KABUL, May 24 — Afghanistan’s coronavirus crisis has freed young couples in Kabul to consider something that once seemed unthinkable: downsizing their weddings.

Extravagant ceremonies with thousands of guests packed into huge halls serving multi-course feasts are a traditional rite of passage in the country.

Grooms can rack up tens of thousands of dollars in debt, while the opulent wedding halls and their suppliers have long been one of the capital’s few economic bright spots.

But with Kabul on lockdown as coronavirus cases rise, some people have pared down ceremonies that have been in the works for months.

“I have been engaged for the last two years and I was planning to get married in late March,” Latif Faramarz told AFP. 

The 26-year-old law student had been preparing to spend around US$15,000 (RM65,450) and was expecting 1,200 guests but was forced to recalibrate after wedding halls were shuttered in March due to the pandemic.

Faramarz drastically cut the guest list to 40 or 50 people and the cost to around US$2,000.

“I’m not excited about downsizing my wedding, they come only once in a lifetime, it’s a joyous occasion. But I don’t have a choice,” he said.

The saving has however opened up other ways for the couple to spend their money and Faramarz now plans to study abroad with his future wife. 

“Education is the best tool to climb the ladder and become successful,” he said.

Weddings in a warzone

Upending long-planned celebrations also means depriving Afghans — particularly women — of one of their few opportunities to celebrate en masse.

Despite staggering levels of poverty and decades of war, weddings continue to be grand, loud affairs.

Families and friends are crammed into segregated dining halls with occasional low-key dancing, while teams of stressed-out waiters ferry in mountains of food that is quickly devoured at the end of the night.   

Photographers swarm around the lucky couple as they enter the hall and pose with family. Women relish the chance to don layers of make-up and wear their finest dresses.

And outside, armed guards keep a careful watch during the festivities, scanning the perimeter of the garishly lit venues that can often be seen from blocks away.

Weddings have been the occasional target of militant attacks, including an Islamic State-claimed bombing in August 2019 that killed at least 80 people.

But the threat of violence has done little to temper the appetite for elaborate weddings and the financial reckoning they bring.

The price tag often plunges the poor into debt that they never escape. Grooms are also expected to pay hefty dowries and finance houses or apartments for the bride’s family.

Shir Ahmad — who asked to use a pseudonym — said he was planning to donate some of the extra cash to the poor after he cut his guest list from 1,000 people to 80.

“I wanted to have an extravagant wedding like my brothers, but my dreams have been shattered due to this virus,” said Ahmad, who will now likely host his wedding at home.

“I will donate the money set aside for the wedding to poor people in Kabul. I think it is not worth having a big party like I wished.”

‘Economic blow’

And while grooms might be saving money, the wedding industry in Kabul has been hit hard, putting thousands of jobs at risk and bleeding millions from the economy.

“Our business is suffering,” said Nadir Qarghayee, who runs the wedding halls union in Kabul.

The city alone is home to 124 halls that employ up to 15,000 people, according to Qarghayee.

“It is a big economic blow to all the wedding halls. They have not operated for nearly two months, but they are still paying the rent and the salaries of the personnel and they have no income,” he said.

Holding wedding gatherings at home comes with its own risk of being caught breaking Kabul’s lockdown rules.

“I can have my party now but I think nobody will come,” said Ghulam Sarwar, after he was forced to delay his marriage.

“The government may take action if we have the ceremony and people come together.” — AFP