
Welcome to Haryana—where cows are sacred, but brides are scarce. In a land that once killed off its daughters before they could even breathe, the ghosts of those unborn girls now haunt its skewed demographics. Fast forward a few decades, and here we are: more moustaches than mangalsutras, more bachelors than bhabhis, and enough frustrated men to form a “Randa Union”—the only union where heartbreak is on the agenda, and romance is a pipe dream.
It’s almost poetic. Decades of “Beta chahiye, beti nahi” have birthed a dystopia where beta is all you’ve got. Congratulations! You’ve successfully created a society where finding a bride is harder than cracking the UPSC.
In fact, in some villages, “Bahu do, vote lo” became an actual political slogan. One could almost imagine politicians riding into town on buses full of potential brides like some bizarre version of Swayamvar on Wheels. Government-mandated Tinder, anyone? Only this time, with voter ID and ration card verification.
Let’s not forget the added masala of mass unemployment. These men are not only single—they’re broke. No job, no family, no purpose—just government schemes that sound like a cruel joke. One activist said, “What’s the point of voting when we don’t even get sympathy, let alone a spouse?” The Randa Union is like a bachelor’s support group with a side of political blackmail: “Give us wives, or forget our votes.”
And guess what? They’re not even exaggerating. A huge shed in Hisar stands as a monument to male despair. Cots, tea, and tales of rejection form the core rituals. These are not men—they’re bachelor monks without the peace of celibacy.
Let’s pause and marvel at the irony. In gated societies, “No Bachelors Allowed” is painted bolder than “Fire Exit”. Rent is doubled if you’re unmarried—because obviously, loneliness must pay tax now. Meanwhile, married people are busy turning love into litigation, but that’s a separate circus altogether.
Truth bomb: Marriage was invented by society because we couldn’t deal with change or uncertainty. It’s fear with a mangalsutra. And now, these men are paying the price of a broken system designed around archaic expectations, gender biases, and a tragic obsession with legacy.
If marriage was about love, we wouldn’t need laws to keep people in it. If it was about happiness, why do most couples look like co-accused on a joint FIR? But no—unmarried men are the outcasts. They’re the “leftovers” of a culture that devoured its daughters.
The government’s answer? Half-hearted slogans like “Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao”, while completely ignoring the “Beta Bacha Lo—he’s turning 50 and still single” crisis. Where are the job schemes, the dignity plans, or the psychological support for this growing demographic?
In a country that worships marriage as the holy grail of adulthood, these men are stuck in limbo—too poor to marry, too old to matter, and too vocal to ignore.
And thus was born the Ekikrit Randa Union—India’s most reluctant brotherhood. Not a joke, but not quite a revolution either. Just men asking, “What now?”
What now indeed.
Maybe the next election manifesto will have a new category:
- Employment drives with “Wife & WiFi included”
- Matrimonial fairs hosted by the Labour Ministry
Or “Swachh Bharat Abhiyan – Randa Edition” with cleanup drives for broken hearts.
Behind the humour, though, lies a ticking time bomb of social neglect, toxic masculinity, systemic apathy, and cultural hypocrisy. We created this mess. The least we can do is stop laughing at it—and maybe, just maybe, start fixing it.
Because the Randa Republic deserves better than chai and despair.

