Texarkana Gazette

‘Best of both worlds’

Indian/Mexican wedding is marriage of cultures

- By Madhu Krishnamur­thy

KILDEER, Ill.—Perched atop a papier-mâché elephant on a hand-drawn cart, Ankur Raniwala added his own twist to a traditiona­l wedding ritual.

It’s common in North Indian culture for grooms to ride horses or elephants to fetch their soon-to-be brides. An animal lover, Raniwala built the elephant himself as a substitute for the real thing.

“The whole intention here is trying to keep to the tradition, but do it in a fun way that isn’t harmful to any animals,” said Raniwala, 31, formerly of Barrington, Ill.

Friends and family members dancing to the rhythmic beat of the dhol (traditiona­l Indian drums) accompanie­d Raniwala in a procession known as the baraat to meet his bride, Veronica Garcia. The setting for the two-day fusion of Indian and Mexican cultures was Kemper Lakes Golf Club in Kildeer.

It’s a microcosm of a national trend among multiethni­c couples tying the knot in elaborate ways to celebrate a marriage of cultures.

The Raniwala-Garcia wedding included Hindu and Catholic rituals, piñatas and henna hand painting, and Mexican and Indian food.

“We kind of took parts of both cultures and put them together to create sort of the best of both worlds,” Raniwala said.

The couple met while studying at the University of Chicago; they now live in suburban Los Angeles.

Garcia, 33, originally from the South Side of Chicago, said she and her husband have deep ties to their respective cultures and wanted to celebrate them.

“We see marriage as joining together, and what better way to do that than to celebrate the places that we come from and traditions that are familiar to us,” she said.

Traditiona­l American and Western culture wasn’t forgotten, as the reception included an ice cream bar, cocktail hour, and live music performed by an English electropop band, Fenech-Soler, flown in from the United Kingdom.

Suburban hotels and wedding venues are tapping into the growing and lucrative Indian-American wedding market, which prompted Harper’s Bazaar to launch a dedicated bridal magazine in 2014.

Indian-American weddings, on average, cost $250,000 and typically have upward of 400 guests, according to Indian Wedding Magazine.

Though the family didn’t want to disclose exactly how much the Raniwala-Garcia nuptials cost, they said it was just shy of six figures.

“This, all in, is probably the most extravagan­t wedding that I’ve had here,” said Jessica Trzop, clubhouse manager and wedding planner at Kemper Lakes for 12 years.

Trzop said catering to the families’ cultural needs has been a learning experience. She thinks Kemper could become a destinatio­n for more Indian-American weddings.

“It’s where the wedding trend is going,” Trzop said. “They are so tapped out of all of these places that they have been going to. … They are looking for new venues to almost kind of show it off … to be unique.”

Festivitie­s for Indian weddings begin days in advance with a ceremony called the mehendi, a pre-wedding celebratio­n involving games, music and dance, as well as hand-painted henna tattoos for the bride and other women in the wedding party.

A condensed version of Hindu marriage rituals and a traditiona­l Christian ceremony, including exchanging of flower garlands and wedding rings, were held Saturday between two tall trees serving as the mandap—an altar-like structure.

During the festivitie­s, the bride and groom changed into three costumes—a traditiona­l Indian lehenga and sari, and a white wedding gown for the bride, and a kurta pajama, sherwani and suit for the groom— all in keeping with the fusion theme.

“To an outsider, the cultural and religious difference­s might be what gets most emphasized about our marriage,” Garcia said after the ceremonies concluded. “Our experience is that both families shared similar values and embraced each other. It wasn’t the difference­s. … It was the mutuality of interest and respect that was felt in every aspect of our wedding.”

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