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Asra
Nomani is Back - My Big Fat Muslim Wedding Jump to Comments By Asra Nomani
Courtesy Marie Claire 23, 2009...11:20 am On the night of my wedding, I sat stiffly on a red
velvet sofa in the main hall of the Margala Motel in the city of Islamabad in
Pakistan, a picture-perfect image of a traditional South Asian bride. With an
embroidered chiffon scarf over my hair and a cascade of shiny 24-karat gold
necklaces around my neck, I kept my kohl-rimmed eyes cast downward, following
the instructions of my hovering aunts. I caught a glimpse of my face, caked
with makeup, reflected in my bangles. I didn’t know the woman who stared back
at me. I thought, What am I doing here? The journey had begun when I was a little girl,
growing up in a Muslim family in the city of Hyderabad in southern India.
There’s a photo of me as a toddler, my sullen face peeking out from layers of
bridal finery—part of a tradition that sets Muslim girls on the path to
marriage. When I was 4, I boarded a TWA flight headed for America, where my
family and I would start a new life while my dad pursued his Ph.D. I went to
school in Morgantown, WV, and did modern things like run cross-country, but
lived by traditional Islamic rules regarding love and marriage. I believed I
had to marry a Muslim—better yet, a man with South Asian roots. To me, abiding by the dictates of my culture and
religion meant finding a love that would be halal, or legal, according to
Islamic law. As a girl, I had learned to live by the hudood, or sacred
boundaries, of traditional Muslim society: I never dated, and I never went to
the junior high school dances. My senior year at Morgantown High, standing by
my red locker, I politely refused the class president when he invited me to the
prom. “I can’t,” was all I could say. And I couldn’t. It would be
haram—unlawful. Eventually, I crossed the sacred boundaries by
falling in love with a student at West Virginia University, where I was an
undergraduate. He was a clean-cut Special Forces National Guardsman with a can
of Skoal in the back pocket of his Levi’s. A Catholic of Polish ancestry, he
wasn’t the man I was supposed to love. The day we consummated our relationship,
I cried, having surrendered my virginity before my wedding night. When my
mother found out about the guy, she gave me a command: “Stop.” I didn’t, of course. We continued to go out for four
years. Then, during graduate school in Washington, D.C., I dated a blond surfer
from California and celebrated Christmas with his family. A year later, I found
myself in Chicago, smitten with a Lutheran from Iowa. One spring Saturday
afternoon, I sat on a bench in Lincoln Park with him after almost three years
together. “I love you,” he said. “I want to marry you.” He should have been Mr.
Right. I loved him deeply. But I looked away. It was a defining moment—my desires doing battle
with the cultural expectations surrounding me. I repeated the mantra I had
internalized: “I can’t.” He protested, saying he would learn my native language
of Urdu and even convert to Islam. I shook my head, “No. I can’t.” I broke his
heart, and my own. Not long afterward, I received a call from a guy I’d
known at grad school. He was Pakistani and Muslim, but living in America, fully
assimilated into the culture. My heart leapt. We talked and flirted deep into
the night. By morning, I was punch-drunk happy at the prospect of a love that
wouldn’t be forbidden. On Valentine’s Day in 1992, we met for dinner. An
employee of The World Bank, he was a former cross-country runner, just like me,
with two cats—again, just like me. A week later, we got engaged. After a month,
I moved into his high-rise apartment in Chevy Chase, MD. My parents weren’t
thrilled that we were living together before marriage, but at least he was a
Muslim. NEXT PAGE: Nine months later, I boarded a flight to
our wedding in his hometown. Asra Nomani, the shell-shocked bride. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Asra Nomani Nine months later, I boarded a Pakistan
International Airlines flight to our wedding in his hometown. Sure, I had
doubts, but I felt I was finally meeting the expectations that my religion, my
culture, and my family had for me. The day of our wedding, I sat in a chair at the Mee
Lee Beauty Parlour in Islamabad, run by a Chinese immigrant, Mrs. Lee Chu Liu.
“Now we wax your arms and bleach your face,” the hairdresser told me. I passed.
That night, my husband and I were married, although I didn’t stand beside him
to say my vows; we were wed in separate rooms, per tradition. Some 300 guests
came, most of them strangers to me. As my wedding flowed into my honey-moon in Paris and
the first few weeks of marriage, some issues I’d ignored throughout our brief
romance started to haunt me. My husband, charming with friends by day, would
simply shut down at night. We would have rather passionless, perfunctory sex,
and then he’d roll over, turn his back to me, and fall asleep. I had naively
thought this would change over time. It didn’t. When I would try to gently talk with him about it,
he’d cut me off. He had been raised in a family where it’s just not the sort of
thing you discuss. To avoid the growing tensions, I started working late at my
newspaper job instead of hurrying home to see him. Our conversations became
increasingly disconnected. I began crying myself to sleep. Within three months, I’d had enough. Depressed, I
retreated to my parents’ home to regain my equilibrium. I feared their
wrath—after all, they’d had an arranged marriage and made it work—but they saw
the gloom on my face, and understood. My father said, “We want to save you, not
the marriage.” After a couple of weeks, I returned to meet my
husband at a Houlihan’s restaurant. When I began to talk with him about our
problems, he literally bolted, jumping over the steel railing of the outdoor
patio where we’d been sitting. His father is the one who ended the relationship. He
called me one day to announce, “It’s over.” Later at my office, I got a piece
of mail, which my husband had signed with the three words “Talaq, talaq,
talaq,” meaning “I divorce you, I divorce you, I divorce you.” According to
traditional interpretation, a Muslim man has to simply utter this word three
times to divorce his wife. Then I realized—I had loved with prejudice, basing
my affections not on inner compatibility, but on external markers like race,
religion, ethnicity. Over the years, as I grew to become an activist in the
Muslim world, I understood that one of the most fundamental ways Islamic legal
traditions control women is through love, with a ban on marrying men who aren’t
Muslim. Today, thankfully, some women and clerics are challenging the practice.
To me, that’s a good thing for the Muslim world, because I believe a society’s
ability to accept marriages that cross racial and religious lines is a direct
expression of its tolerance. This year, my convictions were put to the test. I
had met a wonderful man in Washington, D.C., where I now live. A U.S. Army
officer specializing in Islam and South Asia, he knew the religion better than
many born into the faith—but he wasn’t Muslim. He had traveled along the Ganges
River in India and through the Khyber Pass in Pakistan—but he was born and bred
in Tennessee. Could I love him? Marry him? He gave me red roses, love letters,
scarves in pink (my favorite color). One night, he played me “When Love Is New”
by Dolly Parton and Emmy Rossum. The bluegrass music hit a chord with the West
Virginia girl in me. On Valentine’s Day, we climbed over the boulders
leading to Sky Rock, one of the highest peaks in my hometown of Morgantown.
Then he knelt down in front of me and, gazing up into my eyes, said, “I love
you. Will you be one with me?” I smiled and spoke from my heart: “Yes.” And
snowflakes fell like confetti from the sky. Asra Nomani is the author of Tantrika and Standing
Alone in Mecca. She has written for The Wall Street Journal, The New York
Times, and The Washington Post. For more on Asra Nomani’s battle for women’s rights
in mosques, go to themosqueinmorgantown.com. To listen to Nomani win a debate
on the right of Muslim women to choose whom they marry, go to thedohadebates.com. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Possibly related posts: (automatically generated) My Big Fat Jewish Wedding My Big Fat Greek Wedding meets Jewish Barmitzvah VH1 plans My Big Fat Fabulous Wedding 4
Comments Filed under Islam Tags: Hyderabad, India, Indian Muslim, Islam,
Islamabad, Morgantown, Muslims in America, My big fat Muslim woman, South Asian
bride, US, wedding, West Virginia, Women 4
Comments VandeNikhilam Information » Blog Archive » Asra Nomani
is Back: My Big Fat Muslim Wedding « Pak Tea House July 23, 2009 at 3:38 pm [...] I shook my head, “No. I can’t.” I broke his
heart, and my own View original here:
Asra Nomani is Back: My Big Fat Muslim Wedding « Pak Tea House Tags:
and-even, broke-his, had-internalized, head, heart, islam, Mantra, Muslim
Mantra, native, [...] Skeptic July 23, 2009 at 8:07 pm Asra, I just love how everything in your life is a cause.
So what if you had pre-marital sex, so what if you dated a few white guys …so
what if you married and divorced and your husband was a lousy lover. Alll of
this is quite common even in Pakistan and you’ve never lived in Pakistan. Stop making your life a cause. Live your
life. Get your head out of your arse. Zahid July 24, 2009 at 12:03 pm Asra, I’ve read quite a bit on you and this article was
really the pinnacle of my tolerance to your stupidity. I mean you have every
right to live life the way you want to. No
one has the right to stop you. But to use Islam as an excuse to gain your two
minutes of fame is uncalled for. It’s simple. Islam doesn’t allow for Muslims to have
a sexual relationship outside marriage. You going on about your numerous
boyfriends is your choice, but don’t blame Islam. It was your family that
clogged your mind, not Islam. You might
want to put some blame on your family rather than blaming the religion. Stop
trying to pull a Manji or a Rushdie here to get yourself in the limelight… Bee July 24, 2009 at 10:55 pm Well,
its your choice how you live your life. Nobody gives a shit about how many guys
you have slept with. But this is not the forum to post the graphical details of
your shag sessions with gora lovers, perhaps you should try literotica.com (or
maybe a compilation of your encounters in the form of book). But
why are you trying to drag the religion into this? the acts that you mentioned
in this colorful account has nothing to do with the religion. Honey, you seem
twisted. Life is short, Live it properly. Mind your own business and stop
inventing your own religion. http://pakteahouse.wordpress.com/2009/07/23/asra-nomani-is-back-my-big-fat-muslim-wedding/ |
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