In the past bride
theft was a common practice. Bride theft was used in the event that the
woman was unwilling to marry her suitor. Following the theft, a wedding
ceremony would be held. The father of the groom would help his son
conjure up a plan to capture his bride and find people to come and help
in the act. The woman would be lured out of her house and then seized.
Assaulting the woman while she was still in her house was considered
foul play and a fine would have to be paid. The woman would find every
possible way to resist her captors and try to get her relatives to help
rescue her. During the scramble, the relatives of the man would plead
with the woman's family to let their daughter go with them.
After the
woman had been hussled off to the man's family's house she would be
forced to stay in the man's room with him. Two days later the man would
send two representatives to the woman's family's house to inform them of
what had happened to their daughter and gently ease all their concerns
and fears regarding her plight. At the appropriate time, a formal
request for marriage would be made and the wedding ceremony would be
held soon after. The representatives sent to negotiate had to be masters
in the art of speech and communication in order to convince the mother
and father of the woman to approve of the theft. As the negotiations
progressed, the representatives would try to offer tobacco to the mother
and father of the woman. If they accepted the tobacco it was considered
a sign they approved of the union. In the event that the man and his
family did not go to the woman's family's house and inform them of the
situation, it was considered to be a violation of Hmong custom and
tradition, and a fine of approximately 12 maang would have to be paid (A maang is
a large silver coin which the Hmong use amongst themselves). Along the
same lines as this, if the woman is able to escape from her captors and
return home within three days of her disappearance, the man would be
fined. Sometimes, however, if the father of the woman does not wish to
have his daughter marry the man who stole her away, the woman might
simply be returned and no fine would be paid.
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