In the Indian highlands, there is either a tribe or a nation called Ladakhi. The life of the people is rather primitive, the land is not very fertile, and the customs are rather strange.
The number of Ladakhs is about 60 thousand people, and most of them live on earth, the cultivation of which is their main occupation. It is not known what they know about scientific communism, but within their society they managed to build something similar themselves, and they built it quite a long time ago.
In general, their culture correlates with the traditions of other Tibetan peoples, and the bulk of Ladakhs profess Tibetan Buddhism, which is what some worshipers use.
Of particular interest is their family structure and land inheritance. The fact is that women here do not marry one man, but for him and all his younger brothers or third-party husbands with lesser status.
Accordingly, the children are common here, and the oldest of them receives the inheritance. This allows you not to split up land and keep the people united. Younger husbands feed from the same plot, but they are not its owners. They work, eat and make children.
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True, the Ladakhi have recently been abandoning this custom. The most fertile lands belong to monasteries, which, following the example of Orthodox priests two centuries ago, strive to use parishioners as free labor. And besides, they are also engaged in usury.
From such a life, many men (and not only them) either go to monasteries themselves, or escape to cities, where they join the generally accepted realities. They give birth to their own wives, their own property and no longer really remember the bright Ladakh past. And who will blame them for this? The fish is looking for where it is deeper, and where the man is better.