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Ten Years from Today, What Will You Tell Your Kids Where You Met?

If you are considering getting married now, most likely, you would be married in ten years when you would have kids who might ask one day “Mom/Dad, where did you guys meet?” The pairs who met on Maangu could proudly say that they met on Maangu. What about you?

Do you want to become a part of Maangu journey? Maangu is changing the way Indian men and women meet, interact, engage in a relationship and get married – yet preserving the Indian values. Maangu gives an opportunity not only to you or your parents, but also the potential partner, her/his parents to come together as one family and move forward.

We don’t believe in the dogma where the ugliest guys get hundreds of offers and finest girl not even zero because of the perceived supply/demand problem. In reality, there is no problem with supply and demand. Gender distribution wise, Indian population is pretty balanced.  So, why not men also compete for the girls as opposed to the present dogma of girls’ parents chasing and begging several men’s parents?

It’s a fair game. Just because you are male (and ugly as hell), females should not chase you.

Ten years from now, tell your kids proudly that you guys met on Maangu – the game changer in ridiculously “traditionally-blind” process of finding grooms or brides in Indian culture.

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Marrying with tree in Indian Culture | Maangu Views

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In a crazy Indian wedding custom, if the bride is Manglik, she is made to first marry a Peepal tree or a dog. It is believed that marrying a Manglik woman results in the early death of the husband. Hence, the woman is first married to a tree or an animal to ward off the evil effects of the curse on her human husband. The husband has no such traditions to fulfill if he is Manglik. A simple religious ceremony resolves the issue…..

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