- Kazakh wedding ceremony
The religious part of the Kazakh wedding ceremony is called "Neke Qiyu" ( _kz. Неке Қию). The wedding process may take up to many weeks and even months to complete. This is because a Kazakh marriage, like marriages in most Muslim societies, involves a contract between families which requires negotiation. The "Neke Qiyu" is a small portion of the whole, and usually takes about a half an hour to complete.
The "Neke Qiyu" usually takes place on the evening of the day the bride is revealed to her groom's family. This festive ceremony is called "betashar" ( _kz. Беташар) or "revealing of the face." After she shows respect to her groom's family, the veil is lifted and the bride receives a kiss from her
mother-in-law . The mother-in-law then puts a white scarf on her head to symbolize her marital status and then welcomes her into the groom's family.After several hours a feasting, a
mullah arrives. A mullah is a teacher of Islam who knows how to recite theQuran . He performs the "Neke Qiyu". Even though the "betashar" is performed outside in the garden in the presence of many relatives and friends, the "Neke Qiyu" is performed inside with close relatives only. The mullah and the couple sit facing one another. He briefly recites some verses from the Quran and asks the couple to confess the faith ofIslam . When this ceremony is done, the couple must go and register their marriage at the state registry office, a practice introduced in the Soviet period.The brief ceremony at the registration office is called a "AHAZH" ( _kz. Азаматтық Халық Актілерін Жазу (АХАЖ), _ru. ЗАГС). The "AHAZH" also features a procession of cars decorated in ribbons, which stops to take pictures along the way. In the city of Turkistan in southern Kazakhstan, the photos must include one of the couple at the Yasawi Shrine. For many progressive families the "AHAZH" has almost replaced both the "Neke Qiyu" and the "betashar".
Resources
* Privratsky,Bruce. "Kazak Religion and Collective Memory." Richmond, Surrey, UK: Curzon Press, 2001
ee also
Culture of Kazakhstan
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