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Afghans marry in mass ceremony in bid to cut costs

Since the return of Taliban, weddings have become low-key affairs, with dancing and music banned

Published: Tue 26 Dec 2023, 8:05 PM

Updated: Tue 26 Dec 2023, 9:11 PM

  • By
  • AFP

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Afghan grooms look on during a mass wedding ceremony at a wedding hall in Kabul on December 25, 2023. — AFP

Afghan grooms look on during a mass wedding ceremony at a wedding hall in Kabul on December 25, 2023. — AFP

Fifty couples married Monday in a joint ceremony in the Afghan capital -- a growing practice to reduce the astronomical cost of traditional weddings in the impoverished country.

The couples were joined in matrimony in one of the dozens of glitzy wedding halls that punctuate Kabul, but the ceremony itself was somewhat austere.

Since the return of the Taliban in August 2021 weddings have become low-key affairs, with dancing and music effectively banned.

In front of the City Star wedding hall near the airport, around a hundred turbaned men dressed in traditional shalwar kameez chatted in groups -- not a single woman present.

They decorated cars with green ribbons and red plastic roses forming hearts to carry the newlyweds away.

Roohullah Rezayi, 18, due to leave with his wife in a few hours, told AFP he could not afford a solo wedding.

"A traditional wedding would have cost us at least 200,000 to 250,000 Afghanis ($2,800 to $3,600), but this time it will be between 10,000 and 15,000 Afghanis," he said.

The young man, a member of the Hazara Shiite minority and from Ghor province, earns barely 350 Afghanis per day doing odd jobs.

"We invited 35 people from our two families, otherwise it would have been 300 to 400," said the groom, a plastic flower in the breast pocket of his waistcoat worn over a white tunic.

Donations to each couple from the Selab Foundation, who organised the event, are equivalent to $1,600 -- a huge amount in one of the poorest countries in the world. They will also leave with a cake, a kit containing toothpaste, shampoo and moisturiser, and a carpet, blanket and a few household appliances to start married life.

Hundreds of male guests wrapped in traditional patu shawls attended the ceremony in a large, chilly hall, festooned with garlands. An official from the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice gave a speech, and there were recitations from the Koran.

The brides-to-be were kept out of sight in a separate wing, however, and journalists were prohibited from approaching them. It was only after lunch that the women appeared, fully veiled.

Larger, more pricey weddings in Afghanistan can bring together more than 1,000 guests and cost over $20,000.

For Monday's mass wedding, 600 couples applied. For some of the lucky chosen ones, it has been a long wait.

"I've been waiting for this day for three years," said Samiullah Zamani, a 23-year-old farmer from Kabul province.

"I can't wait to see her," he said of his fiancee.

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