Dominican Republic FAMILY AND KIN
Rural family
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
The family was the fundamental social unit. It provided
a
bulwark in the midst of political upheavals and economic
reversals. People emphasized the trust, the assistance,
and the
solidarity that kin owed to one another. Family loyalty
was an
ingrained and unquestioned virtue; from early childhood,
individuals learned that relatives were to be trusted and
relied
on, while those outside the family were, implicitly at
least,
suspect. In all areas of life and at every level of
society, a
person looked to family and kin for both social identity
and
succor.
Formal organizations succeeded best where they were
able to
mesh with pre-existing ties of kinship. Indeed, until the
1960s
and the 1970s, most community activities were kin-based: a
few
related extended families joined together for joint
endeavors. In
the countryside, the core of extensively related families
remained pivotal, despite large-scale migration and
urbanization.
If anything, the ties among kin extended more widely in
contemporary society because modern transportation and
communications allowed families to maintain ties over long
distances and during lengthy absences.
In general, the extent to which families interacted,
and the
people with whom they interacted, depended on their degree
of
prosperity. Families with relatively equal resources
shared and
cooperated. Where there was marked disparity in families'
wealth,
the more prosperous branches tried to limit the demands
made by
the poorer ones. On the one hand, generosity was held in
high
esteem, and failure to care for kin in need was
disparaged; but
on the other hand, families wished to help their immediate
relatives and to give favors to those who could
reciprocate.
A needy relative might receive the loan of a piece of
land,
some wage labor, or occasional gifts of food. Another type
of
assistance was a form of adoption, by which poorer
families gave
a child to more affluent relatives to raise. The adopting
family
was expected to care for the child and to see that he or
she
received a proper upbringing. The children were frequently
little
better than unpaid domestic help. Implicit in the
arrangement was
the understanding that the child's biological family, too,
would
receive assistance from the adopting family.
Kinship served as a metaphor for relations of trust in
general. Where a kin tie was lacking, or where individuals
wished
to reinforce one, a relationship of compadrazgo
would
often be established. Those so linked are compadres
(coparents or godparents). In common with much of Latin
America,
strong emotional bonds linked compadres.
Compadres
used the formal usted instead of tu in
addressing
one another, even if they were kinsmen. Sexual relations
between
compadres were regarded as incestuous.
Compadres
were commonly chosen at baptism and marriage, but the
relationship extended to the two sets of parents. The tie
between
the two sets of parents was expected to be strong and
enduring.
Any breach of trust merited the strongest community
censure.
There were three accepted forms of marriage: civil,
religious, and free unions. Both serial monogamy and
polygamous
unions were socially accepted. Annulment was difficult to
obtain
through the Roman Catholic Church; this fact, in addition
to the
expense involved, made couples reluctant to undertake a
religious
marriage. Civil marriage was relatively common. Divorce in
this
case was relatively easy and uncomplicated. Marriage forms
also
reflected the individual's life cycle. Most opted for free
unions
when they were younger, then settled into more formal
marriages
as they grew older and enjoyed more economic security.
Class also
played a role: religious marriage was favored by
middle-class and
upper-class groups, and it thus indicated higher
socioeconomic
status. The ideal marriage involved a formal engagement
and a
religious wedding followed by an elaborate fiesta.
No shame accrued to the man who fathered many children
and
maintained several women as concubines. Public disapproval
followed only if the man failed to assume the role of
"head of
the family" and to support his children. When a free union
dissolved, a woman typically received only the house she
and her
mate inhabited. The children received support only if they
had
been legally recognized by their father.
Families were usually more stable in the countryside.
Since
the partners were usually residing in the midst of their
kin, a
man could not desert his wife without disrupting his work
relationship with her family. A woman enjoyed greater
leverage
when she could rely on her family to assist if a union
failed or
when she owned her own land and thus had a measure of
financial
independence.
In keeping with the doctrine of machismo, males usually
played a dominant role within the family, and they
received the
deference due to the head of the household. There was wide
variation in practice, however. Where a man was absent,
had
limited economic assets, or was simply unassertive, a
woman would
assume the role of head of the family.
Sex role differentiation began early: boys were allowed
to
run about unclothed, while girls were much more carefully
groomed
and dressed. Bands of boys played unwatched; girls were
carefully
chaperoned. Girls were expected to be quiet and helpful;
boys
enjoyed much greater freedom, and they were given
considerable
latitude in their behavior. Boys and men were expected to
have
premarital and extramarital sexual adventures. Men
expected,
however, that their brides would be virgins. Parents went
to
considerable lengths to shelter their daughters in order
to
protect their chances of making a favorable marriage.
Parent-child relationships were markedly different
depending
on the sex of the parent. Mothers openly displayed
affection for
their children; the mother-child tie was virtually
inviolate.
Informal polls of money changers in the 1970s indicated
that
remittances sent from the United States for Mother's Day
exceeded
even those sent at Christmas. Father-child relationships
covered
a broader spectrum. Ideally, the father was an authority
figure
to be obeyed and respected; however, fathers were
typically more
removed from daily family affairs than mothers.
Data as of December 1989
|