Hello everyone, welcome to my blog! This blog will be about india. First of all, be prepared to see different people, different places, different lives. I learned a lot on this trip and I can't wait to pass it on to you. Let's start!!!
I want to tell you about your first impressions right after your arrival in India. Everything is very different, people I am not used to and their lives, I am excited. At the same time, everywhere smelled very bad, yes everywhere.. After we landed in New Delhi, we started to travel on the bike we rented for 400 rubles. It's a complete chaos.. there are no rules, people don't listen to each other, they are very different.. We draw attention because we are white-skinned, everyone is constantly looking at us and they are not afraid. He lives in a generally tense community.
The colors that people choose to dress in are quite different. They have their own style and I like it very much. I guess what I don't like and can't get used to is cleaning. This is something nobody cares about. We wanted to taste street flavors but it didn't look clean at all and unfortunately we couldn't taste it. In general, the air in the country is very polluted.
Then we hitchhiked and communicating with people is both difficult and easy. Usually people speak Hindi and we tried to communicate in English, but no one could understand us. We realized that we would have some difficulty in communicating with the people here.
I would like to tell about the Sati tradition, which I was very surprised, upset about and could not understand.
WHAT IS THE SATI TRADITION?
I want to say that I am against anything and anyone that distinguishes a woman or any human being from the rest. I was very upset and surprised when I encountered this tradition here. It should not be customary to burn a woman alive just because her husband is dead.
This is exactly the Sati tradition in India. According to this tradition, a woman should keep her husband happy even if he dies. As if being a widow is shameful, she is expected to commit suicide soon after her husband's death or is burned with her husband.
In some societies where there is no cremation culture, she is buried alive with her husband. Another name for this tradition is devanagari. In fact, in this culture, not only does the woman need to be cremated, her husband, friends, relatives, whoever wants to show their loyalty can show their loyalty by being burned alive.
The Sati tradition has been seen in many important places where Hinduism is practiced. Bali and Nepal come right after India. Towards the end of the 17th century, many attempts were made to circumvent this tradition, it was outlawed during the period of British exploitation of India, and some kings forbade the cremation of widows with children, but this could not be prevented. It is still being done in Rajasthan, India, and thousands of women are burned to death.
India has other interesting traditions. A few of them are as follows;
• Suicide
• Marrying Girls to a Dog
• Marriage of Frogs
• Throwing Children from Height
I would like to talk a little bit about people's lifestyles and quality. In India in general everyone is very poor. after visiting delhi i saw many people living on the street.
It saddens me to see people so poor. The lack of quality of life and the constant increase in the population scared me a lot.
The fact that the fertility rate is increasing day by day and at the same time has the most populous country in the world makes the life of Indians very difficult.









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