Page 1
137
9 ? Family and Community
Family and
Community
CHAPTER
9
1. Why is the family unit
important?
2. What is a community and what
is its role?
The Big
Questions
Family
Almost all of us live in a family. The family is the fundamental
and most ancient unit of any society. In Indian society today,
there are several types of families — from joint families
to nuclear families. A joint family has several generations
living together — grandparents, parents, uncles and aunts,
Love and dharma are the flower and fruit of family life.
— Tiruvalluvar
Examples of joint families
9_100724_v4.indd 137 9_100724_v4.indd 137 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM
Page 2
137
9 ? Family and Community
Family and
Community
CHAPTER
9
1. Why is the family unit
important?
2. What is a community and what
is its role?
The Big
Questions
Family
Almost all of us live in a family. The family is the fundamental
and most ancient unit of any society. In Indian society today,
there are several types of families — from joint families
to nuclear families. A joint family has several generations
living together — grandparents, parents, uncles and aunts,
Love and dharma are the flower and fruit of family life.
— Tiruvalluvar
Examples of joint families
9_100724_v4.indd 137 9_100724_v4.indd 137 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM
138
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Governance and Democracy
brothers, sisters and cousins. A nuclear family, on the
other hand, is limited to a couple and their children, and
sometimes one parent and children.
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ What types of families do you see in your neighbourhood?
List the type with the number of households for each type.
Æ What types are more frequent? Why do you think this is so?
Æ As a class activity, compare with your classmates’ findings
and discuss.
In English, there are not many terms to describe family
relationships; we saw some of them in the first paragraph.
Indian languages have many more terms. For example,
in Hindi there is bua, tau, tai, chacha, mausi, nana, nani,
and many more. Some languages, such as Tamil, also have
different terms for elder brother / sister or younger brother
/ sister. But what is the word for ‘cousin’ in an Indian
language? In most Indian languages, you will find that there
is no such word! That is because cousins are only ‘brothers’
and ‘sisters’. This emphasises the deep bonds among all the
children in the family.
Examples of nuclear families
9_100724_v4.indd 138 9_100724_v4.indd 138 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM
Page 3
137
9 ? Family and Community
Family and
Community
CHAPTER
9
1. Why is the family unit
important?
2. What is a community and what
is its role?
The Big
Questions
Family
Almost all of us live in a family. The family is the fundamental
and most ancient unit of any society. In Indian society today,
there are several types of families — from joint families
to nuclear families. A joint family has several generations
living together — grandparents, parents, uncles and aunts,
Love and dharma are the flower and fruit of family life.
— Tiruvalluvar
Examples of joint families
9_100724_v4.indd 137 9_100724_v4.indd 137 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM
138
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Governance and Democracy
brothers, sisters and cousins. A nuclear family, on the
other hand, is limited to a couple and their children, and
sometimes one parent and children.
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ What types of families do you see in your neighbourhood?
List the type with the number of households for each type.
Æ What types are more frequent? Why do you think this is so?
Æ As a class activity, compare with your classmates’ findings
and discuss.
In English, there are not many terms to describe family
relationships; we saw some of them in the first paragraph.
Indian languages have many more terms. For example,
in Hindi there is bua, tau, tai, chacha, mausi, nana, nani,
and many more. Some languages, such as Tamil, also have
different terms for elder brother / sister or younger brother
/ sister. But what is the word for ‘cousin’ in an Indian
language? In most Indian languages, you will find that there
is no such word! That is because cousins are only ‘brothers’
and ‘sisters’. This emphasises the deep bonds among all the
children in the family.
Examples of nuclear families
9_100724_v4.indd 138 9_100724_v4.indd 138 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM
139
9 ? Family and Community
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ Make a list of all the members of your family you can think
of, including a few distant relatives. List their terms in your
mother tongue or regional language and try to find the
equivalent in English. Two examples are below for Hindi:
Name
Term in
Hindi
Description / term in English
Rani
? ??
mother's brother’s daughter
(cousin) (among other possible
meanings)
Sameer
????
father's younger brother (uncle)
Æ Notice how, quite often, a single word in your mother
tongue or regional language requires several words in
English to give a precise definition.
Roles and Responsibilities
Relationships among family members are based on love,
care, cooperation and interdependence. ‘Cooperation’
means ‘working together’. Each member of the family
has a role and responsibility towards other members. For
instance, parents are responsible for raising their children
to become happy individuals and responsible members of
the society. But also, as children grow up, they take on more
responsibilities in the home to help other family members
— whether parents or a sister or a brother, etc. Through
daily practice, children learn to participate in the life of the
household. In many homes, children also learn some of the
traditions and practices their family has been following for
generations.
9_100724_v4.indd 139 9_100724_v4.indd 139 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM
Page 4
137
9 ? Family and Community
Family and
Community
CHAPTER
9
1. Why is the family unit
important?
2. What is a community and what
is its role?
The Big
Questions
Family
Almost all of us live in a family. The family is the fundamental
and most ancient unit of any society. In Indian society today,
there are several types of families — from joint families
to nuclear families. A joint family has several generations
living together — grandparents, parents, uncles and aunts,
Love and dharma are the flower and fruit of family life.
— Tiruvalluvar
Examples of joint families
9_100724_v4.indd 137 9_100724_v4.indd 137 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM
138
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Governance and Democracy
brothers, sisters and cousins. A nuclear family, on the
other hand, is limited to a couple and their children, and
sometimes one parent and children.
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ What types of families do you see in your neighbourhood?
List the type with the number of households for each type.
Æ What types are more frequent? Why do you think this is so?
Æ As a class activity, compare with your classmates’ findings
and discuss.
In English, there are not many terms to describe family
relationships; we saw some of them in the first paragraph.
Indian languages have many more terms. For example,
in Hindi there is bua, tau, tai, chacha, mausi, nana, nani,
and many more. Some languages, such as Tamil, also have
different terms for elder brother / sister or younger brother
/ sister. But what is the word for ‘cousin’ in an Indian
language? In most Indian languages, you will find that there
is no such word! That is because cousins are only ‘brothers’
and ‘sisters’. This emphasises the deep bonds among all the
children in the family.
Examples of nuclear families
9_100724_v4.indd 138 9_100724_v4.indd 138 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM
139
9 ? Family and Community
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ Make a list of all the members of your family you can think
of, including a few distant relatives. List their terms in your
mother tongue or regional language and try to find the
equivalent in English. Two examples are below for Hindi:
Name
Term in
Hindi
Description / term in English
Rani
? ??
mother's brother’s daughter
(cousin) (among other possible
meanings)
Sameer
????
father's younger brother (uncle)
Æ Notice how, quite often, a single word in your mother
tongue or regional language requires several words in
English to give a precise definition.
Roles and Responsibilities
Relationships among family members are based on love,
care, cooperation and interdependence. ‘Cooperation’
means ‘working together’. Each member of the family
has a role and responsibility towards other members. For
instance, parents are responsible for raising their children
to become happy individuals and responsible members of
the society. But also, as children grow up, they take on more
responsibilities in the home to help other family members
— whether parents or a sister or a brother, etc. Through
daily practice, children learn to participate in the life of the
household. In many homes, children also learn some of the
traditions and practices their family has been following for
generations.
9_100724_v4.indd 139 9_100724_v4.indd 139 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM
140
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Governance and Democracy
LET’S EXPLORE
Answer these questions and compare your answers with a
few classmates:
Æ Who in your family decides what is to be bought from
the market?
Æ Who cooks food in your home?
Æ Who is the oldest person in your family?
Æ Who cleans the floor in your home?
Æ Who washes utensils in your house?
Æ Who helps you to do your homework?
Following our dharma, or doing our duty, has been an
important principle of Indian culture. The family is also
a ‘school’, where children learn important values such as
ahimsa, dana (giving), seva (service) and tyaga (sacrifice) .
Individuals in the family often give up their own needs to
take care of the family’s needs.
Let us see one such story.
Shalini lives with her family in a town in Kerala. Her father runs
a small business and her mother is a teacher in a nearby school.
Shalini has a younger brother. Her grandmother, Acchamma
9_100724_v4.indd 140 9_100724_v4.indd 140 11-Jul-24 5:04:19 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:19 PM
Page 5
137
9 ? Family and Community
Family and
Community
CHAPTER
9
1. Why is the family unit
important?
2. What is a community and what
is its role?
The Big
Questions
Family
Almost all of us live in a family. The family is the fundamental
and most ancient unit of any society. In Indian society today,
there are several types of families — from joint families
to nuclear families. A joint family has several generations
living together — grandparents, parents, uncles and aunts,
Love and dharma are the flower and fruit of family life.
— Tiruvalluvar
Examples of joint families
9_100724_v4.indd 137 9_100724_v4.indd 137 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:17 PM
138
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Governance and Democracy
brothers, sisters and cousins. A nuclear family, on the
other hand, is limited to a couple and their children, and
sometimes one parent and children.
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ What types of families do you see in your neighbourhood?
List the type with the number of households for each type.
Æ What types are more frequent? Why do you think this is so?
Æ As a class activity, compare with your classmates’ findings
and discuss.
In English, there are not many terms to describe family
relationships; we saw some of them in the first paragraph.
Indian languages have many more terms. For example,
in Hindi there is bua, tau, tai, chacha, mausi, nana, nani,
and many more. Some languages, such as Tamil, also have
different terms for elder brother / sister or younger brother
/ sister. But what is the word for ‘cousin’ in an Indian
language? In most Indian languages, you will find that there
is no such word! That is because cousins are only ‘brothers’
and ‘sisters’. This emphasises the deep bonds among all the
children in the family.
Examples of nuclear families
9_100724_v4.indd 138 9_100724_v4.indd 138 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM
139
9 ? Family and Community
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ Make a list of all the members of your family you can think
of, including a few distant relatives. List their terms in your
mother tongue or regional language and try to find the
equivalent in English. Two examples are below for Hindi:
Name
Term in
Hindi
Description / term in English
Rani
? ??
mother's brother’s daughter
(cousin) (among other possible
meanings)
Sameer
????
father's younger brother (uncle)
Æ Notice how, quite often, a single word in your mother
tongue or regional language requires several words in
English to give a precise definition.
Roles and Responsibilities
Relationships among family members are based on love,
care, cooperation and interdependence. ‘Cooperation’
means ‘working together’. Each member of the family
has a role and responsibility towards other members. For
instance, parents are responsible for raising their children
to become happy individuals and responsible members of
the society. But also, as children grow up, they take on more
responsibilities in the home to help other family members
— whether parents or a sister or a brother, etc. Through
daily practice, children learn to participate in the life of the
household. In many homes, children also learn some of the
traditions and practices their family has been following for
generations.
9_100724_v4.indd 139 9_100724_v4.indd 139 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:18 PM
140
Exploring Society: India and Beyond
Governance and Democracy
LET’S EXPLORE
Answer these questions and compare your answers with a
few classmates:
Æ Who in your family decides what is to be bought from
the market?
Æ Who cooks food in your home?
Æ Who is the oldest person in your family?
Æ Who cleans the floor in your home?
Æ Who washes utensils in your house?
Æ Who helps you to do your homework?
Following our dharma, or doing our duty, has been an
important principle of Indian culture. The family is also
a ‘school’, where children learn important values such as
ahimsa, dana (giving), seva (service) and tyaga (sacrifice) .
Individuals in the family often give up their own needs to
take care of the family’s needs.
Let us see one such story.
Shalini lives with her family in a town in Kerala. Her father runs
a small business and her mother is a teacher in a nearby school.
Shalini has a younger brother. Her grandmother, Acchamma
9_100724_v4.indd 140 9_100724_v4.indd 140 11-Jul-24 5:04:19 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:19 PM
141
9 ? Family and Community
(father’s mother), Chittappa (father’s brother or paternal uncle)
and her Chitti (aunt or uncle’s wife) live with them. They have a
daughter, Shalini’s cousin, who she calls Chinni. Shalini’s uncle
has just lost his job and her aunt is a homemaker. The whole
family was preparing for the festival of Onam. Acchamma told
Shalini’s father that his brother was having financial difficulties,
so they were not able to buy new
clothes for the festival. When Shalini’s
parents took her and her brother
shopping, they bought new clothes
not only for themselves, but also for
Chittappa, Chitti and Chinni. As a
result, Shalini did not get the silk dress
she had expected; she had to settle
for a simple cotton one. Acchamma
explained to Shalini that this is how
families support each other and share
what they have. Shalini did not mind
her simpler dress. She was happy that
everyone could get some new clothes.
LET’S EXPLORE
Æ Draw a simple tree of this family of seven members.
Æ Why do you think Shalini’s parents bought clothes
for everyone?
Æ What would you have done if you were in Shalini’s place?
That story was set in Kerala. Let us now travel northeast, to
a village in Meghalaya.
My name is Tenzing. I love the mountains we live in, though
life is sometimes hard. My father runs a small grocery
store. After my mother became busy in a local handicraft
cooperative, making our beautiful traditional fabrics,
wood carvings and other items for sale to tourists, my father joined
in cleaning the house, taking care of our small vegetable garden
9_100724_v4.indd 141 9_100724_v4.indd 141 11-Jul-24 5:04:20 PM 11-Jul-24 5:04:20 PM
Read More