Two of
Ted’s former university students got married and we were invited to the wedding,
which was held at a hotel in Sapporo.
The bride is the first Japanese student I met, as she accompanied my
husband and his supervisor to pick me up at the airport in the middle of a
blizzard when I moved to Japan. Here is a picture of her on her birthday the
first year we were in Hokkaido.
This
was my first Japanese wedding. Ted had
attended a few when he lived in Japan before, but this was his first wedding in
Hokkaido, which has its own rules and traditions about things. Money is given at a Japanese wedding, no
toasters or china place settings or other gifts. In the rest of Japan, friends are expected to
give at least 30,000 yen and family members 50,000 yen or more. In Hokkaido, every person pays a set amount
(listed on the wedding invitation) at the door.
In this case, it was 16,000 yen.
First
was the ceremony at 5 o’clock, held in a chapel like room even though this was
not a Christian ceremony. It looked like
a Western wedding, with the bride wearing a long white gown and veil, but there
were no bridesmaids or attendants. The
couple read from a book and exchanged rings and kissed. Flower petals were
thrown and pictures taken and the couple left.
Next,
the guests mingled and drank “welcome drinks” until the reception started at
6:30 pm.
This was a very large
reception. Each table had eight or ten
people and there was a gift bag on the chair of each person. When we later
opened our gifts back at the hotel room, we found wonderful Japanese sweets.
We were seated at a table
right in front of the bride and groom’s table, which was on a little
stage. The bride and groom came into the
reception wearing beautiful traditional Japanese wedding kimonos.
There
were speeches and toasts and entertainment and many many photos, while plate
after plate of delicious food was served.
At some
point, the bride and groom left and returned a few minutes later, with the
bride wearing a red gown and the groom a formal suit. They went around to each table
and lit candles that started out like sparklers. The food continued to
come. As with all Japanese social
events, no one allows your alcohol glass to empty. If you want to stop drinking, you just have
to leave your glass full, you can’t refuse a refill.
We
thoroughly enjoyed the wedding. Best
wishes, Miku and Yoshito!
2 comments:
Loads of fun. It looks as though that is required. What a beautiful event.
That was so cool to see, thank you for sharing!
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