Facebook Pixel Custom-made marriages | Post - newspaper - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

Custom-made marriages

Post

|

June 11, 2025

WEDDING bells are ringing somewhere all the time. My recent column on my godparents’ SOth wedding anniversary was a milestone celebration. And last week, if my precious parents had still been alive, on June 6, they would have rung in their 65th wedding anniversary.

- RAVI GOVENDER

In a world filled with infidelity and the like, the above two examples would seem like part of Aesop’s fables. Following on that theme, I decided to take a gander at wedding and marriage customs worldwide. Some are downright scary. Others are hilarious. However, if the couple want approval, they need to put up a brave facade.

Let me begin by quoting an old chestnut: What are the three most important things in a wedding ceremony? Apparently, they are “aisle, altar and hymn.”

However sexist folklore insists that the bride agrees but spells it differently. She apparently reads it as: “I'll alter him.”

For fear of spending tonight in the dogbox, I will refrain from elaborating on that.

Okay, let’s begin our journey around the world. I believe that is sometimes a term used on a honeymoon. Wedding customs are practised to basically create a link for the couple to their lineage or culture. As they say different strokes for different folks.

In the Philippines, they release a pair of white doves to signify a harmonious union. In South Africa, we do that at a funeral. Ouch! We better not mistakenly juxtapose that.

MORE STORIES FROM Post

Post

Double standards as sports' governing bodies continue selective bans

CONTROVERSY is growing as FIFA and the IOC face accusations of a ‘double standard’ regarding the US-led attack on Iran compared to the 2022 ban on Russia.

time to read

3 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

Cape Town must trade Newlands nostalgia for Stormers future

ONE of my earliest and favourite rugby memories is being part of the 1995 Rugby World Cup opening ceremony at Newlands on a lovely winter’s day, 10 June.

time to read

3 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

The dark meaning of indentured immigrants, described as 'dead stock'

A REPORT in the Natal Mercury of December 6, 1860, noted that many of the sugar planters who had requisitioned indentured labour were displeased at the number of women and children among those who disembarked from the Truro and Belvedere, describing them as \"dead stock\".

time to read

2 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

SLC target 2027 World Cup with Kirsten appointment

SRI Lanka Cricket (SLC) on Monday announced the appointment of former South African cricketer Gary Kirsten as the new head coach of the national men's team, effective from April 15.

time to read

2 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

The duality of Donald Trump: peacemaker or warmonger?

DEEP MEDITATION

time to read

1 min

March 11, 2026

Post

How to prevent lower back injuries on the fairways

ON THE FAIRWAYS

time to read

1 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

Gold, sleep, darling: a Durban review of the Sona

DEEP MEDITATION

time to read

4 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

Post

Why everything in SA feels harder than it should be

LIFE in South Africa often feels unusually demanding. Not because South Africans lack resilience or competence, but because everyday living has become an exercise in constant anticipation, adjustment and compensation.

time to read

4 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

Small farmers betrayed: when the state turns its back on justice

SOUTH Africa’s land question has always been politically charged, but the growing wave of unlawful land invasions is not about redress; it is about lawlessness.

time to read

2 mins

March 11, 2026

Post

Post

A refreshing rural comedy that hits the right notes

A GENRE of film that will always win the hearts of a South Indian is one set in a village with good humour and a fair social message.

time to read

1 mins

March 11, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size