A Multi-Cultural Wedding Experience: Part 2

My First Indian Wedding-Me with the Couple

My First Indian Wedding-Me with the Couple

There are a few certainties in the summer months: BBQs, blockbuster movies, tan lines, humidity and, of course, weddings.  My earlier Iowan summers were filled with family cookouts at Lake Okoboji, endless days at the city pool achieving horrid tan lines, sticky nights up to no good in tall cornfields and the traditional exchange of nuptials between two Christian Midwesterners.  This summer I’ve managed to take in all the aforementioned certainties in the form of hot dogs, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, wicked Texas-induced tan lines, makeup-melting sweats (myth buster: Dallas has humidity!) and two of the most wonderfully unique weddings I’ve ever attended.

Two August 2009 weekend road trips brought me to steamy Houston, TX for an Americanized Nigerian wedding and a traditional Indian wedding.  I had no idea what to expect other than cake and some shameless dancing where others look on in horror.  I went in with an open mind, and each one presented me with a different perspective on weddings, love, traditions and the union of two people ready to officially start their lives together.

WEDDING #2:

Another weekend and another trip to the suburbs of Houston (quite a bit like the suburbs of Dallas really), and I was thrilled about attending my first Indian wedding.  I’d heard legends about how fun and how beautiful Indian weddings are, and I’d seen Slumdog Millionaire—therefore, I must be an expert on Indian culture (that’s a joke).  I met the bride earlier this year as she was new to the company and I was to be mentoring her during her first 30 days.  It was love at first sight, and we have been close friends ever since.  She was engaged when she started with the company, and I’d been anticipating this happy wedding for months.

Roommate Lindsay, my faithful co-pilot, and I headed to the temple mid-morning on Saturday.  We weren’t sure where we were going and somehow wandered around the side of the temple.  In between two buildings were lovely gardens where a drummer was bringing rhythm to celebratory dancing and the groom was hoisted onto the shoulders of friends and family.  You could see the groom’s smile from our far off vantage point, and it nearly melted my heart.  Like the prior weekend I found myself in awe of the clothes.  The colors, the draped fabric, the jewels, the beautiful people, etc all took my breath away and felt so wonderfully foreign.

Party in the Temple Gardens-Groom Hoisted Up

Party in the Temple Gardens-Groom Hoisted Up

Lindsay and I decided that we should probably be inside the temple, and we managed to find a side door leading into the room where the ceremony was to be held (a banquet hall with tables facing a stage).  The first person I saw was my lovely friend, the bride, in traditional Indian wedding clothes, and I had to fight back tears.  She was more beautiful than any Bollywood movie star or person I’d ever seen.  It’s an odd thing to see one of your friends in their traditional ethnic clothes…this is such a huge part of who she is, and I’d never seen her in this way.  I must say that a sari is far lovelier than a power suit any day!

The Beautiful Bride

The Beautiful Bride

Lindsay and I found our other Dallas friends and reserved a table with a VIP view of the stage where the ceremony was to be held.  We headed out from the banquet room to the lobby area where the groom, drummer and party had migrated from the gardens to the temple doors.  I could now clearly see he was wearing a turban-like hat on his head (again, surprising to see him in traditional clothes) and that melt-your-heart smile.  Like the bride, he looked like a movie star.  The crowd in the foyer parted, and the bride was led by her sisters out to the groom.  They were both hoisted in the air and placed garlands of roses around each others’ necks.  After being gently placed back on the ground, they headed inside separately for the ceremony to begin.

Back in the banquet room, the bride’s parents were sitting in two chairs facing the audience on the stage.  After a procession, they were joined by the groom who sat down in a chair to the side of the bride’s father.  After welcoming him, the bride’s sisters placed a tapestry in front of the groom to prevent him from seeing the bride until she was sitting across from him.  The bride’s friends walked down the aisle holding candles and filed to the sides of the aisle waiting for the bride to pass by.  My friend was breathtaking as she walked down the aisle and up onto the stage with her aunt and uncle.  She took the seat across from her soon-to-be husband, and the ceremony continued in Gujarati and Sanskrit.

The Bride Approaches the Groom

The Bride Approaches the Groom

From this point on, the room was full of chatter and movement (very different than most American weddings).  I wasn’t too sure about what was happening on the stage, but I was enchanted by it.  Suddenly (or so it seemed to me since I didn’t know what was happening) the bride and groom stood up and they placed garlands around each other’s necks as they had done earlier.  There was a flurry of activity and the photographers began to snap tons of photos.  After a few more rituals—one of which a varamala (rope) was placed around them, husband and wife took the seats where the bride’s parents were originally sitting.  I assumed at this point that they were married which was later confirmed to be true.  From this time until we left, waves of people were coming up to the stage for photos with the couple.

The Happy Couple!

The Happy Couple!

As I beamed at the couple onstage, I was beginning to feel the effects of the Indian wedding ceremony: desire to wear a sari, be Indian, spontaneously start dancing with the music and understand Hindi.  Lindsay and I know one of the bridesmaids, and she assisted with filling us in on what was happening throughout the afternoon.  We were most thankful to her!

People had been eating for some time (hence the chatter and movement), and I decided to get in the buffet line.  I watched the Indian people in line around me and copied them.  The food was Indian (of course), vegetarian, spicy and wonderful.  I didn’t recognize very much of it, but I tried it all and enjoyed it!

Wedding Food

Wedding Food

My mind was in a whirl after all of this (exactly like the prior weekend), and the day was only half over!  I couldn’t even imagine what to expect for the evening reception.  Lindsay and I found our way to the hotel and then later to the room where the bride was getting ready.  Up close I was able to notice the amazing intricacy and detail of the henna on her hands, forearms and feet.  I’ve tried to draw it on my hands before, but it never looked quite like this… I was informed that everyone was going to be changing outfits for the reception which made me as happy as my mother in an antique store.  The wardrobe change meant that I was going to be ogling at all new saris for the night!!

As the reception kicked off, it wasn’t only the clothes that enraptured me but the whole event.  There were entertaining MCs running the show, fantastic Indian music, family introductions, several choreographed dances and an adorable skit about the bride and groom put on by their close friends.  It was all bright, fun and joyous.  Eventually it was time for the dance party, and I was dreading it after seeing all the other talented dancers throughout the night.  I was pulled onto the dance floor, informed of a few simple ways to dance somewhat like an Indian person would (lift your arms, screw in the light bulb and move your hips) and wound up having one hell of a great night.

The Happy Couple Watching the Skits

The Happy Couple Watching the Skits

Besides the clothes, a few things really struck me about my first (and hopefully not last—Jilan, Pranav???) Indian wedding:

  • There were a lot of customs and rituals that were completely foreign to me.  I felt really honored to be a part of such a traditional Indian event.  I was humbled at how respectful the ceremony was to Indian culture.
  • It was a huge crowd – it seemed like people had come in from all over for the big day.
  • The close and extended family were recognized and paid respect throughout the weekend.
  • Colors, everywhere.  It was not just white with a hint of Tiffany’s blue.  No, it was reds and oranges and pinks and blues and lilacs, etc, etc.  I LOVED IT.
  • The bride and groom had a natural glow of happiness, but they were also sparkling with jewels and sequins on their clothes.  In addition, the ceremonial area was filled with sparkles.  I LOVED IT.
  • Music was an integral part of the event.  Between the drummer and the Indian music playing overhead, I couldn’t help but keep the beat with my hands.
  • Dancing was inevitable: we saw dancing when we first walked up to the temple and we ended the night with dancing which I really got into.  It was the beat in that music…

The approximately fourth-generation German-American-Iowan girl (hence the last name ending with –DORF) went to Houston and attended a Nigerian-American and an Indian wedding.  The German-ness is mostly non-apparent in our customs back home.  I love that my friends who got married this August still have such close connections to their home countries and their customs.  Those rituals all had special meaning about the act of marriage making for two weddings that were very different but equally spectacular to me.

If I decide to ditch the elopement idea, I’ll have Nigerian headdresses, saris, Indian music, Nigerian music, Indian dancing, Indian food, the Nigerian custom of throwing money on the couple, that slightly-coconuty cake from the first wedding…

The Couple's First Dance

The Couple's First Dance

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