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Supreme Court decision: Hindu Marriage Invalid Without Rituals – No Room For Extravagance

Supreme Court decision: Hindu Marriage Invalid Without Rituals – No Room for Extravagance.

Supreme Court decision: Discover the landmark Supreme Court ruling on Hindu marriage. Learn why valid rituals are essential, not mere festivities, in forming this sacred bond.

Understand the gravity of this decision for couples and society. Hindu marriage is not valid without rituals, it is not an event of dancing, singing, and eating, a big decision of the Supreme Court regarding marriage.

The Supreme Court has said that Hindu marriage is not an occasion for ‘dancing, singing, eating, drinking or commercial transactions’.

Supreme Court decision: A marriage cannot be recognized under the Hindu Marriage Act without completing valid rituals.

Where the marriage is not performed according to rituals like Saptapadi (seven rounds of the sacred fire by the bride and groom), that marriage will not be considered a Hindu marriage.

The bench of Justices Bibi Nagarathna and Augustine George Masih said that Hindu marriage is a sacrament and a sacred bond, which is greatly important in Indian society.

In its recently passed order, the bench urged young men and women to think deeply about it before entering into the institution of marriage, because marriage is a sacred bond in Indian society.

In the case of two trained commercial pilots, the bench made this observation in its order. Without getting married via the formalities of marriage, both pilots had applied for and been granted a divorce.

The bench said, that marriage is not an occasion for celebration of dancing, singing, and eating or for demanding dowry and gifts by exerting undue pressure, following which criminal proceedings can be initiated.

Marriage is not a commercial transaction. It is a sacred bond that establishes a relationship between a man and a woman.

Through this, a man and a woman acquire the status of husband and wife, which is a basic unit of Indian society.

The bench described marriage as sacred as it provides a lifelong, dignified, equal, consensual, and healthy union of two people.

Hindu marriage strengthens the family unit and the feeling of brotherhood within different communities.

The bench said, we condemn the practice of young men and women who seek to acquire the status of husband and wife for each other in the absence of a valid marriage ceremony under the provisions of the (Hindu Marriage) Act and hence the so-called Are getting married formally.

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