious factors should be broken if it prevents us from reaching to the dream. The fear of women in some religions and cultures prevent the women to follow their dreams. Due to cultural and religious beliefs, many men becomes expatriates as women of expatriate husbands/brother/father have been waiting and depending single income of those expatriates.

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