Above the Clouds, a Quiet Crisis of Inheritance: The Daughters Denied Their Due
by Mohammed Wajihuddin
A chance encounter on a flight to North Bihar spotlights a deeply entrenched cultural taboo that routinely strips women of their property rights—even within a legal framework meant to protect them.
Darbhanga, Bihar — The seatbelt sign had just been switched off at 35,000 feet, leaving the aircraft cruising through a sea of white clouds, when a quiet conversation between strangers exposed a painful reality. It was a mid-air encounter that bridged the gap between personal grief and a systemic social crisis gripping many traditional communities across India.
Two sisters in their mid-30s occupied the middle and aisle seats. Bound for Darbhanga from Delhi, they spoke a gentle mix of Urdu and Maithili—the dialect characteristic of North Bihar. The conversation began with a mundane question about the soaring cost of last-minute air travel.
“Sir, when did you buy your ticket?” the sister in the middle seat asked. Upon learning that a ticket booked a week prior cost ₹6,000, her jaw dropped. “We bought ours just last night and paid ₹13,000 each. Our father has passed away, and we are traveling for his funeral.”
The air filled with solemnity. After a brief, comforting prayer of Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji’un (“Verily we belong to God, and verily to Him we shall return”), and upon establishing a shared cultural background, the sister felt secure enough to unburden her heart. What emerged was a harrowing account of elder abuse, sibling greed, and systemic gender discrimination.
Shifting Fortunes and Broken Promises
The grief of losing a parent was visibly compounded by a deep sense of betrayal. The sister recounted the actions of her three brothers, describing them in a choked voice as “oppressors” (zalim).
“Our father transferred all his properties to them while he was alive,” she sobbed. “As long as the land remained in our father’s name, my brothers took care of him. The moment the deeds were signed over to his three sons, they began misbehaving with him. He died a deeply broken, sad man.”
The father’s final months were plagued by immense emotional suffering. Not only did his sons marginalize him once his financial utility was exhausted, but he was also grieving the sudden loss of his youngest daughter, who had succumbed to a heart attack just months earlier.
When asked if the brothers treated the surviving sisters with any decency, the response was bleak. “No,” she said. “They were angry with our father simply because he showed a deep affection for us.”
Yet, despite that affection, the father followed age-old patriarchal customs, completely denying his daughters a share of his wealth.
The Intersection of Scriptural Law and Social Practice
The tragedy highlights a glaring disconnect between religious jurisprudence and actual societal enforcement. Under Islamic law, daughters are explicitly granted a legal share in their parents’ estate, an inheritance right that persists even after marriage. However, a significant legal loophole exists: if a patriarch chooses to formally gift (Hiba) his entire estate to his sons during his lifetime, the daughters are effectively disinherited, leaving them with no legal recourse to claim their ancestral rights.
In many traditional societies across South Asia, it remains a heavily guarded social taboo for a woman to demand her share of parental property. Daughters are culturally conditioned to waive their rights in favor of their brothers, often under the guise of preserving familial harmony or securing a “safety net” should their marriages fail.
Unfortunately, as thousands of quiet family disputes reveal, that safety net is frequently an illusion.
Turning Parents into Dependents
Journalists, sociologists, and legal experts have long warned against the practice of aging parents completely relinquishing their financial assets before death. For decades, the wise have warned: Do not do injustice to your daughters out of blind love for your sons.
When parents completely divest themselves of their wealth while still alive, they effectively sever their own financial independence. By giving away their assets, they strip themselves of their autonomy and dignity, reducing their status to that of vulnerable dependents relying entirely on the unpredictable charity of their children.
This phenomenon is far from isolated to rural landscapes or specific demographics. The vulnerabilities of premature inheritance transfers span all socio-economic strata. India’s corporate history holds notable examples of prominent billionaires and industrialists who signed over their vast fortunes and corporate empires to their children, only to find themselves locked out of their own homes, stripped of their titles, and forced to battle in court for basic living allowances.
A Plea for Conscience and Magnanimity
As the aircraft began its descent into Mithilanchal—a region renowned for its rich cultural heritage—the sisters, visibly anxious about navigating the airport, collected their baggage and stepped out into the humid afternoon to meet a nephew.
While the immediate grief of the family head’s demise may temporarily soften familial friction, the long-term economic vulnerability of these sisters remains an open question.
Legally, when a father writes off his wealth to his sons, the daughters are left empty-handed. However, this raises a profound moral imperative for the modern family unit: even when legal frameworks fail to protect daughters, brothers must demonstrate moral character. True justice requires siblings to show magnanimity, look past technical loopholes, and voluntarily return to their sisters what is rightfully and ethically their due.
