NRI children being cared for by grandparents in India
Posted: Mon Feb 21, 2011 9:12 pm
Cultural trend of sending children back to homeland can cause trauma
[QUOTE]As a psychotherapist, I feel compelled to alert families, and young immigrant couples in particular, to the peril of separating the child from the parents at a very young age. I refer to the practice of young immigrant parents sending their child, often under age 1, thousands and thousands of miles away to be raised by grandparents in another country for an extended length of time.
Working in the culturally diverse Bay Area, I have had opportunities to hear about, witness and deal with the long-term effects of this phenomenon. Sadly, it is not a decreasing trend. And my experience is that the parents often minimize and deny the inherent trauma of the separation.
I have observed this practice more often in communities and cultures that have traditional values associated with extended families and multiple mothering. Young immigrant families sometimes find themselves overwhelmed by caring for their baby in a culture far from their own. By "far," I mean distance both in terms of geography and of emotional and cultural difference.
The child is temporarily raised by grandparents or extended family while the young parents work and study toward a better quality of life -- more time and money and the long-term interests of the family. In my experience, this separation happens more often in Asian, South Asian and Middle Eastern cultures.
In these cultures, almost everyone knows someone who has sent their child "back home" for a few months to a year or two.
...
What do you think about babies being sent to India and staying with grandparents for a year or two while parents are living abroad?
- Never an acceptable option. Parents should have a baby only if they can take care of it without sending it away.
OR
- It can sometimes become necessary for parents to opt for this arrangement.
Are the negative effects of such arrangement on the parent-child bonding long term or does the initial bonding of the first 1-2 years not matter that much in the long run?
[QUOTE]As a psychotherapist, I feel compelled to alert families, and young immigrant couples in particular, to the peril of separating the child from the parents at a very young age. I refer to the practice of young immigrant parents sending their child, often under age 1, thousands and thousands of miles away to be raised by grandparents in another country for an extended length of time.
Working in the culturally diverse Bay Area, I have had opportunities to hear about, witness and deal with the long-term effects of this phenomenon. Sadly, it is not a decreasing trend. And my experience is that the parents often minimize and deny the inherent trauma of the separation.
I have observed this practice more often in communities and cultures that have traditional values associated with extended families and multiple mothering. Young immigrant families sometimes find themselves overwhelmed by caring for their baby in a culture far from their own. By "far," I mean distance both in terms of geography and of emotional and cultural difference.
The child is temporarily raised by grandparents or extended family while the young parents work and study toward a better quality of life -- more time and money and the long-term interests of the family. In my experience, this separation happens more often in Asian, South Asian and Middle Eastern cultures.
In these cultures, almost everyone knows someone who has sent their child "back home" for a few months to a year or two.
...
What do you think about babies being sent to India and staying with grandparents for a year or two while parents are living abroad?
- Never an acceptable option. Parents should have a baby only if they can take care of it without sending it away.
OR
- It can sometimes become necessary for parents to opt for this arrangement.
Are the negative effects of such arrangement on the parent-child bonding long term or does the initial bonding of the first 1-2 years not matter that much in the long run?