Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tradition takes a hit

Pandemic dampens Kashmir weddings with lavish feasts

- DAR YASIN

SRINAGAR, India — In Indian-controlled Kashmir, the coronaviru­s pandemic within months has changed an elaborate and lavish marriage tradition that had remained virtually unaltered for centuries.

Three days of feasting, elaborate rituals and huge gatherings have been replaced by muted ceremonies attended by a limited number of close relatives and neighbors. With restrictio­ns in place and many weddings canceled, the traditiona­l master chefs have little or no work.

Months before the pandemic, Haseeb Mushtaq drew up a guest list of hundreds and grand plans for celebratin­g his wedding in May.

But then the pandemic blocked him from traveling home for his wedding from Dubai, where he has an engineerin­g job. When he finally arrived home for his postponed wedding in September, he could only invite about a hundred people, mostly from his extended family and close friends.

“Marriage is a once-in-a-lifetime affair and I feel really bad that we couldn’t invite most of our relatives, friends and neighbors,” Haseeb said at the ceremony. “The hardest part was deciding whom to invite and whom not.”

Still, Haseeb considers himself lucky. One of his friends working in Saudi Arabia was unable to travel home for his own marriage and had to delay it until next year.

As Kashmir’s wedding season sets in, normally lavish celebratio­ns have been drasticall­y downsized.

Kashmiris normally hold elaborate marriage feasts, with meals cooked over firewood through the night by chiefs called “wazas.” Hundreds of guests are invited for lunch and dinner and served up to 30-course meals. The feast is called “wazwan.”

The peculiarit­y of a wazwan is that every part of a lamb, except the hide, head and hooves, is used for making different dishes.

Groups of four diners squat around large copper platters heaped with rice and various mutton and chicken dishes. More dishes are served by the chefs, dressed in crisp white baggy trousers and tunics.

The wazwan tradition is so entrenched across all classes in Kashmir that awareness of the wastage of high-quality food has not produced any restraint. Numerous attempts by social groups and the government have failed to instill any significan­t austerity in the food.

However, the pandemic has largely achieved that in a matter of months.

Wedding ceremonies require prior permission from the authoritie­s, and guest limits and social distancing are mandatory. Most feasts are restricted to 10 dishes, and the chefs are advised to wear protective suits and gloves.

Health officials say 63,990 coronaviru­s cases have been reported in the region through Sept. 20, including 1,001 deaths.

For master chef Ghulam Qadir and his team of more than three dozen cooks, the pandemic has caused his earnings to be badly hit for the second straight year. Last year, India suddenly scrapped disputed Kashmir’s statehood in August and imposed an unpreceden­ted security clampdown, creating economic disaster and the cancellati­on of most wedding celebratio­ns.

Qadir said the pandemic has posed another challenge to the cooks — keeping themselves and guests safe while cooking and serving the marriage feasts.

“It is sad to see our hundreds of years of tradition changing in few months due to the pandemic. We used to eat from one big platter and now we have a small plate for each guest,” Bashir Ahmed said at a relative’s marriage party. “It looks like a small change, but this kind of change saddens me.”

 ?? (AP/Dar Yasin) ?? Kashmiri men eat a wedding feast, known as a wazwan, on Sept. 15 as they maintain social distance due to covid-19 at a wedding on the outskirts of Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir. The coronaviru­s pandemic has changed the way people celebrate weddings in Kashmir. The traditiona­l weeklong feasting, elaborate rituals and huge gatherings have given way to muted ceremonies with a limited number of close relatives attending.
(AP/Dar Yasin) Kashmiri men eat a wedding feast, known as a wazwan, on Sept. 15 as they maintain social distance due to covid-19 at a wedding on the outskirts of Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir. The coronaviru­s pandemic has changed the way people celebrate weddings in Kashmir. The traditiona­l weeklong feasting, elaborate rituals and huge gatherings have given way to muted ceremonies with a limited number of close relatives attending.
 ??  ?? Kashmiri wazas, or chefs, chop mutton before cooking for a wedding feast wazwan.
Kashmiri wazas, or chefs, chop mutton before cooking for a wedding feast wazwan.
 ??  ?? Relatives of a Kashmiri bride carry henna and candles inside a decorative basket during henna ceremony.
Relatives of a Kashmiri bride carry henna and candles inside a decorative basket during henna ceremony.
 ??  ?? Kashmiri men carry rice plates before serving them to guests.
Kashmiri men carry rice plates before serving them to guests.
 ??  ?? A Kashmiri man sprays sanitizer on the hand of Haseeb Mushtaq, a Kashmiri groom, as he arrives at his bride’s home on Sept. 14.
A Kashmiri man sprays sanitizer on the hand of Haseeb Mushtaq, a Kashmiri groom, as he arrives at his bride’s home on Sept. 14.
 ??  ?? Umar Fayaz, a Kashmiri boy, wears a mask Sept. 17 before entering a tent at a wedding.
Umar Fayaz, a Kashmiri boy, wears a mask Sept. 17 before entering a tent at a wedding.
 ??  ?? Saqib Fazili, a Kashmiri groom, poses for photograph during a wedding ceremony.
Saqib Fazili, a Kashmiri groom, poses for photograph during a wedding ceremony.

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