The Heartwarming And Special Roles Brothers Play In Indian Weddings

Brothers play a huge role in Indian weddings. Here are a few rituals from around the country that highlight the siblings’ bond…

Apr 22, 2025
  • Image Caption: Athiya Shetty

    While they may battle it out occasionally for the control over the TV’s remote or the last cookie in the jar, there’s no denying that the bond between a brother and sister is special. This is why it’s not a surprise that many wedding rituals in India evolve around celebrating this unique bond and highlighting its importance as the sibling stands on the cusp of a new life.

    Whether it is the Lajja Homam ceremony in the Southern parts of India, the Shubbho Drishiti Ceremony in the east or the Baraati Arati ritual performed by the Jains, brothers have a vital role in performing wedding rituals apart from being the errand runner or generally overlooking the wedding planning during the ceremony..

    Rituals Performed By Brothers During Indian Wedding Festivities

    Lajja Homam ceremony in South India

    Image Caption: Instagram/Haritham Events

    The Lajja Homam ceremony is performed in Telugu weddings and involves pouring rice into the altar, which is also symbolic of the Hindu goddess Lakshmi and a sign of fertility. During the ceremony, the groom places his hand beneath the bride's hand, and the bride's brother pours the rice over her hand into the sacred fire.

    Saat Paak and Shubho Drishti in Bengal

    Image Credit: Instagram/bridesofbengal_wmg

    Shubho Drishti in Bengali literally translates to ‘sacred gaze’. In this ceremony, the bride covers her face with a beetle leaf and is made to sit on a wooden stool or a pidi. The pidi is then taken to the wedding altar by her brothers, who circle the pidi around the groom seven times before allowing her to remove her beetle leaf and take a glance at her to-be-husband.

    Throwing of rice MangalPhera in Gujarat

    Image Credit: Instagram/wedding_gujarat

    Similar to the Lajja Homam in the South and the Khoi Fela ceremony in Bengal, in traditional Gujarati weddings, the brother of the bride offers the husband and his wife a handful of rice after the four basic pheras which highlights the main aspects of every human life as per the Shastras. (Dharma, Artha, Kama Moksha). The bride and the groom proceed towards the saptapadi, or the seven sacred steps and take vows.

    Karmasampati ritual of Maharashtra

    Image Credit: Instagram/Maharashtraweddings.in

    Resembling the Ponkhana ritual in Gujarat, where the mother-in-law pulls the son-in-law's nose to make him more humble, this post-wedding ritual of Maharashtrian weddings involves the bride's brother stepping in and pulling his brother-in-law's ear to remind him of his duties as a husband and to ensure the well being of his sister. Post which the groom gives a new name to his wife and the wedding altar extinguished.

    Barati Aarti ritual performed at Jain weddings

    Image Credit: Instagram/Rps Photography

    In Jain weddings, the aarti ritual involves the singing of holy hymns in the background by the ladies of the family while the bride's brother applies tikka on his brother-in-law's head and offers him gifts. In return, the groom gives the bride's brother a coconut, which is supposed to represent protection against evil forces. This barter between the two families signals the beginning of a new harmonious relationship.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    For Manifest to become one of Cambridge Dictionary's most viewed words of 2024 — 1,30,000 hits and counting — it means some of us must have Googled it at least once. I know, I hit that search button over and over again
    because each time I looked at it, I saw a new meaning.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    Putting together a homegrown title at a time when the demise of print has been long announced may seem surprising...
    ...but it has long been a dream of mine to give India a magazine it deserves. A magazine that is the country.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    And nothing, absolutely nothing, represents India more than our weddings.It is a time when families are brought together. Traditions come alive as they are adapted to each couple's beliefs. And lives are joined in a way that the romantic in me still enjoys.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    The fact that it comes with band, baaja and baraat — what's not to love?And that is the reason our first issue celebrates:
    THE NEW BRIDE.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    If you look at
    'Curate Beautiful, Create Happy'individually, they are powerful but when you put them together, they become a promise. While each section is dedicated to a word, I hope you will see this as your first of many handbooks for happiness.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    Curate
    Where we give you a fast-paced look into everything you should wish list when you start to think about marriage. What to buy and how to dress, along with modern mithai and the homegrown fragrance makers to bookmark. Make special note of the feature on alta.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    Beautiful
    It has everything you need to make your wedding special. From the big comeback of red and pink in bridal wear to how the cool kids are wearing corsets to the celebration, there is only one way to get ready for a wedding —with enjoyment.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    Create
    This section is a building block, a step to a better life. A place where we have all the answers. Or at least the beginning of a great conversation.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    Happy
    This needs very little description. It has travel with a special focus on incredible India, and a collection of wedding albums, sourced randomly, but collected with abundance because happiness has no limits.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media

    This first issue has a lot more, including a carefully edited address book of everything you need to make your wedding perfectly 'gramworthy! But it doesn't stop there. Each issue will be different because each one of you is unique.
    Because we manifested this difference, now we will celebrate you.

    - Avarna Jain,
    Chairperson RPSG Lifestyle Media