100%👍Originally posted by: BrhannadaArmour
That happened on and after September 9. I know, Kirti was a spiteful and selfish character for a while, but I wouldn't call her spoilt or bratty. She's a working woman who supported her mother until Ammā decided to move in with Raghav. Suddenly, Ammā who used to proclaim her faith in Kirti and call Raghav a gūṇḍa spun around and said (on June 14), "When Raghav comes home, he'll fix Kirti!" Kirti didn't want Raghav to spoil her, but when she wouldn't take diamond jewelry from him, he passed it off as a gift from Pallavi. Kirti consistently wanted to move out, especially after the first time Raghav hit her, and Kirti was ready to move into Sunny's small apartment.
Raghav locking Kirti in her room was a violation of her constitutional right to freedom of movement and personal liberty, a crime called wrongful confinement, punishable under the Indian Penal Code, Sections 340 and 342. Jaya and Pallavi became accessories to Raghav's crime by not helping Kirti.
Kirti has good reasons to resent Raghav: Raghav knew that Krishna Rao had embezzled the villagers' money; Raghav was persuaded that "this is how you get rich" and accepted more money from Krishna Rao in exchange for his silence (i.e. Raghav became an accessory to the crime); after three months, when Raghav had used his commission to pay for Ajit's respiratory problems and Jaya's dance academy, the mob figured out the crime that Raghav was hiding, and killed Kirti's father and brother.
This was the story that Raghav told Pallavi, but by the time Jaya reacted to Pallavi's assertion that Krishna Rao had fooled Raghav, their conclusion was that Raghav had done nothing wrong; Raghav was a victim. Raghav's dishonest and exploitative business for the past ten years, following Krishna Rao's example, was forgotten by Jaya, but not by Kirti.
On the show, when Kirti told Raghav that his love for her is an act, Raghav responded by hitting her, thereby proving her point. In my fan fiction, I wanted Raghav's love for Kirti to be more sincere and involuntary. So, when Raghav finds out that Kirti is against him, he's shocked by Kirti's approach, but not by her animosity, and his concern for Kirti comes before any other response. In my story, Raghav is deeply hurt by Kirti's words, and has violent urges, but he doesn't want Kirti to be afraid of him, or ashamed of anything that she has done. I think that Raghav and Kirti having to talk distrustfully, when both of them yearn to be close, is more dramatic than Raghav hitting Kirti.
I agree with you that it was illogical of Jaya and Raghav to blame Pallavi for Kirti's escape. They were already stupid to think that making a matrimonial profile for Kirti (which is identity theft, a crime) and ordering Kirti to meet Jatin was the way to get rid of Sunny. They predictably humiliated themselves by inviting a matrimonial prospect for a woman who has a boyfriend. The irony is that Kirti wanted Jaya's blessing and wasn't ready to marry Sunny until Jaya compounded the problem and drove Kirti to take the plunge. Jaya's and Raghav's pique with Pallavi was extremely petty, considering that Raghav feels absolved of his many crimes against Pallavi, and Jaya is the one whose miscommunication led to the forced marriage.
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