Saturday, July 19, 2014

Saneie Masilela kissed his wife and said he loves her despite the huge age gap that has stunned villagers who describe the marriage as 'sickening'

Bride Helen Shabangu (63) puts a ring on the finger of her groom Sanele Masilela (9) at their second ritual marriage ceremony in Kildare Village, Ximhungwe near Bushbuckridge in Mpumalanga, South Africa.
Nine-year-old Saneie Masilela has become the world's youngest groom for the second time after remarrying the 62-year-old woman he tied the knot with last year.

Dressed in a silvery tuxedo, baby-faced Saneie clutched the hand of mother-of-five Helen Shabangu - her children are aged between 28- and 38-years-old - as they repeated their vows a year on in front of 100 guests.
The schoolboy says he did it to make the marriage 'official' but other villagers in Ximhungwe in Mpumalanga, South Africa describe it as "sickening".
The ceremony - where guests shared a piece of cake - took place in front of Helen's long-term husband Alfred Shabangu, 66, who was there last year as well.
He said: "My kids and I are happy because we don't have a problem with her marrying the boy - and I don’t care what other people say.”
Both families claim the wedding is simply another 'ritual' after Saneie was told by his dead ancestors to wed last year and his parents forked out £500 for the bride and another £1,000 for the ceremony.
But the schoolboy - the youngest of five children – wanted to follow South African tradition and insisted they have the second ceremony this week to make their marriage official.

Groom Sanele Masilela (9) gets a kiss from his bride Helen Shabangu (63) at their second ritual marriage ceremony in Kildare Village, Ximhungwe near Bushbuckridge in Mpumalanga, South Africa.
Sealed with a kiss: Sanele, 9, and bride Helen, 63

The young groom said he still hoped he would have a proper wedding to a woman his own age when he was older.
He added: “I told my mother that I wanted to get married because I really did want to.
"I'm happy that I married Helen – but I will go to school and study hard.
"When I’m older I will marry a lady my own age. I chose Helen because I love her and, although we don’t live together all the time, we meet at the dumping site where my mother works regularly."
Recycling worker  Helen – who donned the same dress as last year – said: “I’m very happy that the boy chose me and my family support and understand that it is part of making ancestors happy.
"One day Sanele would grow normally and have family of his own and get married one day, all this ceremony is for making ancestors happy. We are playing.”

Bride Helen Shabangu (63) and her groom Sanele Masilela (9) showing the reporter their wedding rings at their second ritual marriage ceremony in Kildare Village, Ximhungwe near Bushbuckridge in Mpumalanga, South Africa.
Bizarre ceremony: Rings of the happy couple

Sanele’s 47-year-old mum, Patience Masilela said: “Sanele was fine and he was happy about the ceremony last year and it what he wanted – he was not shy.
“He was just happy to get married, very excited and was not embarrassed about it. So much so he wanted to do it again.
“After the wedding last year people keep asking them question like will they live together, sleep together, have babies but I keep telling them that after the wedding everything went back to normal - nothing changed.
“Sanele moved to Venda not long after the wedding because he wanted to learn a new language, but they are very close. Our families are very close.
“It was nice celebrate with a wedding once more, it was after all a calling from the ancestors.
“By doing this we made the ancestors happy. If we hadn’t done what my son had asked then something bad would have happened in the family."
What do you think? Should ancient traditions like this be allowed?

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