- Joined
- Nov 3, 2009
- Messages
- 7,589
I hear it all the time, and only in the US. My friends who moved from Russia actually ran into it - the groom''s family just refused to cover their share of the wedding cost citing this old rule. I can not understand it at all. Someone told me that since the woman is no more bringing in any dowry, this is instead of a dowry. But first, the man is not necessarily taking her into his house, either, they often rent or buy it together.
Second - and that is what many people do not understand - in many cultures a dowry was something that was kept untouched and returned back to a woman in a case of divorce or separation (because divorces were everywhere, even in ancient cultures). If a woman had to return back to her parents'' home, her father or older brother would manage what used to be her dowry. It was not something she brought to her husband, it was her security property.
But many people here still tell me that a tradition is a tradition. I do not have daughters but I think it is unfair.
Second - and that is what many people do not understand - in many cultures a dowry was something that was kept untouched and returned back to a woman in a case of divorce or separation (because divorces were everywhere, even in ancient cultures). If a woman had to return back to her parents'' home, her father or older brother would manage what used to be her dowry. It was not something she brought to her husband, it was her security property.
But many people here still tell me that a tradition is a tradition. I do not have daughters but I think it is unfair.