Indians still arrange marriages, but on the web

Published: 16 April 2001 y., Monday
Owners of sites such as Suitablematch.com, IndianMarriages.com, Marriage.com and Indian.matrimonial.org say they have signed up hundreds of thousands of Indians aiming to meet Indians with similar backgrounds, whether along lines of caste or color. "Usually Indian Americans look at the newspaper," said Bharat Manglani of Suitablematch.com in Lexington, Mass. "There are temples for the Indian community. Sometimes people meet there. That is a very small number." In the United States, searching for an Indian mate can be especially complicated. The nation's comparatively small number of people of Indian descent numbered about 900,000 in 1990, according to the latest data available from the U.S. Census Bureau. "The Indian community is sprinkled," Manglani said. "It is well spread out over the United States. It was very hard to find someone through the newspapers or through word of mouth." Those in the market for a mate can set up a personal profile online, scanning in their photos and listing such personal detail as height, age and hair style, favorite season or dream job, their parents' occupation and caste. That part is free. But conducting detailed searches for a potential mate, specifying criteria, requires paid membership. This use of modern technology does not necessarily collide with Indian tradition. For ages, the practice of arranging marriages saw, for example, parents choosing a mate for their child, with an actual meeting between the new couple scheduled shortly before their wedding day. That practice declined for a period of time, beginning in the 1960s, replaced by what some Indians call "love marriages."
Šaltinis: startext.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Antiwar hacker strikes the U.S. Navy

Virus writer and hacker activity has stepped up dramatically since the U.S. and U.K. armed forces started their war against Iraq more »

EU bigwig bangs on about eGovt

A top EU commissioner has been banging on about the importance of eGovernment more »

Al Jazeera launches English service

But within hours, firm suffers denial of service attack more »

Chip cards - in Kazakh practice

Commercial Alliance-Bank will be the first among RK banks implementing a transaction through international chip cards "Visa Smart Debit & Credit (VSDC)" through single processing center more »

A new Internet site

All those interested in British-Polish economic issues now have a new Internet site www.bpcc.org.pl more »

"Tibo’2003"

Minsk to Welcome Belarusian Congress on Telecommunications, Information and Banking Technologies more »

E-Russia threatened by cuts in financing

A drop in federal funding could delay some projects under the Electronic Russia program, which aims to boost the use of information technology throughout the country, the Communications Ministry said Tuesday more »

Belgian consortium heads race to run .eu

The European Commission is consulting its 15 national member governments over a draft decision to pick a Belgian-led consortium to run the long-awaited .eu top-level domain name registry more »

U.S. military computer attacked

Previously undiscovered flaw used to attack Army Web site more »

Banking Solutions at CeBIT 2003

Wincor Nixdorf presents a range of propositions with the spotlight focused on the specific needs and problems facing the banking industry under the key headings of Branch, Multichannel and Cash Management more »