
Vietnamese Wedding

The traditional Vietnamese wedding is
one of the most important ceremonies in Vietnamese culture, with influence
from Confucian and Buddhist ideologies.
Engagement
Besides the wedding ceremony, there is also an engagement
ceremony which takes place usually half a year or so before the wedding.
In the past, most marriages
were arranged by the parents or extended family, and while children were
sometimes consulted, it was almost always the parents' final decision. While
this has changed completely in modern Vietnam, in the past it was not
surprising to find that a bride and groom had only just met on the day of
their engagement or marriage.
The wedding
The traditional Vietnamese wedding consists of
an extensive array of ceremonies: the first is the ceremony to ask permission
to receive the bride (abandoned in modern Vietnam), the second is the
procession to receive the bride (along with the ancestor ceremony at her
house), the third is to bring the bride to the groom's house for another
ancestor ceremony and to welcome her into the family, then finally the banquet
party.
Due to the spiritual nature of the occasion,
the date and time of the marriage ceremony is decided in advance by a fortune
teller.
Asking permission to
"receive" the bride
In the past, on the wedding day the groom's
mother (along with a few other close relatives) would make a trip to the
bride's home, carrying along a gift of betel.
The mother would officially ask permission to "receive" the bride
and then notifies the family of the time the procession would arrive to bring
the bride to her new home. It was at this time that the bride's family would
confirm the state of things and proceedings would take place.
In actuality, this now obsolete ceremony was
used in the past to confirm at the last minute that the marriage would even
take place. Due to often forced arranged
marriages, the bride sometimes fled beforehand and so this ceremony was
essential in confirming that things were going smoothly.
In modern Vietnam where people choose their own
marriage partners based on love and individual needs, this ceremony is chosen
upon the couple whether to go through the process or not.
Receiving the bride
The procession of the groom’s family is led
by specific order; usually the first person will be a man chosen as the
representative of the groom's house (he should have a good manner of speaking
along with high status in society), followed by the groom's father, the groom,
then the rest of his immediate family and close friends. Huge traditional
umbrellas are carried and accompany the front of the procession.
Interestingly, in the past the groom's mother did not take part in the
procession as a sign that she would not be a threat to the future bride (and
she would even hide for a short period upon the bride's welcome into the
groom's home). However, this practice has long been abandoned. The number of
people participating in a procession varies but is usually restricted to a
smaller number (20 or so) to make it easier on the bride's family who will be
receiving all of the guests.
In the procession, the groom and his family
(among others) will be bearing elaborately decorated lacquer boxes, covered in
red cloth. Inside these boxes are gifts representing the wealth the groom's
family will bring to the bride's family. Gifts include: betel, wine, tea,
fruit, cakes, a roast pig, and an abundance of jewelry for the bride (the
amount of jewelry depending on the personal wealth of the groom's family).
Usually the number of gift boxes varies from 6 or 8, but never 7 or 9 which is
seen as bad luck.
Upon arriving at the bride's home, firecrackers
are lit to alert the bride's family, who then light their own round of
firecrackers to welcome the groom's family into their home. After each gift of
food is accepted by the bride's parents, the groom then receives permission to
greet the bride, who is finally brought out.
While tea
has always been an essential part of Vietnamese life, for commoners Vietnamese
tea culture never became as complex or bogged down with rituals as its
counterparts in Japan
or China.
Nevertheless, a traditional wedding is about the only time in a Vietnamese
person's life that a formal tea
ceremony is essential.
The bride and groom in front of all their
family and friends will serve tea (or wine) to their parents. Each parent will
then give advice about marriage and family to the couple. A candle ceremony
will follow, symbolizing the joining of the bride and groom and their
families. The gift boxes filled with jewelry that were brought by the groom's
family will be opened by the groom’s mother who will then put each piece on
the bride for good fortune.
Due to western influence in the concept of wedding
rings, in modern weddings what usually follows is the exchanging of
wedding bands (however Catholic
Vietnamese families save this for the separate church ceremony).
The bride and groom will then be presented with
small red envelopes containing money from close family members. Finally, the
groom officially asks to bring the bride to his home, and she follows with the
procession to the groom's house.
The ceremony at the
groom's home
As the procession arrives back at the groom's
house, the groom's family members that had stayed behind will light
firecrackers in celebration. The newlyweds will be brought by the groom's
parents to their own ancestor altar, where another ancestor ceremony takes
place and the bride is introduced to her new relatives. Finally, bride is then
brought into what is to be the couple's room and introduced to their new
marriage bed.
The banquet party
Following the ceremony at the groom's house,
all of the bride and groom's family and friends are invited to a massive
banquet party. However, nowadays the order of these ceremonies are slightly
rearranged and usually (especially in big cities) the banquet takes place
right after the ceremony at the bride's house, with the bride being brought to
the groom's house only afterwards.
The number of guests in attendance at these
banquets are huge, usually in the hundreds. Elaborate 7-10 course meals are
served, with popular dishes including seafood
hotpot, the Vietnamese seven courses of beef, and so on so forth. Guests
are expected to bring gifts, often money, which the groom and bride at one
point in the banquet will go from table to table collecting. Occasionally, the
newlyweds may profit from the monetary gifts from their family and guests even
after they have paid for their lavish and expensive feasts or reception.
In modern weddings, brides usually change into
3 different gowns during the wedding banquet, 2 of which include the western
white wedding gown and once again into the traditional Áo dài she had worn
for the previous ceremonies.
Modern compromises
and differences in religion
While most Vietnamese are Mahayana
Buddhists, a significant minority are Catholic,
which actually does not change much about most traditional Vietnamese
weddings, whether celebrated in Vietnam or overseas. This is explained because
since most Vietnamese practice ancestor
worship regardless of denomination; even Catholic Vietnamese have no
qualms about the ceremonies traditionally performed at both the bride and
groom's house. However, before the banquet, Buddhist families usually visit a
temple whereas Catholic families will attend the typical western ceremony at a
church.
Most Vietnamese weddings even these days
incorporate both eastern and western traditions; one such compromise is the
bride wearing both a western gown and an Áo dài throughout the day.
Symbols
Traditional and modern symbols of marriage are
often featured during Vietnamese marriage ceremonies as decorations on the
wedding umbrellas, lacquer gift boxes (or the red cloth that covers them), or
even the decorations in the homes of both the bride and groom. They usually
include lanterns, doves, initials of the couple, so on so forth. However one
symbol that is indispensable are the words "song hỷ" (also
written as the character 囍).
Vietnamese was written formerly in Chinese
characters as well as the vernacular Chinese
influenced Nom
script before the 20th
century, and while literacy in these scripts during feudalistic times was
restricted mostly to scholars, officials and other members of the elite,
characters such as these have always played an aesthetic role on important
occasions such as wedding
(From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia)