Tes buta warna tingkat tinggi
No one has ever won the world and they never will.
Neither one of us converted into the others faith nor do we fall into the traps of society and what people think. I love him a lot and our families support us and we are both learned in our own cultures and traditions. My husband and I are from different religions and we are very happy. It doesn’t matter what faith you belong to, I’m simply saying that we should refrain from saying ill about another’s. I don’t think it works that way, love is different. I’m not saying convert and disregard your culture and traditions, but to say that whoever falls in love with someone from a different faith is stupid and doesn’t know about their culture is ignorance. Whether you like it or not, the world is changing and the youth is taking steps to wipe out the barriers that communities have built. Interfaith marriages have been happening since the times of the Mughal empire, it’s not something new, but people nowadays have 2 sides… either they are accepting or very radical and intolerant. They know their culture, we celebrate holidays, they know their language, and I don’t need to justify to anyone that my children are happy. I don’t think anyone has any right to wish ill upon my children or say that they will grow up confused because they are not. Why do you only look at a person’s faith and nothing else? I did not hide anything from my family and neither did he, nor did we get married against anyone’s wishes. My family accepted my husband and vice versa because they knew him from the time we were young, and know he is hardworking and a kind individual. Why are others so concerned about my children? My husband and I are happy raising them, and contrary to your narrow-minded beliefs we do speak the same language and are from the same area back home. I always thought that above all God was love, and in my own belief I only believe in one God and that God is everyone’s, not just the God of a select few. All I’m trying to say is that it’s wrong to assume that anyone who does is a shame on their culture. She completes me and I thank God everyday for her.Īmrita: I am not here trying to say go and marry out of religion. But if I’m honest, religion isn’t really what comes across my mind when I’m with her, I just see her as the woman I fell in love with and I don’t really care at that point what faith she belongs to or what faith I belong to. I think I did get lucky because I get to learn new things from her side of the family everyday. We both believe in One God, and we share the same language and homeland, and giving to charity, being a good human being is the foundation of all great religions. The more the merrier is what I always say, who wouldn’t mind having more excuses to celebrate? Before we got married, my wife actually asked me the same and I told her nothing she believes contradicts my own beliefs. I was always raised liberal and my wife is also tolerant, so we don’t see anything wrong in celebrating holidays and customs from both faiths. And we have even decided on names which are found in both religions. My wife and I will teach our children the main tenets of BOTH our faiths.
you should stay within your faith because it is your identity. We are happy and I don’t think someone should say it just to “please” their spouse’s family, because I think your faith is a part of who you are, and even though I am Muslim, whatever you are raised as, Hindu, Sikh, Jain, etc. She is Sikh and will remain Sikh and I am still Muslim. If I cannot change my faith, who am I to ask her to do the same? That’s hypocrisy. My thinking is more open minded and liberal, so I will never ask my wife to do something which I know I could not do. But I think it depends on the spouse in question, these kinds of things should be discussed before the wedding ceremony so that both parties know where they stand. No one in our families had a problem with that, and we are happy. We had a reception after, just to celebrate and it was fine. When we got married, she never said the Shahadah because in Islam that is a form of accepting Islam (which is the mainstream view) so she did not say it and we had a simple ceremony in the court, because we belonged to different religions. Salman: My wife is Sikh and I am a Muslim.