Love is a beautiful and special passion and marriage is symbol of love. Marriage is celebrated in unique ways in different parts of world. In Massai tribe of Kenya, you can't choose the love of your life; it is believed that elders know best hence your parents decide what is better for you. One week before the marriage a wedding meeting held without consulting the bride or her mother. In which both families agree. On the wedding day the bride dresses with colorful necklace with beads and shells. Massai people cut the hairs from bride's head and applied lamb fat and oil on her head the father of the bride blesses her daughter by spitting on her head. Massai nation thought that spitting bring good luck for bride. She then leaves with her husband and does not look back due to fear of turning into stone. The husband doesn't stay with her in the house in which she stays for the next two days. Her mother-in-law commences the wedding ceremony and declaring them husband and wife by shaving the head of bride.
Bizarred Life
Bizarred Life. Every society has ceremonies and practices that mark life’s milestones: birth, adolescence, marriage, and death, many of which may strange to non-practitioners. There are a lot of traditions that seems really bizarre to the world where it is not followed. Here we will disclose some bizarre and interesting traditions and news for our visitors.Bizarre customs and traditions across the world.
Friday, January 29, 2021
Spitting on the bride Massai tribe of Kenya
Thursday, January 28, 2021
Crying Ritual
During the early 17th century the crying marriage ritual was at its peak and remained so until the end of the Qing era in 1911. It is said to have originated during the 475 to 221 BC, when princess of the Zhao State was to be married into the Yan State. At the time of departure, princess’s mother is said to have cried, asking her to return home soon. It is said that it was the first crying marriage. Now a day the custom is not popular but there are still a large number of families that practice it with passion. Among the Tujia people, in China, it is a necessary procedure for marriage. It is necessary for bride to shed tears on her marriage. If she doesn’t, her neighbors will treat her as inferior as one of poor breeding and she could even become the joke of her village. The ritual is exists in various regions of the Sichuan Province. In the west, it is called ‘Zuo Tang’ (sitting in the hall). It means that the bride is required to sit in a lobby and cry. 30 days before the marriage, the girl walks into a large hall each night and weeps for about an hour. After about 10 days, her mother joins her and they both cry together. 10 days later, her grandma joins them. A couple of days later, other females of the family also join them. The crying isn't only an irregular shedding of tears. There's a tune required too. Suitably named the 'Crying Marriage Tune', the overstated singing of the stanzas is said to set the wedding climate pleasantly. A portion of alternate tunes are fixated on topics of steadiness, manners and obedient devotion. Maybe it helps in initiating a new life.
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Tuesday, January 24, 2017
Temporary Burial
The
Toraja are the ethnic group of South Sulawesi in Indonesia. They believe in
welcoming the spirit of a dead person back to the village of his or her origin.
As a belief, they dig up the graves of their deceased loved ones, wash them,
and dress them up in fancy clothes; they also repair or fix broken and damaged
coffins. They call the bizarre ritual as “Ma’nen”. Some families can’t afford
an initial proper burial because it is costly. For them, a funeral is a great
celebration of life like a party in which the entire family of the deceased and
all residents of the village take part. As a result, they place the dead body
in a temporary coffin. Funeral ceremonies are incredibly important to the Torajans
and are often take long time to held after the death of a person until the
family of the deceased raise enough money for burial ceremony. They place
the corps in a temporary coffin when they are able to maintain the fund, they
slaughter buffaloes and pigs. After the sacrifice, the meat is
distributed among the participants of funeral ceremony. After the completion of
ceremonies, the corpse is raised from the dead and walks to its new resting
place.
Saturday, January 14, 2017
El Colacho
El Colacho is an unusual and weird traditional festival being take place in Castillo de Murcia a town of Burgos province in Spain since 1620. To protect their children from illness, evils and adversities and to keep them devils away, families bring their newborns to participate in the festival. Infants laid in neat rows of pillows spread in street. Men symbolized as devils dressed in bright yellow costumes jumps over the newborns. After the jumping session infancies are considered absolved of man's transgression and they are sprinkled with rose petals before being taken away by their parents.
Skull Binding
Different societies around the world have different
characteristics which are define as their culture. There are a number of
universal customs that are practiced on each continent around the globe. They
include birth, circumcision, adolescence, marriage and burial rituals and skull
deformation. These traditions initiated in our past and passed from
generation to generation.
The tradition of human cranial deformation started in our remote
past. The old Mayan were believed that people with
deformed skull to be more intelligent, of higher status and closer to the
spirits. The deformation was made by the people by distorting the normal growth
of the skull of a child. It was practiced to demonstrate social status.
In France, head elongation
was practiced up until the late 19th century. The custom of binding babies'
heads in Europe in the twentieth century, though dying out at the time, was
predominant in France, and also found in pockets in western Russia, the
Caucasus, and in Scandinavia. Few examples of
elongated skulls were discovered in south-eastern Australia in Coobool Creek
and Kow Swamp. Mangbetu people of
Africa continued the practice up until the 1960s as a mark of beauty and social
status. The Vanuatu are among the few people left in the world to practice
skull deformation.
Ant sting
naturebeads.info (becaming-a-man) |
You cannot become a mature man if
you cannot bear an ant sting in Satere-Mawe tribe of the Amazon. To become a
perfect man, each boy participates in this ritual. When a boy come to age of
adolescent, he goes into the jungle with age fellows and a man with medicines
to collect ants that have most painful sting in the world. The sting is
compared to a bullet.
The boys collect ants and ants are
put under the drugs of some herbs, which gives them the doctor. Later, while
ants sleep in their state of drug-induced sleep, they are placed in a mesh
glove with the spine inside. After wake up ants become angry when they find
themselves bound. Boys must wear gloves and hold them for about ten minutes
while they do dance to forget the feelings of pain.
Hanging Coffins
Ancient people of some ethnic groups buried
dead bodies of their family members in hanging coffins. THE TORAJA are
an ethnic group of South Sulawesi, Indonesia.
Toraja practiced this weird custom in which they bury their family members and
hang them over some cliffs after death. Toraja are follows this culture since
2000 years. You can observe many suspended coffins from the bottom of the
cliff. Coffins are generally hung 33 to 164 feet high. No one knows how the
coffins were placed at such great heights. This weird ritual also took place in
some parts of Philippines and china.
Hanging Coffins |
Bathroom Banned for Newlyweds
Tidong community in the Indonesian has unique wedding traditions.
But most weird is that the bride and the groom can’t use the bathroom for three
days and nights after the wedding.
Tidong believe that ritual will save the couple from terrible luck,
broken marriage, infidelity or death of their children at a young age. So the
couple is watched over by their family, and allowed only minimal amounts of
food and drink. After the three days, they are bathed and then they granted
permission to live normal life.
Bathroom Ban |
Festival of Thaipusam
Thaipusam is a thanks giving ceremony. The word Thaipusam is a combination of two words “Thai”
and “Pusam”. Thai is the name of the month and Pusam is the name of a star.
The festival commemorates the occasion “Parvati” (Hindu goddess of fertility) gave Murugan (god of war) a Vel "spear"
so he could conquer the evil spirit Soorapadman.
It is a Hindu festival celebrated
by the Tamil community on the full
moon in the Tamil month of Thai (January/February). It can be observe
in countries where there is a significant presence of Tamil community.
During the celebration, Hindus declare their
devotion to Lord Murugan by piercing various parts of their bodies. They
celebrate their devotion to Lord Murugan for killing of Soorapadman with a
spear. They do this with painful piercings around the body with hooks, and pull
chariots or people who are hanging onto heavy rope attached to their backs by
hooks.
Thaipusam-Festival |
Thaipusam-Singapore |
Shinto Festival
Since 767 AD, every year over 9,000 men take part in the annual
Shinto Naked Festival in hopes of gaining luck for the
entire year. Shinto Naked Festival, also known
as Hadaka Matsuri. It is a type of Japanese
festival in which participants
wear a least amount of clothing; usually just a Japanese loincloth and rarely
completely naked. Naked festivals are held at different places throughout Japan
every year in the summer or winter. The most famous festival is the Saidai-ji
Eyo Hadaka Matsuri held at “Saidiji Temple in
Okayama where the festival initiated. One man is chosen as the
Shin-otokoa, or Naked Man, who must shave all body hair and run through the
streets unclothed while being pursued by thousands of male festival goers
trying to touch him for good luck and prosperity. No one wants to stop this old
tradition, so the Hadaka
matsuri continues.
Hadaka-Matsuri-Japan |
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