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  1. Sati was a historical practice in Hindu communities in which a widow sacrifices herself by sitting atop her deceased husband 's funeral pyre. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] Although it is debated whether it received scriptural mention in early Hinduism, it has been linked to related Hindu practices in the Indo-Aryan-speaking regions of India.

  2. Apr 23, 2023 · People who supported, justified or propagated sati could be punished for seven years. The law also elevated the practice to murder and reintroduced the death penalty for those who abetted it.

  3. Dec 27, 2023 · The ancient Hindu tradition called sati, wherein a widow would throw herself on her husband’s pyre and burn to death, was initially a voluntary act considered courageous and heroic, but it later became a forced practice. Although sati is now banned all over India, it has a dark history. Culture Trip reports on this old Hindu tradition.

    • Richa Jain
    • Sati (practice)1
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    • Seen as A Proper Finale to A Marriage
    • History of Sati
    • The Banning of Sati
    • Prevention of Sati Act
    • Examples

    According to custom, Hindu sati was supposed to be voluntary, and often it was seen as the proper finale to a marriage. It was considered to be the signature act of a dutiful wife, who would want to follow her husband into the afterlife. However, many accounts exist of women who were forced to go through with the rite. They may have been drugged, t...

    Sati first appears in the historical record during the reign of the Gupta Empire, c. 320 to 550 CE. Thus, it may be a relatively recent innovation in the extremely long history of Hinduism. During the Gupta period, incidents of sati began to be recorded with inscribed memorial stones, first in Nepal in 464 CE, and then in Madhya Pradesh from 510 CE...

    Under the rule of the Muslim Mughal emperors, sati was banned more than once. Akbar the Great first outlawed the practice around the year 1500; Aurangzebtried to end it again in 1663, after a trip to Kashmir where he witnessed it. During the European colonial period, Britain, France, and the Portuguese all tried to stamp out the practice of sati. P...

    Today, India's Prevention of Sati Act(1987) makes it illegal to coerce or encourage anyone to commit sati. Forcing someone to commit sati can be punished by death. Nonetheless, a small number of widows still choose to join their husbands in death; at least four instances have been recorded between the year 2000 and 2015.

    "In 1987, a Rajput man was arrested after the sati death of his daughter-in-law, Roop Kunwar, who was just 18 years old."

  4. Nov 30, 2020 · India’s Sati Stones Commemorate a Macabre Historical Practice - Atlas Obscura. Their challenging legacy has complicated preservation and study. by Kamala Thiagarajan November 30, 2020. An old...

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  5. Apr 5, 2023 · Sati, the practice of a widow self-immolating on her husband's funeral pyre, remains one of the most controversial and emotive issues in South Asian culture. While some view it as a sacred funerary ritual, others see it as a barbaric act of violence against women.

  6. Mar 21, 2019 · Sati is a banned funeral custom, in which a widow either voluntarily or by compulsion self-immolates on her husband’s pyre, or commits suicide in some other manner, following her husband's death. What Is the Custom of Sati? History. Social Issues.

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