It's called polyandry. One woman, several Husbands. It's an unusual arrangement. Today, polyandry only persists in isolated villages in the Himalayas. When it was time for Sunita Kumari to wed, her family, like many in India, made arrangements. But they involved more than a dowry and celebration. Sunita has not one husband, not two husbands, but three, all brothers. What must their life be like? Westerners might find the practice Shocking, but for this community it works fine. One reason: sheer practicality. In the Himalayas, arable land is scarce. Farms are tiny. If each generation divided each family's holdings, everyone would starve. Polyandry preserves the farm and the family's future. Unlike most men in India, husbands here handle domestic duties. They're willing to help with the cooking and childcare. In fraternal polyandry, a family picks a wife for its oldest son. The marriage can also include his younger brothers. They don't have to join in, but most do. No one takes a decision regarding one's own marriage. Everyone at home sits down together and then it is decided with the consent of everyone. Polyandry also functions as a form of birth control. No matter how many husbands she has, a wife can get pregnant only so often. If each man were to wed separately, the population here would explode. But what about sex, the forbidden core of a polyandry taboo? In truth, it's a matter of scheduling and on the wife's part, forbearance. Tolerance is very important. The wife has to understand everything. The older brother’s nature. The younger brother’s nature. What about jealousy, that bane of even the most mundane marriage? If the wife is smart, she will take turns each night and sleep with all the brothers. It's not like the older brother wants her the whole time. Until recently, no one here much cared what the outside world thought. Isolation had preserved a way of life that had withered everywhere else. But a road now links the region to distant cities. And on roofs once decorated only with prayer flags, satellite dishes sprout. This village has entered the modern world whose images of romance stand in sharp contrast to polyandry. But polyandry here faces a bigger threat: education. As more people are becoming more educated we are also practicing family planning. If a father has only one son there will be no question about the land, therefore, common marriages will come to an end. In two, perhaps three generations, polyandry may vanish here. But for now, those who practice it find comfort in the familiar. I, myself, feel that common marriage is very good. I feel like everyone should live like our family. Even if we do not have anything to eat or drink, we sit happily, we live peacefully. English (auto-generated)