Polish Gorale (Highlander) Wedding, Chicago, IL, 1990
While men look on, two women, perhaps godmothers, remove Dominika's wreath and place a married woman's kerchief on her head, singing spiteful songs about the wedding night and warning her that married life will be more complicated than her wedding day.
Katrina Thomas's notes: These highlanders from the Tatra mountains, emigrating since WWII to a neighborhood in Chicago, have built there a community hall in mountain-style Gorale architecture. They are the only Poles in the U.S. who retain a wedding culture dress, customs, unique music, and songs in dialect preserved in the isolated region of their homeland. Historically shepherds, the men sing from deep in their chests and play stringed instruments, which they call fiddles, their voices and music echoing from mountainsides while their sheep grow fat. Traditions have not changed appreciably since the 19th century. The couple marrying is accompanied by fiddlers to the nuptial rite and into the church, to the wedding breakfast, and into the evening reception. Gypsy impersonators may bar the newlyweds from the wedding breakfast until given the fare they demand. During the reception, fiddlers play polkas, mazurkas, czardas, two-step, and even rock 'n roll for dancing. At the close of the celebration, an extensive farewell, lasting more than an hour, is the cepoviny, played out in music and song, releasing the bride to her husband, only after many warnings to her and jokes about married life.
Thomas, Katrina (photographer)
1990
1 photograph : black-and-white
reformatted digital
North and Central America--United States--Illinois--Cook--Chicago
BMC-M59
Photographer's categories: Feast and reception , Maiden to matron , Bride , Folk music and song , Bridal attendants
BMC-M59_49-08