Mien Wedding, Redding, CA, 1992
An important rite of a "Big Wedding" is the all-night bowing ceremony in which both bride and bridegroom participate. Sarn Poo will honor ancestors first, family next, and then every guest, by lowering himself to his knees several times for each one. Meuy Chow, standing beside him with her two attendants, will kneel only once to each of those, being honored by her husband.
Katrina Thomas's notes: Also known as Iu Mien, a tribal people settled in farming communities in southeast Asia until disrupted by the Vietnam war, when they came here from Thai refugee camps in the early 1980's. Today perhaps 50,000 Mien live in the U.S., most of them in the states of Washington, Oregon and California. When they first arrived, I photograph several weddings, including Big Weddings, known as tom ching ta, celebrated for three days, catnapping in my car in front of the bridegroom's house so as not to miss any of the day and night ceremonies. The bride may already have birthed several children fathered by the bridegroom, and whether celebrated for one day or three, a Mien wedding is no more and no less than a transfer of the bride to her new home with rites to insure her acceptance by the bridegroom's household spirits. During the period of an overnight or three days, many meals are prepared, principally for the bride's extensive family, perhaps 60 or more, and also for friends. I photograph rites that welcome the bride, and for "Big Weddings," an important all-night bowing ceremony, performed by the bridegroom to ancestral spirits, to living relatives and to all family members.
Thomas, Katrina (photographer)
1992
1 photograph : black-and-white
reformatted digital
North and Central America--United States--California--Shasta--Redding
BMC-M59
Photographer's categories: Conjugal home , Bride , Bridegroom , Honoring , Bowing , Kneeling , Bridal attendants
BMC-M59_44-12