Hi! Everyone!!!
This is the preview of my next ff....let me know how you feel.....I'm still working on 'STARTING part'....may be by Monday I get to shape it ๐
Until Twenty -Twenty Five years ago, there was a big tradition and practice of marrying cousins.
Sisters and Brothers are used to consider it as their luck, 'sowbhagya', auspicious having closed matches for their daughter and son.
Looking outside matches without first considering the cousin is considered as 'inauspicious, insult.'
But present generation hold a belief of having a great risk of birth defects or genetic diseases in marrying cousins.
Besides all these pros and cons, even now many families treat it as auspicious and first consider such matches before going for outside relations.
These relations are quite common in south Indian families, Marathi families, and Muslim communities.
The south indian families even consider marrying 'mamas', mother's brothers when they are in eligible criteria like age, physic, educational qualifications, and financial matters.
The difference among these relations in South Hindu families and Muslim families is the matches are taken into consideration between bua and mama children in Hindu communities while Muslims marry any kind first cousins.(Thanks for clarification by SujalkiDeewani and muniza)
This difference is because, I think, Hindu's go according to paternal hierarchy while Muslims go by maternal hierarchy....not sure as Muslims consider both sides equal way.
In precise, in South Hindu families poopa-poopi's and bua's children can marry their mama's children. But, Chachi-chachi, mousa-mousi children cannot marry one another. They are considered brother and sisters.
Detailed further, it is more common and encouraging to consider mama's daughters to bua's sons than considering bua's daughters to mama's sons. Later one is treated like 'TAKING BACK THE KANYADAN.'
For instance, when bua is given to her sasural by mama-maayka thru 'kanyadan'; marrying her daughter to mama's son is like taking back 'kanyadan' from bua's sasural.
These relations will be considered only when the boy and girl love each other and/or the sister-brother are fond of each other families. In these cases, the society around them don't leave a chance to taunt them in sarcasm 'they dint get any other matches in this whole world. They went for ulta rista"
My story is mostly based on these relationships.. โฆ.(I go with Hindu traditional marriages in cousins to cousinsโฆfirst attempt)
Angad's father, Dilip and Kripa's mother, Gayatri are brother and sister.
Kripa being Angad's bua's daughter he considers as his right to take her for granted as wife. Kripa loves Angad too as it is her birth right and believes she was born for him only. ๐ณ
On the other hand Kripa's father, Suryaban likes his nephew, Prithvi, his own sister's son, as he believes it's his 'sowbhagya' to have him as his son-in-law. He always fights with his wife, Gayatri 'not to go for 'ulta rista.' ๐
From both sides the relations are encouraging and strong. Let's see who gets who.
Of course, we all know where Kripa belongs to. But let's see how it happens.
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