Two Brothers Share One Wife
HIMACHAL PRADESH, India (CNN) — Amar and Kundan Singh Pundir are  brothers. Younger brother Amar breaks rocks in a mine for a living.  Kundan farms their small piece of inherited land. They live in a  beautiful but remote hillside village in the clouds of Himachal Pradesh,  India
Two Brothers Share One Wife
Both aged in their 40′s, the two brothers have lived together nearly  their whole lives. They are poor and share just about everything: Their  home, their work and a wife. “See we have a tradition from the beginning  to have a family of five to ten people. Two brothers and one wife.”  Kundan says.
They practice what is known as fraternal polyandry — where the  brothers of one family marry the same woman. Why…? Tradition and  economics.
Life is hard here. The village is precariously perched on the side of  a very steep hill about 6,000ft up. Most of the villagers survive off  tiny plots of cropland. In this difficult terrain there is not enough  land to go around. So, instead of finding separate wives and splitting  up their inherited property, the brothers marry the same woman and keep  their land together.
Wife Indira Devi says life with two husbands is not easy. “We fight a lot.”
But like any married couple they fight mostly over mundane stuff,  except there are three spouses instead of two. “Usually it’s about  chores, why didn’t you do this…? Why didn’t you do that…?” she says. But  one thing they agreed on was the need to have children; they have  three. So how does a married trio deal with sex…?
“We make shifts, change shifts and sleep on alternate days. We have  to make shifts otherwise it won’t work,” Kundan says. “To run our  families we have to do this, overcome the hurdles as well and then we  have to control our hearts from feeling too much,” Amar adds.
To outsiders their arrangement may seem odd, but in the village of about 200 it is the norm.
Typically the marriages are arranged and women have two husbands. But  some wives have three or four depending on how many brothers there are  in a family. Polyandry is illegal in India but socially acceptable here.  No one from the government seems to bother the villagers about the law.  “It’s been going on for ages. My sister in law has two husbands, my  mother in law also has two husbands,” Indira says.
And as to the question of which husband is the biological father of  the children — the Pundir’s don’t know and don’t care. “For me everyone  is the same, my mother and my fathers are the same. My mother and my  fathers are like God to me,” 17-year old daughter Sunita Singh Pundir  says. Even as modern society arrives in this ancient village through  satellite dishes and mobile phones, the Pundirs say they want their  age-old tradition to continue with their children. “Absolutely,” eldest  son Sohna says.
He and his younger brother have already discussed it and will marry the same woman.
Daughter Sunita is not so sure.
“I would like one husband,” she says.
But when asked if she will marry for love or tradition, Sunita’s  answer makes it clear the tradition of marrying more than one man will  continue with the next generation. “I will never leave our tradition  even if I have to forgo love. I will never spoil my parents’ reputation  and my brothers.”
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