Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

This Kindhearted Indian Businessman Throws Grand Weddings for Fatherless Indian Brides

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Jan, 2017 03:41 PM
  • This Kindhearted Indian Businessman Throws Grand Weddings for Fatherless Indian Brides
In India, it is expected that the bride's family organize and especially pay for the wedding, so when a young woman's father (the main bread earner) dies, she can almost certainly forget about having a wedding, especially if she comes from a poor family.
 
Most often than not, widowed mothers simply don't have the means to marry their daughters. That's where Indian real-estate tycoon Mahesh Savani comes in.
 
Ever since 2008, Mr. Savani has organized weddings for over 700 fatherless brides, not only paying for the event itself, but also giving each one of his new "daughters" a substantial dowry (gold, jewelry, furniture, home appliances, etc.) worth around 400,000 rupees ($5,900). At each wedding, the successful businessman also steps up to play the role of their father and perform their 'kanyadaan' - the traditional ritual of giving away the bride. From that moment on, the girls become his daughters.
 
It all started over 8 years ago, when a close relative died just a week before his daughter's wedding, and Mahesh Savani stepped in to take his place, organizing the whole event and performing kanyadaan.
 
"That's when I began to think of all the girls without fathers who needed someone to assume this responsibility and decided I would take this up," he said. "It is challenging for a woman who has lost her husband to get her daughter married." All he asks from the brides-to-be is a death certificate of their father, to make sure he is not being taken advantage of. Religion and caste are irrelevant to him.
 
 
In the beginning, he used to throw weddings for each individual woman, but as news of his generosity spread around his him state of Gujarat, it got to a point where he couldn't keep up with requests from young women and widowed mothers begging him to help them. It simply became to tiring for him, so ever since 2012 he started holding one mass wedding every December, on the grounds of the PP Savani School which he runs in the city of Surat.
 
Up until this year, Mahesh Savani had married off a total of 472 fatherless brides of various religions. At last year's mass wedding, he paid for the food and drinks of 100,000 people - the couples, their families and their friends, not to mention the gifts he gave every one of his new daughters.
 
This year's event, was a special one. Not only did he get the chance to marry off 236 fatherless women, but his two biological sons also got married at the ceremony.
 
 
"With Sunday's mass wedding, I have become (a) proud father to have performed 'kanyadaan' of over 700 girls," Mahesh told AFP. "This year my two sons also got married during the mass wedding event. So, in all there were 238 marriages."
 
Savani never discloses how much these grand wedding cost, but judging only by the value of the dowry and the elaborate gowns worn by the brides, it's estimated that he spends hundreds of thousands of dollars for each event. He can afford to pay for them thanks to the fortune he has amassed, first from his diamond polishing business, and more recently from real-estate. But just because he can afford to do it, doesn't make his generosity any less impressive.
 
Another thing that makes Mahesh Savani special is the relationship he has with the brides after their weddings.
 
"Once we become his daughters, we are daughters for life. At every festival when a father is meant to go to his married daughter's house with gifts, Mahesh Papa goes to as many homes as he can," says Vishva Vamja, one of the beneficiaries of Savani's generosity. "He treats his responsibility as one that's forever, not something that ends when the wedding is over."
 
 
"Mahesh Papa is just a message away when we need him," says Hina Kathiriya, another one of Savani's adopted daughters.
 
Every Sunday, it is open house at the Savani home, a day when every one of Mahesh's daughters can come by simply to keep in touch or to ask him for help with a problem. On Father's day, dozens of them turn up every year bearing gifts and cards expressing their love for him and their gratitude. Each year's wedding is also an opportunity for the earlier brides and Mr. Savani to bond.
 
"I get all the earlier brides and their husbands to help with the arrangements. The married girls go and do all the shopping for the new brides," he says.
 
Savani claims that being able to make so many women happy is a blessing from God. "The best thing is seeing the relief on the mother's and daughter's faces the moment they hear I'll take care of everything. That, and the girl's happiness on the big day," he said.
 
He plans to hold his now traditional annual mass wedding for fatherless girls for as long as he can afford it.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

WATCH: Son Of Former Taiwanese Official Hires 50 Strippers For Procession Of His Late Father

WATCH: Son Of Former Taiwanese Official Hires 50 Strippers For Procession Of His Late Father
Fifty pole dancers clad in black bikinis gave one Taiwan politician a raucous final send-off in an eyebrow-raising funeral parade that jammed traffic and drew crowds of onlookers.

WATCH: Son Of Former Taiwanese Official Hires 50 Strippers For Procession Of His Late Father

Mysterious Radio Signal Traced To Distant Dwarf Galaxy

Mysterious Radio Signal Traced To Distant Dwarf Galaxy
In a first, astronomers, including one of Indian-origin, have traced the source of a mysterious radio signal to a dwarf galaxy more than three billion light years from Earth.

Mysterious Radio Signal Traced To Distant Dwarf Galaxy

Proven! Giving Peanut-Based Foods To Babies Early Prevents Allergies

Proven! Giving Peanut-Based Foods To Babies Early Prevents Allergies
Most babies should start eating peanut-containing foods well before their first birthday, say guidelines released Thursday that aim to protect high-risk tots and other youngsters, too, from developing the dangerous food allergy.

Proven! Giving Peanut-Based Foods To Babies Early Prevents Allergies

Ballet Dancer Says She's Losing Job Because She's Too Tall

Ballet Dancer Says She's Losing Job Because She's Too Tall
Sara Michelle Murawski says her one-year contract won't be renewed in May. The Philadelphia Inquirer says the 25-year-old is a few inches taller when dancing on pointe. Many of her female peers are about 5-foot-6.

Ballet Dancer Says She's Losing Job Because She's Too Tall

Former USAID Chief Rajiv Shah To Head Rockefeller Foundation

Former USAID Chief Rajiv Shah To Head Rockefeller Foundation
Rajiv Shah, who headed the US government's foreign aid operations, has been appointed the head of the Rockefeller Foundation, a multi-billion dollar private global charity with programmes in India.

Former USAID Chief Rajiv Shah To Head Rockefeller Foundation

Ancient Indians Knew About Tsunamis - And Protected Themselves

Ancient Indians Knew About Tsunamis - And Protected Themselves
For most Indians, tsunami became a household word after the 2004 disaster that pounded the country's eastern coast and killed several thousands.

Ancient Indians Knew About Tsunamis - And Protected Themselves