Abstract:
Loss and bereavement are an important part of anybody’s life. Experience of loss is even more
distressing when the death of a person brings additional social stigma. Such is the experience
of widowhood in post war Sri Lanka. A common idea about this experience in a country like
Sri Lanka is the ‘colorless’ life a widow is expected to live till the time she breathes on this
earth. A widow is stigmatized, feared and segregated from the family and wider society. An
elderly widow is at a particular disadvantage, as she has to face discrimination on three grounds
– gender, age and widowhood. Given this context, this study, intended to understand the social
background of elderly widows.
The main objective of this study is to consider the Common conceptions about widowhood and
looking into how different meaning of this experience emerges in post-war Jaffna. Time and
again many researchers have tried to get to the basics of understanding widowhood. This
paper’s primary concern is to fill this gap of doctrinal approach of meaning attribution to
widowhood through a qualitative sociological approach on the meaning of widowhood based
on real life experiences in post war Jaffna, Sri Lanka. This study makes further attempts to
answer the following specific research questions– How do elderly widows construct meaning
of their status as widows in post war Jaffna? And do their role, status and experience within the
household and family effect creation of such meaning?
This study conducted a qualitative research based on random sampling method. This paper has
reported on the experiences of 62 elderly widows. The participants were selected from a list of
those who got registered as elderly widows at the divisional secretariat in Jaffna. The selected
respondents were using in-depth interviews, non- direct and participant observation and key
informant interviews (09) as the ways of collecting primary data through the purposive
sampling. The method for the analysis of data is theme analysis based on grounded theory for
the analysis of field interviews. The focus of this paper is on elderly widows as they are the
ones whom more likely to have grave experience of widowhood on the basis of their gender,
age, day to day life events, situations, etc. This preliminary fieldwork pertaining to the topic
gave us a sense that not all the widows have attached the same kind of meaning to their
widowhood experience. Creation of a; meaning depends on various factors from grief of losing
a caring husband to the relief of getting rid of a drunkard husband. Since issue of elderly people
have become a central part of the development and social work discourse in the post-war Tamil
society, findings through this study can be helpful in developing better understanding of elderly
widowhood and what kind of approach and policies need to be formulated to address their issues
and grievances.