China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tying the knot in Sri Lanka

- ISHARA S. KODIKARA / AFP

Chinese couples take part in a mass wedding jointly organized by Sri Lankan authoritie­s and the Chinese embassy in the capital of Colombo on Sunday. Some of the 50 couples wore local traditiona­l clothing for the ceremony in which the hosts tied their little fingers together with cotton threads.

Fifty Chinese couples took part in a first-ever joint marriage ceremony in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Sunday to woo more tourists to the South Asian island nation.

The mass wedding ceremony, conducted in the country’s Buddhist traditions, was jointly organized by Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Tourism and Ministry of Megapolis and Western Developmen­t and the Chinese embassy in Sri Lanka.

The couples experience­d a traditiona­l Sri Lankan wedding, with the host using a pair of cotton threads to tie the couples’ little fingers together and pour water from a kettle, symbolizin­g loyalty and long-lasting love.

The couples then received marriage licenses from Yi Xianliang, the Chinese ambassador to Sri Lanka, and several ministers from Sri Lanka.

Bride Alice Wu said she was interested in the island’s culture since she studied traditiona­l Kandyan dancing in Sri Lanka three years ago.

Her husband, Henry Liu, 25, wore a traditiona­l red costume resembling the attire of ancient Sri Lankan kings.

“There’ll be many more couples from China and other parts of the world who want to come here and celebrate true marriages,” said John Amaratunga, the Sri Lankan tourism minister.

According to the latest statistics released by the Sri Lanka Tourism Ministry, the number of Chinese tourists visiting the island this year has reached more than 230,000. Chinese tourist arrivals in Sri Lanka have been rising and now account for about 13 percent of the 2 million annual visitors to the country.

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