Moral of the episode: Don't go for love marriage if you don't have a strong mind!
Dear Mrs. RR, what is the moral of this story for the boy's parents?
My own uncle, only son after a row of seven girls, one of them my mom, a brilliant boy, came to U.S., did Ph.D., found the love of his life, Filipino girl, and married her. Even had a child with her. But, his mother, i.e. my grandmother, never left him alone, pounded him relentlessly. Finally he gave in, divorced his love and married a honest to goodness Iyengar girl, found by my dearly departed grandmother. After a few years, the arranged Iyengar wife from good old Trichy threw him out, changed the lock on the door, and they got divorced. After a few years he hooked up with another one, a Punjabi, and she turned out to be after him to get a green card by marrying him. She also ditched him after she got what she wanted. My uncle's family life is pretty much ruined, he is now, in his mid-sixties, a lonely man. All because of ஜாதி வெறி.
If there is a moral in such stories it is one for all the parents, but they want their children to learn some lesson or another, not themselves. It is way easy to second guess the level of strong mind needed to stand up to relentless parents and the strength of one's own mind, a mind that is madly in love. The young ones are not going to take any moral from this tragic story, at least let us hope the parents who must be more matured are amenable enough to learn the right lesson.