Pakistan's Freudary Marriage
old and mysterious landlocked countries — pakistan.
every part of the world will have its own strange wedding practices, including in pakistan.
wedding is the most interesting in pakistan, where there are a lot of strange folk practices.
pakistan enters the “wedding season”
in april/may of each year as a day for pakistanis to get married, and the ceremony of marriage is very ceremonial and ordinary people's weddings last for three days because of the importance that pakistanis attach to the wedding.
the most impressive impression of the traditional pakistani wedding in the popular wedding ringp> is that it takes at least three days for ordinary people, while the wealthy families are busy for a week or two, or even a month.
during this time, both men and women will have a variety of ceremonies, pakistanis will have a strong family attitude, almost all relatives and friends will be present at weddings, and even relatives working in the gulf countries will come back so far.
the fact that pakistanis regard marriage as strong and stable, and are therefore indifferent to wedding rehearsals, dowry and bride price, contributes to some extent to the rise of the culture.
there's a custom in pakistan that's different from us, and it's where people laugh.
at the wedding of a friend's brother, a journalist found the groom in his hand with a “flower” made of paper money.
i thought it was a funeral wreath, curiously asking friends.
he smiled and said it was a sign of blessing and good luck, and that some bridegrooms would wear bouquets made of paper and money, with colours on them, and others wearing bouquets.
there are all sorts of bouquets on the market, so there's no more fuss.
at the wedding of a local friend, the family wrapped up a park near the house and asked the wedding company to set up a tent in the park for guests.
it is understood that it would cost hundreds of thousands or even millions of rupees for a wedding.
the reporter asked a local: "did you think about getting married?" he replied: “the poor can get married as a matter of course, and there are no such problems as bride price and dowry if they are in free love, and the poor can marry afghan and kashmiris, even iranians.
the poor can also enter into a family by marriage easily, i.e.
by marrying their sister or family girl to the other's brother or relative at the time of marriage, which reduces expenditure and strengthens relations within the family and the tribe.” i don't know