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Leaving 3-Year-Old Daughter And ₹100 Cr Wealth Behind, Surat Woman Joins Husband In Monkhood

Their family members will take care of the child.
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Yatindra Kush Tyagi/Facebook

Anamika Rathore, a 34-year-old woman from Surat, decided to become Sadhvi Anakar Shreeji just two days after her husband Sumit Rathore became a Jain monk.

Amidst criticism and opposition from various people, the couple renounced Rs 100 crore property and their three-year-old daughter to become monks.

When the couple had first announced their decision a week back, the Gujarat child rights panel filed a complaint against them for leaving their 3-year-old child and had sought a report from the civil administration and the police. In the complaint, concerns were raised about the daughter's future.

The city police commissioner had then called the Jain community leaders and lawyers to discuss the issue after the report was sought. Meanwhile, Anamika had told the officials that her child will "not become an orphan" if she leaves. "My brother and sister-in-law who are issueless have gladly adopted her. My father's family is rich and so is my father-in-law's family," she said.

The Jain community leaders has said that Rathore's family members will take care of the child. The legal formalities for adoption are in process.

"The legal formalities for adoption and custody of the child are being completed by the family members in Neemuch. The child is being taken care by family hence it is not a major issue," Indrachand Kher, a Jain community leader told Times Of India.

On Monday, Anamkia was given 'diksha' by Sadhu Margi Jain Samaj Acharya Ramlalji Maharaj at a function held in Surat.

The couple, who married four years ago, had decided to become monks when their daughter was eight months old and they had reportedly started preparing for it back then.

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17 Women Unfurled Beautiful Memories After Donning Their Mothers Saris
Bhavna Kher, 34, Writer(01 of17)
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"It took my mother six months to embroider this sari. The intricate Kashmiri embroidery is not easy to pull off - her back ached, her eyes strained but she didn't give up and eventually gave this to me as a wedding present. I know I will drape my mother's blessings, each time I drape this sari." (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Shagun Seda Sengupta, 34, Creative Director(02 of17)
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"This is a 23 year old pure chiffon sari from Mysore that my father gifted my mother. I love how it's so simple yet so striking. Since it was a gift from my father, I never had the nerve to ask my mother to give it to me. On her 60th birthday, in a fit of motherly love she finally gave me this sari." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Uma Prakash Shetty, 23 (in this photo), Homemaker(03 of17)
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"As a young girl I loved raiding my mother's wardrobe and wearing her finest saris. Today my daughter does the same with mine." (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Preeti Verma, 33, Owner and Designer Runaway Bicycle(04 of17)
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"This is a 35 year old Benarasi sari that my mother got as a wedding gift from my father's family. Over the years the sari tore in places but she loved it so much she darned it with bright green flowers. My mother's love for it makes this sari even more special to me." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Garima Sharma, 23, Freelance Writer(05 of17)
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"The sari belonged to my nani. And even though it is a few years old, pink and looks like it was made for serene, elegant and god-fearing good girls, I adore it. When she was taken really ill, my nani still wore saris, and she kept this one for special occasions. It's not very well worn though because she passed away after a long battle with heart trouble. She was very important to me and her death affected me profoundly. I am very rootless about sentiment and in the wake of her death, some of the smaller islands of her life have remained in the form of the few precious items that I have inherited from her." (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Hetal Ajmera, 35, Designer and partner, Sharpener Inc.(06 of17)
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"I like dressing comfortably, so I never wanted to wear a sari, I felt I would hate it. But we had one of those family functions where I had no choice but to wear one, so I picked this from my mom's cupboard. It was the first sari I wore, it was soft, easy and surprisingly very comfortable. I've loved wearing saris ever since." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Bollamma Apaya, 82, Homemaker(07 of17)
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"This is 53 years old, it's a Dharmavaram sari. It's a special memory for me because it is the last sari my mother gave me before she passed away." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Ankitha Sista, 25(08 of17)
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" This is a 34-year old sari and my mother saved her salary for a couple of months to buy it because she set her heart on it when she saw it. Two decades later, this turned out to be my personal favourite, much to her surprise. She gave it away to me as a reminder of how we agreed on the same thing for once. " (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Priyanka Bose, 34, Actor(09 of17)
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"25 years ago, my father bought this Dhakai sari for my mother from Bangladesh and she kept it aside for me. He always had immaculate taste for her when it came to saris. I always say, as we Bengalis don't inherit money, we inherit ma's saris." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Archana, 23, Domestic Help(10 of17)
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"This sari belonged to my aunt. My own mother passed away when I was very little, but my aunt brought me up like her own daughter. This is not a very old sari, but it was bought by my aunt for herself and she gave it to me because I loved it so much." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Supriya, 31, Ad Film Maker(11 of17)
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"This is a 34 year old Benarasi sari that my mother wore for her wedding and when she passed it on to me, I wore it for mine." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Neepa Sheth, 49(12 of17)
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Sheth is wearing a 26 year old Kanjeevaram sari that was passed down from her mother as part of her wedding trousseau - Soup (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Diksha Basu, 32, Writer and Occasional Actor(13 of17)
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"This is one of the first saris I took from my mother because I love the colour scheme. We both wear a lot of red and black. These days we share our saris but when I wear this particular one I see flashes of my mother whenever I catch my reflection." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
Shilpa Colluru, 33, Marketing Professional(14 of17)
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"My mother was a teacher and she was known to never repeat her saris even for a single day. I've inherited her love for saris." (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Yalini Murukathas, 25, Legal Caseworker(15 of17)
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"My father bought this Kanjivaram silk sari for my mother days before he passed away. I was 9 years old. He used to lavish her with gifts so this is one of many, but one day I found a photo of Amma standing beside him draped in this sari. He looked so happy. I like to think he would have been at least half as happy had he been here to see me in it 16 years later." (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Nirmala Mayur Patil, 33, Writer/Photographer(16 of17)
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"As orphans and beginning their life together from scratch, this first mysore silk sari papa got for ma meant a great deal for both. For me today, although aged and fraying around the edges, it narrates their tale and is a tangible reminder of where I came from." (credit:Soup/ Facebook)
Ankita Kohli, 28, Freelance Creative Consultant(17 of17)
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"This is one of my mother's college saris. A part of me always wonders about my mother as a young college girl when I now wear this sari as a grown woman." (credit:Vijit Gupta/ Soup)
-- This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.