It's the custom of the Chedams to steal their daughters-in-law from "Steve Day."
what kind of holiday is this? it has been documented in the state of chadan that the chetins have such a strange holiday — the “stealing day”, what is the “stealing day” and why is it called the “stealing day”? the chedan state gazette records that the chedans have a strange holiday — the “stolen day” — also known as the “stolen day” — which allows the chedans to open their houses day and night and to light their lights to steal from each other on the three days preceding and after the annual night's eve.
it is even more surprising that people can steal not only vegetables and guacamole from each other, but also a wife-in-law.
while it is not possible to verify when the wife's wife's wife's wife's goods and horses were stolen, as documented in the sundone chronicle, the chedams “have no penalty” and “have a wife and daughter's treasures and cars stolen by others” during the “steal day” show that the chedams could not only steal their daily goods but also “take away” the living women.
with respect to the custom of bride-to-wife theft during the “steve day”, most historians believe that this is mainly related to the socio-economic situation of the chindan nation.
is the early legacy of the late matrilineal society, which allowed a woman to freely enter into a marriage contract and to leave her husband's house on a “stolen day” basis; and the first reason was the precarious economic position of the chindam men, who had to spend three years of hard labour in the wife's house to get married before they could pay a “bride price” to leave.
the excessive process of
forced men and women to negotiate, and men stole women from the "steve day".
in the long run, the chaudd tradition of bride thefts from the chedan “steve day” has developed.
the
i'm sorry