View Full Version : Be careful getting married in India



Easy180
04-10-2007, 11:10 AM
Check out the horrific things they did to upset some Hindu's....Possible jail time for that...Yikes


An Indian court will this week hear testimony that British model Elizabeth Hurley and her husband Arun Nayar mocked Hindu traditions with their "showcase" wedding, a laywer said Tuesday.

A decision whether the glamorous couple should be prosecuted in the desert city of Jodhpur -- where they wed a month ago but may now risk jail -- could come as early as next week, said lawyer Hastimal Saraswat.

The pair staged a lavish ceremony at a Rajasthan fort that was exclusively covered by celebrity magazine Hello!, which reportedly paid two million pounds (3.9 million dollars) for the rights.

But after seeing the pictures in the magazine, an angry Jodhpur resident hired Saraswat to take legal action.

"Liz Hurley and Arun Nayar insulted Hindu tradition and I want them to be severely punished," Vishnu Khandelwal, a devout Hindu who runs a printing press, told AFP Tuesday.

The court has already heard from two witnesses, including Khandelwal, and will hear testimony from at least three more, including a Hindu priest, said lawyer Saraswat.

Khandelwal said he was upset when he saw Hurley and Nayar had taken alcohol prior to the religious rites and kissed near the sacred fire that Hindus hold to be the witness to the marriage.

"They sat on a sofa and they were supposed to sit on the floor," Khandelwal added.

His petition to the court -- which will decide whether or not to prosecute -- also pointed out that Hurley wore leather footwear near the fire, in a land that worships the cow.

"Liz and Nayar had already married in Christian tradition. In spite of this to make a profit they did a showcase marriage in Jodhpur," said Khandelwal.

The couple wed at an English castle prior to heading east for their Indian nuptials.

The bride's own father-in-law is considering testifying against the couple in the case, the lawyer said.

Vinod Nayar told Sunday tabloids in Britain he had severed ties with his son after the younger Nayar ejected him from the marriage proceedings at Hurley's behest.

"He is very upset with Liz," said Saraswat. "He has told us that if you need help in court I will give it."

The petition was filed under section 295 A of the Indian Penal Code, which makes it an offence punishable by three years in jail to "outrage" any group's religion with "deliberate and malicious intention."

jbrown84
04-10-2007, 02:25 PM
People in America offend my religious traditions all the time and no one is prosecuted for it. This is kind of ridiculous.

Martin
04-10-2007, 03:57 PM
i don't see the problem... indian culture makes perfect sense to me. throw battery acid on some skirt who gets out of line... no harm, no foul. sit on a sofa during your wedding... lock 'em up and throw away the key. -M

Dave Cook
04-10-2007, 04:10 PM
Battery acid? Going a little too far with that little cheap shot, aren't we?

I wonder if they followed Indian tradition and conceived a child on their wedding night?

Martin
04-10-2007, 08:06 PM
i'll admit, india isn't the only place on earth where the practice occurs... but how's that a cheap shot? -M

Oh GAWD the Smell!
04-17-2007, 02:25 AM
"They sat on a sofa and they were supposed to sit on the floor," Khandelwal added.

Hurley wore leather footwear near the fire,

Reasons #39,722 and #217 on why religion has no business in matters of law. That's just retarded.

Dark Jedi
04-26-2007, 12:58 PM
Reasons #39,722 and #217 on why religion has no business in matters of law. That's just retarded.

True. Almost as retarded as telling two people who love each other they can't marry because a bronze age book of fairy tailes does not like it.