Kalmyk Wedding, Freewood Acres, NJ, 1985

    Item Description
    Description

    Arriving at Jalsa's house, in which his relatives are celebrating the marriage, Leslie bows at the door. While she waits, a member of his family, behind the sheet, reads the names of Jalsa's ancestors, and also those more recently deceased, for whom Leslie murmurs a prayer.

    Katrina Thomas's notes: Kalmyks are the descendants of the Oirats, a semi-nomadic Asian Mongolian people, who lived in felt yurts, and adopted Tibetan Buddhism during their migration from Asia to the European part of Russia. They remained there for nearly 400 years. After World War II, despite America's stringent immigration laws, 571 were admitted in 1951 and 1952, as displaced persons, under a special dispensation of the US attorney general. Others soon followed. Their weddings observe rules and hours, set by an astrological priest, for specified events which incorporate their traditions of a white road. It is based on the fact that milk and milk products are essential to the culture of a herding people. I photographed one wedding in Philadelphia. All the others took place in their rural neighborhood of Freewood Acres that has taken root in Howell Township, NJ.

    Linked Agent
    Photographer (pht): Thomas, Katrina
    Physical Form
    Date Created
    1985
    Geographic Subject
    Extent
    1 photograph : black-and-white
    Resource Type
    Internet Media Type
    image/tiff
    Digital Origin
    Institution
    Library
    Shelf Locator
    BMC-M59
    Local Identifier
    BMC-M59_36-06
    PID
    bmc:59660
    Record Content Source
    Rights Statement
    Note

    Photographer's categories: Post-nuptial , Wedding location , Bride , Barring path , Bowing , Ancestral spirits , Prayer