A matter of Faith-'Iqbal and sneha'

virgoqueen thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail
Posted: 18 years ago
#1
omantic movies and noirls are filled \\\\ilh them. Star-crossed lovers, that is. People w-hn are lbreed. because ol' their difibrent religious beliefs, to give up the people the\\ luiv. 11' it just hop- pened in films and hunks. that unuld be okni. But real lin is I'illed with people \\\\ho are apprehensile abunt brooking laith . \\hout moting inton dil'lbrant sphenonl' lith. /\\hunt dealing with relatives anxious about their well beine. \\bnut unndering hu\\\\- to Wing up the children Inter. But aally 11wn is no problem aller than am normal ones assuriatell with marrial life, file couples \\\\hu have married al- side their religions tell us. lielief in Chul does not nean you enn I holieve in ini "What does religion have to do with love and marriage?" ) Television actor Igbal Khan is Muslim to the core. He prays five times a day The namaaz is his road to Allah's gate - the divine link. But that has nothing to do with his marriage or his idea of a perfect mate. "What does religion have to do with love and marriage? Isn't marriage about building a home, life and togetherness?" Igbal quenes. Love is the foundation of his three-and-a-half-year marriage to half Parsi-half Sikh girl Sneha Chabra. They met on the sets of a music video nearly seven years ago and then drifted apart. But destiny brought them together in Mumbai. Was it instant love? "Oh no, anything but that. We met a couple of times and realised we loved meeting each other The process was gradual," smiles Sneha. The romance was great, but the thought of com- mitment was rattling. Srinagar-born Igbal knew that though his parents were not orthodox, they were conservative. "Dad is in the administrative services. We were modern but in the family and in the place that we come from, things are not really progressive. I had my fears," he says. There had been a couple of mixed marriages in Sneha's family so she was not too apprehensive. "My family is more cosmopolitan. What mattered was the boy and there, Iqbal scored full marks," she says. The couple, however, was firm about one thing - their parents had to bless the union. "Religion is important to me and my parents. But I knew if they objected, I would make them see rea- son," Igbal recalls. Surprisingly his parents did not object. "They met Sneha and were more than happy" he says. And what of the relatives? "Once my parents agreed, no one else could refuse. To be honest, no one else mattered," says Igbal. The couple tied the knot in court and followed it up with a discreet nikach. The couple is not worried which religion their children will be brought up in. What matters, they say is that the children should be able to understand and respect every religion. "We know a particular faith because we were born to one. Luckily our kids will understand our cultures. And that should make them better human beings. I wouldn't mind if they offered namaaz or prayed in a temple. It's all the same," Sneha says.

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lil_desi_goddes thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#2
thanks for the article but it has been posted before!
6219 thumbnail
Posted: 18 years ago
#3
Thanks for posting, but I posted this already!

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