Indian bride walks out of wedding when groom fails math test
byDaprince Speaks Blog-
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In this Feb. 20, 2015
file photo, Indian brides from impoverished families, dressed in wedding
finery, wait for their grooms to arrive during a mass marriage ceremony
in New Delhi, India when 12 couples tied the knot in a single ceremony
organized by a social organization, that would otherwise have cost each
family thousands of dollars. An Indian bride has walked out of her
wedding ceremony after her groom-to-be failed to solve a simple math
problem, police said Friday, March 13, 2015. The question she asked: How
much is 15 plus six? His reply: 17. The incident took place late
Wednesday, March 11 in Rasoolabad village near the industrial town of
Kanpur in northern Uttar Pradesh state. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das, File)
(D.S.P.) — An Indian bride walked out of her wedding
ceremony after the groom failed to solve
a simple math problem, police
said Friday.
The bride tested the groom on his math skills and when he got the sum wrong, she walked out.
The question she asked: How much is 15 plus six?
His reply: 17.
The
incident took place late Wednesday in Rasoolabad village near the
industrial town of Kanpur in northern Uttar Pradesh state, local police
officer Rakesh Kumar said Friday.
The groom's family tried
persuading the bride to return, but she refused. She said the groom had
misled them about his education.
"The groom's family kept us in
the dark about his poor education," said Mohar Singh, the bride's
father. "Even a first grader can answer this."
Local police
mediated between the families and both sides returned all the gifts and
jewelry that had been exchanged before the wedding, Kumar said.
Last
month, another bride in Uttar Pradesh married a wedding guest after the
original groom had a seizure and collapsed at the wedding venue.
The
groom's family had not revealed that the groom was epileptic. While the
groom was rushed to a hospital in Rampur town, the bride asked one of
the wedding guests to step in and married him.
Most
marriages in India are arranged by the families of the bride and groom.
Except for brief meetings, the couple rarely gets to know each other
before the nuptials.