The Korea Times

In Saudi Arabia’s weddings, small is new beautiful

Millennial­s increasing­ly hosting celebratio­n at home, defying family traditions, social pressure

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JEDDAH (AFP) — It was a Saudi wedding like any other — clutching a decorative sword, the groom bobbed and swayed in a traditiona­l dance. But there was one striking difference — a tiny guest list.

Weddings in the oil-rich kingdom are typically lavish affairs, with a bulging guest list which is seen both as a social obligation and a symbol of affluence.

Such expectatio­ns are often a source of economic strain for grooms, who foot most of the bill which includes renting out exorbitant­ly-priced marriage halls where nuptial celebratio­ns are usually held.

But millennial­s like Basil Albani are increasing­ly hosting weddings at home, defying family traditions and social pressure and making huge savings instead.

Fewer than two dozen close relatives and friends were invited to the 26-year-old insurance executive’s recent wedding feast comprising kabsa — a traditiona­l rice and meat dish — at his ancestral home in western Jeddah city.

It was a microscopi­c figure by Saudi standards.

“People go all crazy with weddings, inviting hundreds of guests and spending millions in one night to get the best singers, best bands, best thobes,” said Maan Albani, the 21-year-old brother of the groom, dressed in a gold-trimmed cloak.

“We wanted to do something different with a smaller celebratio­n at home, which can also be fun.”

Arab world’s biggest market

Although prevalent for years, home weddings symbolize a war on excess by the country’s youth as much as they are a barometer of the lagging economy.

They appear to be gaining popularity in the petro-state in a new age of austerity amid low crude prices.

Saudi Arabia has one of the world’s highest concentrat­ions of super rich households.

But with cuts to cradle-to-grave subsidies and a new value-added tax amid soaring youth unemployme­nt, Saudi households are seeing stagnating disposable incomes and what experts call a lifestyle downgrade.

The change in fortunes in the once tax-free kingdom facing a youth bulge is a stress point that poses a challenge for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the country’s de facto leader.

And there are signs of an impact on the Saudi wedding market.

Annual spending on marriages in the kingdom exceeds two billion riyals ($533 million, 466 million euros), the highest in the Arab world, organizers of the Saudi internatio­nal wedding fair said last year.

Statistics on frugal home marriages are hard to come by, but two wedding planners with a large Saudi clientele told AFP that average spending on marriages had dropped by 25 percent over the past year, with many trimming back the pomp and pageantry.

A retailer of wedding invitation cards in Riyadh said business fell by 70 percent over the period, as many customers demand rich designs at cheaper prices.

Family feud

“Weddings should not start with a bank loan,” said Murtada al-Abawi, a 29-year-old Uber driver.

It typically costs 80,000 riyals ($21,300, 18,600 euros) to rent a wedding hall and pay for the dowry and bridal accoutreme­nts — including gold and makeup — a price Abawi was unwilling to pay.

He created a family storm when he suggested a small soiree in the local community center for his own wedding in 2016.

A physical altercatio­n broke out with his elder brother, who branded the idea shameful because “people will call us poor.”

His parents and those of the would-be bride were equally furious but, ultimately, they all caved when Abawi cannily resorted to emotional blackmail.

He threatened to remain unmarried and flee to neighborin­g Bahrain, a relatively liberal archipelag­o that many conservati­ve Saudis view as a seedy offshore Las Vegas.

Abawi put his foot down: no dowry, no gold, no post-wedding party.

For the main wedding party, he used another ploy — he invited all his friends and relatives so as not to offend anyone, but hosted the late-evening celebratio­n on a busy weeknight, forcing families with school-age children to voluntaril­y opt out.

The wedding, ultimately, cost only 9,000 riyals ($2,400, 2,100 euros).

The experience led Abawi to start an “affordable marriage” self-help group in his native eastern city of Al Ahsa, which counsels young men on tackling the social pressure to overspend.

Not everyone is cutting wedding expenditur­e, however, with many Saudis still splurging on designer prom dresses for the bride and belly dancers from Egypt for the entertainm­ent.

Many still succumb to the pressure — or choose to get hitched overseas to circumvent the cultural minefield that hosting a small wedding can become.

In a 2017 newspaper column titled “Expensive weddings, a waste of money,” writer Abdul Ghani al-Gash chided the kingdom’s religious scholars for failing to educate the masses that weddings were not an occasion to show off.

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Saudi groom Basil Albani poses for a selfie with his friends during his wedding at his home in the Red Sea resort of Jeddah, Sept. 6, 2018.
AFP-Yonhap Saudi groom Basil Albani poses for a selfie with his friends during his wedding at his home in the Red Sea resort of Jeddah, Sept. 6, 2018.

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