A Big Fat South Indian Wedding

Written by: Leah Injaty

Weddings—you hate ’em or you love ’em. Well for me, I had no idea what to expect since I’ve never even been to an American wedding, let alone one across the globe. And so there I was, taking my first international solo flight after requesting a 2-week holiday from my super fun summer internship in Chicago. My dad and younger siblings had flown into India a few weeks earlier, since my sister was apparently supposed to intern at a local hospital, until she got sick from the “bacterial culture shock” in her stomach shortly after the wedding and had to leave early. I had no idea who the bride and the groom were, but apparently we had met the groom when he came to the US for the first time, and our dads are good friends. All I cared about was that I hadn’t visited my family in India since I was 12, and I was being invited to the epitome of Indian festivities, a $200k Indian resort wedding with dresses, food, and traditions I’ve always wanted to experience, so there was no way I would pass it up.

When I landed at Kempegowda Airport in Bangalore, I was unpleasantly surprised to find that I couldn’t connect to the airport WiFi without some mysterious code that I had no idea how to get. I tried asking some fellow travelers, but none of them spoke English well enough to point me in the right direction. Unsure of what I was supposed to do, I copied everyone else and filled out a slip of paper before entering customs, where they asked me a slew of questions about my purpose for traveling to India. After getting through customs, I passed through the fanciest duty-free store I’ve ever seen, with overly polite employees coming at me left and right asking if I needed help when I slowed down to look around. Outside the store, I finally found a kiosk where I could scan my boarding pass and get the WiFi code. It was at that moment that I gained a deeper appreciation for modern technology; I have no idea how people did this back before phones were ubiquitous.

Kempegowda Airport Duty-Free store

Fast forward to the wedding, after visiting my aunts, I was floored when I discovered from my sister that we would need six different dresses for all six events in order not bring bad luck to the couple. Keep in mind the entire wedding was 2.5 days. We stuffed our suitcases full of said dresses and drove to the resort, which was absolutely stunning. Apparently guests closer to the family got to stay in the resort, while the majority of people came to just the reception on day 2. What are these six events of South Indian weddings, you may ask? Let me fill you in on their cultural significance as well as my individual experience.

Haldi

Did someone say water balloon fight? No, seriously. They brought out water balloons at a traditional ceremony. Haldi is a wedding ritual where turmeric water is poured on the couple as a blessing, and to give them “radiant glow” for their wedding, as yellow is considered auspicious. You’ve never seen this much yellow decor in your life, trust me.

At first, they were sitting ducks as we poured bucket after bucket of turmeric water over their heads, until things got a little more chaotic. I was having a little too much fun until, in a battle for the bucket, a few people turned on me, and I got a face full of the turmeric water, which didn’t sit well with my contacts. By the time someone brought water balloons, all hell broke loose, and all the prim and proper aunts and uncles went inside to get away from the splashing. Needless to say, my dress did not survive very well. Afterward, there was a “rain dance” where we ran underneath an array of sprinklers above our heads and danced to popular Bollywood songs in a big circle.

(Image 1)  My dress before Haldi

(Image 2) Moments before disaster

(Image 3) My dress after Haldi

Mehndi

Or as we Americans call it, henna. Mehndi has strong cultural significance both in weddings and in general. In weddings, mehndi designs symbolize the love between the bride and groom, and the cooling effect of the eucalyptus that it’s made of is said to calm the nerves of the bride. Typically, wedding mehndi is the most elaborate mehndi a bride will receive in her life, with polished designs covering her hands, forearms, feet, and halfway up her calves. The bride isn’t the only one who gets to have mehndi, however. Artists traditionally do mehndi on all the women close to the bride, but even men are opting to get it done in modern times. There was even an adorable little kid we kept seeing throughout the wedding, and he told the artist he really wanted Spiderman drawn on his hand. We even befriended some other young people in their 20s who were friends with the groom at this event, whom we frequently met up with throughout the wedding.

My sister and I, after getting mehndi

Sangeet

Despite having an Indian name, it was essentially what you’d think of when you hear about an American wedding reception. There was food, crowd games, and dancing, and this event even had a dress code of “Western formal” instead of the typical Indian dresses (although I don’t think that’s the norm). My siblings and I are some of the only kids in our extended family to grow up in America, and we coincidentally look very western compared to our extended family, so this event made me feel a little less like a neon sign sticking out in the crowd. I spoke so “American,” in fact, that the groom’s father even had trouble understanding my English, and so there were many moments of my dad and sister “translating” my English to… English with an Indian accent.

I arrived fashionably late, and when I did, I saw my teenage brother on stage with a bunch of older ladies in their sarees playing that crowd game where the announcer says an item that you have to grab from the crowd, and the last person who comes back onstage is eliminated. He continued to be ahead of the game, sprinting through the aisles and grabbing items, but the real kicker was when it was him against one other lady. The announcer shouted “gray hair,” and my dad furiously ripped out some strands of his hair and yelled for my brother to come take it, and he did! As you can imagine, my brother stood victoriously on the stage as the other lady patted him on the back. Afterward, my sister and I, along with our new friends, went onstage for some dancing in, again, a big circle (for some reason that’s how Indian dancing always goes).

(Image 2) My “Western” outfit for the Sangeet

Varapuja

Coming from “vara,” meaning “groom,” and “puja,” meaning “worship,” varapuja is a ceremony to honor and welcome the groom before the wedding ceremony by the bride’s family. The family symbolically washes his feet and offers him flowers, rice, turmeric, and sweets. They also perform “aarti,” which is a ritual where one moves a lit wick in circles while reciting a prayer, and then moves their hands over the flame and then to the forehead to offer prayer.

Aarti being performed

We got up bright and early on the second day to watch the ceremony, not before changing into our fourth dress of the event. Seriously, we spent at least half the time changing outfits. Since I don’t speak Hindi, I struggled to follow along with what they were saying during the ceremony, but this had inspired me to later start learning Hindi on Duolingo, which I semi-successfully have kept up with. It was at this point that I started to realize just how much money was spent on all these beautiful decorations, but it was totally worth it in my opinion. They held a mini photoshoot for the couple right after, and everyone gathered around to watch. My family also took our own pictures, even my brother and dad, who don’t typically take them, because the scenery was absolutely unreal.

Reception

If you thought the Sangeet sounded like a wedding reception, you were sorely mistaken. This wedding reception had it all: fireworks, a walkway of flowers, smoke machines, and photographers for the 1000+ guests. And no, I did not accidentally add a 0. We didn’t get much time to talk to the couple since they had to greet everyone one group at a time as the guests came on stage to give gifts and take photos. We spent most of our time doing a complimentary photoshoot, eating at the buffet, and socializing.

My family in our fifth outfits of the weekend.

The reception meal was the only one not served on a banana leaf, which came as a surprise. Usually, we’d go to this one giant room with banana leaves at every seat, and the servers would come around with a food item and ask if we wanted any, like an assembly line. I always ended up taking too much and had to stay behind to finish; everything just looked so good that I couldn’t pass it up. I even tried taking a bite out of the banana leaf itself out of curiosity, much to my sister’s horror. The meal at the reception had a fancy menu with all the options, and you could go to each station to get your desired food. From the botanical theme to the fairy lights strung outside elegantly, everything about this event came straight out of a fairy tale.

Flower Bridge

Wedding Ceremony

Canopy for the wedding ritual

At first, we watched from a distance as friends, family, and priests performed aarti and other rituals, and then we all gathered around them, with me standing right behind the couple. One of the rituals involved sprinkling handfuls of rice in front of them before throwing the last few grains onto their heads as a blessing, and we took turns doing this in groups of two. When I said earlier that they tied the knot, I meant that literally. In some South Indian weddings like this one, the couple finalizes their marriage by tying a long red string called a “thali” around the other’s neck. Drums beat ceremoniously in the background as they finally tied it around each other, as everyone cheered for the newlyweds.

 Priests pouring rice in front of the couple

As the sun came up and the festivities calmed down, we took some final pictures and had the chance to get to know the couple when there weren’t as many people. The bride confided in me that she didn’t sleep much since the wedding started, which wasn’t really a shocker. Although I did find out that the couple was going long distance again right after their wedding, which was a shocker. I truly hope that despite all the stress, they got the wedding of their dreams. After a few last pictures and hugs, we said our goodbyes and continued the rest of our travels in India.

It’s safe to say that I think weddings are officially ruined for me; I don’t think anything could surpass the grandeur of this one. Some of the ladies there commented about my sister and I really “making the most” of our first wedding experience, and I wholeheartedly agree. The friends I’ve made, from the Spiderman mehndi kid, to the family friend who hired a stylist for herself but had her style me and my sister, to the 20-somethings who were having the time of their lives, all have stuck with me to this day as a sense of community I’ve never experienced before. I can’t wait for my next trip to India to see not only my actual family, but this new family I’ve found.

À la prochaine,

Leah

Countdown to Georgia Tech-Europe!

Written by: Leah Injaty

As I’m writing this, there are exactly 55 days till I arrive at the Frankfurt airport and begin my 4-month stay at the GTE campus in Metz, France. It feels like forever, but also I know I’ll be cramming my travel preparations as soon as finals season is over in December. From buying the perfect winter boots to preparing my 15-page Visa application packet, there are so many moving parts and deadlines to the whole study abroad process that I never would have expected. However, as an emerging “real” adult, I try to give myself grace in learning a new experience, and I take solace knowing that there are 180 other students in my shoes.

France has held a special place in my heart ever since I stepped foot into my first French class in my freshman year of high school. I had never learned a foreign language before, and it felt like I had unlocked some sort of secret code to speak to my classmates in the halls, like a kind of language you’d make up with your friends in elementary school. We had fun coming up with English equivalents to French phrases (bonne idée = bunny day) and bonding over how we couldn’t roll our French r’s. Gradually, we went from learning basic phrases like “On va au cinéma” to reading more complex passages about Francophone (French-speaking) countries like Morocco, to watching French music videos and movies that discussed a variety of topics about French culture and political movements. Somewhere along the way, I found myself being roped into not just the language but the music, food, and traditions of Francophones across the globe, and the way speaking a new language empowered me to engage with said culture in an entirely different way.

Eventually in my senior year, I had the opportunity to obtain my Seal of Biliteracy, which involved researching a French-related topic throughout my last semester, writing a paper, and giving a 10-minute spoken presentation all in French. Let me tell you, memorizing a 12-page speech on the French Revolution was not easy, especially remembering how to say all the dates. It felt like I was back in elementary math class when I had to remember that 1789 was pronounced “mille sept cent quatre-vingt-neuf,” which translates literally to “thousand seven hundred four-twenty-nine.”

My (second from right) French Seal of Biliteracy ceremony

After all that hard work and thanks to my enthusiasm, I had the honor of receiving the Outstanding French Student of the Year Award for my graduating class, in which the prize was a copy of Les Misérables in French that I swear is at least 3 inches thick. As life got busy, it’s been sitting on my shelf since then, getting rusty along with my French language skills. One priority I have for my study abroad semester is to rediscover my passion and skill for the French language, so I hope that we can learn together through this blog! I’ll make sure that by next summer, I’ll be able to read this wonderful classic without having to look up every other word.

(Image 1) An endearing note from my French teacher

(Image 2) My giant copy of Les Misérables compared to the size of my laptop.

Back when I was a prospective transfer student and heard on a tour that Georgia Tech has a literal campus in France, my heart jumped out of my chest. Studying abroad in France had been a lifelong (well, more like teenage-lifelong) dream of mine. Despite Geor+gia Tech’s strong reputation as a STEM school, I secretly carried more excitement for GTE than for any other opportunity upon receiving my acceptance letter.

Now, when I hear people talking about Francophone places I’ve visited, I don’t just get that exciting feeling of talking about something I’ve studied, but also about someplace I’ll get to see and experience outside of just literature and film. However, France isn’t the only reason I’m excited about this trip. I’ve had a strong sense of wanderlust throughout my adult life; maybe I blame it on the fact that I moved around a lot as a kid. I’ve been the new kid countless times throughout my childhood, but it was never a scary thing for me; in fact, I love the idea of reinventing myself over and over, to define myself however I want without the baggage of the past. That’s something amazing that travel brings out in me: the opportunity to enter a place that has never seen a trace of me and to feel like I’ve belonged there my whole life.

Despite knowing how stressful travel can be, I can’t help but romanticize walking through the streets of Paris, gliding through the canals of Venice in a gondola, skiing for the first time in the Alps, as well as those random interactions and funny moments that no one ever predicts. There’s probably a million travel blog posts on the internet about every single country and tourist experience I’m going to have next spring, but what will be undeniably unique is the people I meet, the moments we share, and the challenges we face together. And so I hope that on top of sharing the cool places I’m going to, I can give you a taste of what it’s like to experience all the little moments of joy that I know are coming my way.

À la prochaine,

Leah

Meet Leah! GTE’s Spring ’26 Blogger

Written by: Leah Injaty

My name is Leah, and I’m so excited to share my travel adventures with you! I’m a fourth year Math and Computer Science double major at Georgia Tech, and I’m thrilled to be starting my study abroad semester in Metz, France, very soon.

Ever since my first solo trip in NYC at 18, I’ve fallen in love with exploring new places. Since then, I’ve successfully secured internships and opportunities that allow me to travel, taking me to Chicago, Dallas, Boston, Tampa, and even India. Studying abroad in Europe will allow me to unlock an even greater cultural experience that will truly open my eyes.

Aside from traveling, my hobbies include dancing, knitting/crocheting, logic puzzles, board games, and reading. My hometown is San Jose, CA, where I live (when not in school) with my parents, my two younger siblings, and my super energetic husky.