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ARRANGED MARRIAGES- fascinating article
NRI Says,
I Married a Total Stranger
New York, Nov 10, 2007
Ashok Agarwal
NRI Anjali Mansukhani wrote her experience as "I
Married a Total Stranger" in Marie Claire on Oct.
2007 issue. This is a fascinating article, describing how her arranged
marriage was set up by the decision of both parents as living in
America.
- She discusses her family's wedding traditions, her transition
from living with her family in India to becoming a corporate wife
in Manhattan
- First meeting between the families, including the future bride
and groom. At the second meeting, both parents made the decision.
The mothers called a week later to conclude the engagement.
- She describes the period after the marriage when they got to
know each other as “just like dating, only we were already
married.”
Read Full Story
Marie Claire
November 2007
by Anjali Mansukhani
I Married a Total Stranger
Despite the fact that she was college-educated and he was a successful
banker, she saw her husband exactly three times before they took
their vows. But how would their arranged marriage play in America?
By Anjali Mansukhani
Most Americans have sex on the third date. I married my husband
after meeting him for the third time. I'm Indian, and having an
arranged marriage is something that my ancient culture still thinks
is a great idea.
Since the day I was born, my parents had been planning this occasion.
When I was 20, they presented me with my first proposal. I found
him overbearing, and I desperately hoped there would be more suitors.
There were. But I passed on every Raj, Arun, and Sanjay —
too fat, too boring, too short.
By age 26, after attending more than 150 weddings, I was fast approaching
my "expiration date." So my parents put pressure on our
community — not to mention my relatives — to find The
One. They urged me to be more flexible, and I had no reason to argue.
Being a spinster in Indian society is considered an embarrassment,
a burden on the family. I was raised to think a smiling groom, approved
and blessed by my parents, was the ultimate achievement. While Western
teenagers spent summers working the cash register at the mall, I
spent mine learning to sew and cook so that I could someday be a
successful wife.
After endless auditions of eligible bachelors, my family short-listed
a Wall Street banker — an Indian living in New York, who happened
to be in town on his annual 10-day visit to see his family. My cousin
had arranged for a casual encounter between our two families during
high tea at her home. He was tall, dark, and 29. Sporting funky
eyeglasses and a sharp blazer in Mumbai's 100-degree heat, he spoke
with an American accent that I found knee-knockingly sexy. The second
time I saw him was at a dinner orchestrated by both families, where
our parents decided on the spot that this was my guy. There was
something about his demeanor, his soft, lilting voice, and the pleasing
way he interacted with my family — frankly, we all fell for
him.
My parents were ecstatic, and truthfully, I was pleased to be the
reason for their joy. One week later, his mother called my mother,
and by the end of the phone call, we were engaged. Shouts and hugs
were exchanged throughout the neighborhood — you'd have thought
I'd won an Olympic gold medal.
A wedding date was set for six months later, the venue picked,
and a guest list of a thousand finalized. As the preparations began
and wedding invitations were hand-delivered, I visited with friends
and said my good-byes. Of course, I was anxious about being shipped
halfway across the world to the U.S. I was giving up my cultural
identity and lifestyle: Indian monsoons; colorful saris; conversations
in my mother tongue; the inquisitive neighbors, cousins, and aunts;
and most of all, the food.
But on the other hand, it was nice to finally be engaged. And the
very fact that I was getting hitched to an Indian living in America
made me royalty.
Traditionally in India, the bride's father pays for the weeklong
ceremony. He also provides a "dowry" — cash that
accompanies the bride from her old home to her new one and serves
as her financial security — sort of an ancient prenup. In
today's urban India, it's couched in a package of fabulous parties,
elegant saris, and, of course, heirloom jewels that mothers have
cleverly been amassing since their daughters were born. My future
in-laws, however, insisted on sharing the financial burden, setting
the stage for an equitable and very modern marriage.
For months, my 16 aunts slaved away, putting together a trousseau
of the wildest, boldest silks. My mother became the conductor of
this grand orchestra, giving orders and coordinating schedules.
The days when the preparations felt overwhelming were actually the
ones when I was least afraid of my future. In America, I wouldn't
be governed by in-laws, nosy neighbors, or relatives checking on
whether I was following tradition. I imagined freedom. Relief. Independence.
The wedding was preceded by six days of partying, each one centering
on a small religious ceremony, plus a social gathering featuring
fireworks, feasting, music, and Bollywood-style dancing. Each day
required a different outfit, jewelry, hairdo, and makeup. Rather
than the bachelorette parties I'd later learn about in the States
— where someone might end up with a "Chuck Forever"
tattoo — at home in Mumbai, my girlfriends and I partook in
a henna hand-painting ritual to beautify me for my future husband.
After the henna ceremony, two of my cousins took me aside and gave
me the CliffsNotes on the birds and bees. Combine an Indian upbringing
with a Catholic-school education, and my knowledge of sex was limited
to "It is a sin." Despite blushing profusely and begging
them to stop, I completed the crash course, and we all laughed.
On the wedding day, my groom, dressed in a brocade coat, arrived
in a flower-decked Mercedes — a modern-day maharaja. Together,
we circled the holy fire seven times (a tradition called Saat Pheras);
then, under a canopy of frangipanis and orchids, we were wedded
for seven lifetimes. The Pheras are the most important part of the
wedding ceremony. In Hinduism, the fire is considered the sustainer
of life, and it is only after the Saat Pheras are completed that
a couple is declared man and wife. Each Phera is taken to invoke
the blessings of specific gods and goddesses, who then grant the
seven blessings: financial stability, health, faith, trust and love,
progeny, togetherness, and loyalty and unity forever.
On my wedding night, a sense of calm finally washed over me, as
I made my leap from bride to wife (armed with the Kama Sutra, which
my cousins had downloaded onto my PDA as a gift).
After our 10-day honeymoon, we were ceremoniously dispatched to
Manhattan. My life was packed into six bursting suitcases. When
my husband had described our apartment, I'd pictured a life-size
dollhouse with separate dining and living rooms, bedrooms, balconies
— a tall building with a green garden. Instead, my new home
turned out to be smaller than my bedroom in India. The trade-off:
From the 40th floor the view was unsurpassable. My husband's American
friends called, asking about the wedding and curious to see if I
had a nose ring. I was just as eager to meet them.
The next day, my banker husband went to work, and I was home alone
for the first time. I eyed his walk-in closet, courageously moving
his suits into a smaller armoire. Judging from what remained, I
had married an avid golfer, skier, and board-game player. That evening,
he moved his clothes back into the walk-in, offering to share it.
Still, it seemed I had too many things for the space. My neighbor
suggested unplugging the refrigerator to maximize storage (a trick
she had used). It seemed extreme, but by the second week, I was
considering it. After all, I discovered that New York delivers coffee
and anything else, even in a blizzard.
While I craved privacy in India, the lack of neighbors and family
dropping in left a shocking void every day as I ate breakfast and
lunch alone. My husband worked late most evenings, and I sat in
front of the TV, unable to call home because it would be 2 a.m.
there.
Being away from India gave us the chance to get to know each other.
The first few weekends we spent like tourists — a trip around
Manhattan on the Circle Line, a romantic view from the top of the
Empire State Building. My husband bought me fashionable, sometimes
sexy clothes, and we tested each others' boundaries. We talked incessantly
about our childhoods, schools, friends, mistakes, hopes, dreams,
and desires. It was just like dating, only we were already married.
After a few weeks, I learned that I'd married a "jetrosexual."
He had an exhausting travel schedule (four cities in four days).
I joined the ranks of corporate wives who saw every show, opera,
and ballet in town, just to fill the hours.
To make friends, I joined a gym, went to the library, and took
Italian classes. I discovered that having an arranged marriage was
a great icebreaker, and my social circle mushroomed each time I
retold my story.
As peers in India opted for motherhood and worked on post-baby
waistlines, I took Spinning and pole dancing at the gym to work
off exotic dinners of sweetbreads, foie gras, chocolate mousse.
After reading about America's obsession with Venti decaf skim mochas,
I went to try one — but came back instead with a spiced chai
latte. Amazingly, Starbucks was providing my childhood drink on
every corner.
Marriage, I soon learned, wasn't easy — especially to a modern
man. My husband had acquired a mistress, and her name was BlackBerry.
She had the power to stop discussions midsentence, her red signal
lighting up his face in the way I only dreamed of doing.
With his work schedule and my burgeoning social calendar, our love
story unfolded on fluorescent Post-its stuck to the fridge: "Water
plants." "Out of toothpaste." "Make baby tonight."
Nothing, it seemed, was left to chance.
Slowly, I was getting to know my husband, even starting to fall
in love with him. Though we were from the same ethnic background
and had a similar upbringing, he had spent his impressionable years
in America. He liked baseball, oatmeal, tofu, and bran muffins.
I followed cricket and thought of oats and bran as the stuff we
fed horses. I had no idea how to do laundry in machines. On my first
attempt, I shrank his favorite Burberry sweater. Luckily, he didn't
expect me to conform to the traditional roles within a marriage.
Even so, he had always wanted an arranged marriage because he felt
it would be easier for him to share a life with someone who understood
his upbringing and culture.
But I could not escape tradition entirely. In a matter of months,
our home became an extension of the Air India terminal, as uncles,
sisters, brothers, and distant cousins settled in on the pull-out
couch. (I'd forgotten that an Indian woman marries a family, not
just a man.) For three months, I endured gigantic suitcases in the
middle of the living room, curry wafting into the hallway, and prayer
bells at 6 a.m. sharp. I envied my friend Anna, whose Swedish parents
stayed in a hotel, treated her to brunch at Serafina, and busied
themselves at Bloomie's
To escape the houseguests, I found a job as a financial consultant.
The New York Times in one hand, coffee in the other, I realized
that my saris of bright pink, violet, and salmon were not exactly
subway wear. Quickly, I succumbed to Levi's and Ralph Lauren.
My officemates were intrigued when they heard about my arranged
marriage. "It's nice to have a spiritual and family connection
with your husband, rather than one that begins in a bar and ends
with sex," sighed leggy Victoria from Brooklyn, who frequented
eHarmony and match.com.
That's when I started to realize that I just might have the best
of both worlds. I marinated my Indian marriage in the flavors of
Manhattan. I kept the sari and bought the Jimmy Choos. I made fabulous
curries, seasoned with spices from Dean & Deluca. And after
months of enjoying decidedly non-Indian experiences of seders, Saks,
and sake, I felt confident enough to direct Indian guests to a hotel,
occasionally throwing in a MetroCard.
As Indian women gain financial independence, it is inevitable that
we will see fewer arranged marriages — and maybe that's too
bad. I firmly believe that our marriage works because it is blessed
and supported by our families. The strength we get from their advice
(solicited and unsolicited) helps us overcome difficult times. Had
I found my own mate, I'm sure my parents would have come around,
but I'd have to live knowing that they wouldn't be truly emotionally
invested in the success of the marriage.
I've come to believe it's not so much how you get hitched but what
you do with your relationship that matters. Although my husband
doesn't always agree with his opinionated and selectively liberated
wife, he openly expresses his love. Back home, couples don't even
hold hands on the street. Here, well, couples do a lot more than
that. India may have found me a husband, but America showed me how
much fun it is to be his wife. Power to my parents for arranging
this union.
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Note: A Blackberry is an electronic device.....not a woman....

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