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I learnt to become an Indian bride - one saree at a time
The Straits Times
|October 27, 2024
Like her Chinese grandmother, the writer married into an Indian family. One of them was disowned, the other embraced.
 
 When my husband first told his mother about me, she had two questions - "Is she Indian?" and "What's her date and time of birth?"
After my in-laws' initial surprise that their son had chosen to bring home a Eurasian girl, they consulted a Hindu astrologer, who proclaimed that there was "no better lid for the jar".
Apparently, we were perfect for each other, astrologically speaking.
I met my in-laws for the first time at Sri Mariamman Temple in Chinatown - the biggest and oldest Hindu temple in Singapore - because they wanted our first meeting to be in an auspicious place.
I had to shop for the occasion, as I did not have any attire appropriate for the temple, which frowns on shorts, skirts above the knee, sleeveless tops or revealing, overly tight clothing.
When I found myself alone with my mother-in-law at a coffee shop later that day - my husband and father-in-law had gone to buy food and drinks - I decided to take the bull by its horns.
"Aunty, you know I'm very open to learning about Indian culture and Hinduism, right?" I told her, wanting to acknowledge her reservations about having a non-Indian daughter-in-law.
Unused to such a direct approach, she merely smiled and nodded.
Soon after our first meeting, I was invited for dinner at my in-laws' home in Boon Keng.
I arrived with a bouquet for my mother-in-law, and she - to my surprise - presented me with a pair of diamond earrings and my first saree.
When my husband and I decided to get married in 2018, just four months after we began dating, I learnt that Hindu temples are open for weddings only on certain auspicious dates.
We settled on a Sunday morning in late November, leaving us (or rather, my in-laws) six months to plan the wedding.
Esta historia es de la edición October 27, 2024 de The Straits Times.
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