| Getting
Married In Bali ?
For
many people, Bali is well known as the island of Gods
with its distinctive beauty, culture and traditions. As
the most attractive tourist destination, Bali is also
an appropriate choice to arrange a wedding due to uniqueness
of its culture, Bali is simply the best as the wedding
destination. People definitely can get a miracle island
of wedding on a best valued.
Most people wishing to marry in Indonesia therefore find
easier to engage an agent or their personal travel agent
to act on their behalf. The high number of tourist visiting
the island and their plan to held a wedding in Bali is
the reason of why most travel agencies able to organize
wedding. Some travel agencies may provide some information
needed in particular cases of wedding.
But, that is an agent following specialist wedding company
that they are toughly acquainted with the legal requirements
and are able to arrange all the wedding needed, it is
wise the arrangement trusting to the professional. Considering
this wedding organizer is found.
Our
services include arranging
1. Full legal ceremony,
2. Religious only,
3. Balinese Blessing,
4. A Civil Ceremony.
Please
click for our Bali
weddings offer
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Bali
marriages Info
The
pawiwahan (marriage, weddings of a Hindu couple) is
a very important part of Balinese social life. The ritual
generally takes place in the home of the groom, a further
confirmation of the typical patriarchal inclinations of
Balinese culture, and is per- formed by a priest. The
newlyweds to be, dressed in very colorful and refined
garments, worn only for the day of the wed- ding, will
withdraw in prayer in the family temple. This is followed
by the presentation of offerings in the pelinggih
and by a series of ritual gestures. A very typical moment
in the ceremony occurs when the bride offers the groom
several different beverages: a conventional way to reiterate
that the woman. as a wife, commits herself to obeying
her husband and to lovingly care for him for the rest
of their lives. 
Many
Balinese marriages are still prearranged or negotiated,
though young men may also "kidnap" their wives,
and mixed-caste marriages are increasingly common. Marriage
customs differ from caste to caste and village to village,
but all Balinese marriage practices share fundamental similarities.
There are basically two ways to get married on Bali, 'ngerorod'
and 'mapadik'.
For
wedding packages in Bali please click
here
Ngerorod
This is marriage by elopement, in which the prearranged
honeymoon precedes the wedding ceremony. Since it's otherwise
quite expensive to marry on Bali, 'ngerorod' is becoming
more and more popular. It has particular appeal to the
Balinese sense of theater. Balinese love a spectacular
kidnapping in which friends of the suitor capture a woman
in the fields, on the road, or down by the river. Theatrics
are paramount: she is expected to bite and kick her abductors
in mock self-defense.
These
days it's more stylish and fashionable for the woman to
be whisked away in a hired sedan, and more often than
not she goes willingly. The couple then repairs to a friend's
house stocked with provisions, offerings, and the bride's
wardrobe. The woman's infuriated father sounds the alarm
demanding to know what has become of his daughter. A search
party is organized which eventually returns unsuccessful
and exhausted.
Meanwhile,
the couple is consummating the marriage before special
offerings (sesayut tabuh rah) have the time to wilt. These
offerings alone make the marriage binding by customary
law. Emissaries of the groom visit the bride's father
to argue the advantages of the union. Begrudgingly, the
girl's father gives in, after a suitable bride price has
been agreed upon. The groom's father must finance and
conduct the marriage ceremony, welcoming the bride as
a new daughter into the family. The actual public wedding,
within 42 days of the staged kidnapping, is only an official
confirmation of their union. They are already married
in the eyes of the gods.
For
wedding packages in Bali please click
here
Mapadik
This is marriage by consent, in which an upper-class couple
conducts a formal courtship. Since daughters were once
regarded as property useful for attaining a family's social
and political goals, high-caste families tried to wed
a son to the daughter of a friend or relative so a blood
bond would unite the resources of both families.
Under
no circumstances may a woman "marry down," i.e.,
take a commoner. The preferred marriage is through a parallel
patri-cousin, the father's brother's daughter. It has
been noted that Triwangsa couples often get along so well
because they are all first cousins.
Traditionally,
the man or his father journeys three times to the bride's
house with food and 'sirih'. When the bride's family visits,
the groom's father is obliged to give them food, 'sirih'
is chewed (an ancient, ritualistic means of coming to
agreement), and presents are exchanged. The groom then
regularly visits the home of his prospective bride, presenting
gifts and performing services for his future father-in-law.
The
groom's family arranges and pays for the wedding; the
date set well in advance on a propitious day. Wedding
guests are often entertained by professional storytellers
and musicians. Enormously detailed rules govern dining
and seating arrangements. Sometimes the bride's family
is not even invited.
The
actual ceremony varies. It could be very simple and short,
presided over by a common temple 'pemangku', or it may
be elaborate, expensive, and go on all day. Both the bride
and groom dress in bright 'songket', with brocades of
gold thread, and the woman's hair is decorated with glittering
gold flowers.
Usually
the bride and groom offer food to one another, then simulate
such domestic duties such as washing, cooking rice, and
cutting bamboo. Prayers are intoned, and then the couple
eats together in public, feeding each other. This is an
important symbolic act, as in former times only married
men and women were allowed to eat food together in public.
The priest then performs a ritual purification and blesses
the couple. Neither rice nor flowers are thrown. Today
there could very well be a Western-style buffet reception
held afterward where speeches are offered by members of
the two families.
Married
life
After the wedding, the new bride leaves her old ties behind
and formally becomes a member of the husband's kin group
and caste, serving the new family's gods. The couple resides
in the house of the husband's parents for the first few
years; relations with her own family may be severed.
The
wife owns all her clothes, jewelry, household utensils,
pigs, and chickens, and often has her own income from
the sale of market goods. Inheritance is invariably passed
along the male line; the man owns the house, the rice
fields, the cattle, and his tools, and is in charge of
handling the money.
Polygamy
amongst the aristocracy was once widespread but is now
quite rare. At one time the wife of a prince could hold
varying levels of status in a 'puri', depending upon her
caste and whether she ranked as first, second, third,
or fourth wife. The prince usually did not even appear
at his wedding ceremony with a low-caste bride; she was
ceremonially married to his 'kris', or a tree.
A
man may be awarded a divorce by the village authorities
if his wife is lazy, quarrelsome, adulterous, or sterile,
while a woman may divorce her husband by simply leaving
his home if he is cruel, under an occult power, or impotent
For
wedding packages in Bali please click
here
Related
wedding links
Bali
weddings miror1, Bali
weddings mirror2
Bali
weddings Portal
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