The habit of people in India who deserves nih gan example .... In one remote village in Bihar State, India, continued its tradition of community residents to plant trees to celebrate the birth of a daughter.
In the village Dharhara, District Bhagalpur, for example, the family must plant a minimum of 10 trees when their daughter was born.
This tradition of perceived benefits, when the princess has grown up.
Marriage Kumari, 19, married in early June. Prospective partners are school teachers. Kumari arranged marriage with a man by his father, Subhas Singh.
Singh is a farmer with low incomes, but he's not worried about the high cost of his daughter's wedding ceremony.
As tradition by rural communities, Singh has planted 10 mango trees on the day of birth of Marriage. Girls-and tree-nurtured for several years and both are growing 'mature'.
"This day has arrived, we have been selling fruit from the tree during the next three years and earned money to finance the wedding of our children," Singh said as quoted by the BBC, Tuesday (15 / 6).
"The trees are our deposits," he said.
In Bihar, the bride will have to pay mas mating. Value of dowry is usually dependent caste, social status and employment. The state is also known tradition of giving goldfish mate's death.
However, mango trees have been dismissed concerns parents of Marriage. And the incident was not a unique thing in the village of Dharhara.
"We stopped doing the traditional agriculture such as growing wheat and rice. We planted the trees as much as we can as long as the tree produces and dependable," said Shyam Sunder Singh villagers.
Singh finance the marriage three children after selling fruit from trees planted when they were born.
"One medium sized mango tree valued 200,000 rupees or $ 4,245 for one season fruit. These trees have commercial value and they really helped us when daughters marry," he said.
Villagers say they save some money from selling the fruit in your bank account on behalf of their daughter.
Tree planting has been ongoing for generations.
"We heard from our fathers, and they from their fathers. It's been done by the family and villagers from the old days," said Subhendu Kumar Singh, a schoolteacher.
"This is our step to answer the challenge of carp breeding expensive, global warming and killing of newborn baby girls," he says.
His cousin, Shankar Singh, planting 30 trees when her daughter was born Sneha Surabhi. And now Sneha, 4, participate regularly watering the trees planted for him.
Villages with a population of about 7,000 people, has more than 100,000 trees, mostly mango and lychees.
If you look at it from afar, the village would like a forest plasticity.
In the village Dharhara, District Bhagalpur, for example, the family must plant a minimum of 10 trees when their daughter was born.
This tradition of perceived benefits, when the princess has grown up.
Marriage Kumari, 19, married in early June. Prospective partners are school teachers. Kumari arranged marriage with a man by his father, Subhas Singh.
Singh is a farmer with low incomes, but he's not worried about the high cost of his daughter's wedding ceremony.
As tradition by rural communities, Singh has planted 10 mango trees on the day of birth of Marriage. Girls-and tree-nurtured for several years and both are growing 'mature'.
"This day has arrived, we have been selling fruit from the tree during the next three years and earned money to finance the wedding of our children," Singh said as quoted by the BBC, Tuesday (15 / 6).
"The trees are our deposits," he said.
In Bihar, the bride will have to pay mas mating. Value of dowry is usually dependent caste, social status and employment. The state is also known tradition of giving goldfish mate's death.
However, mango trees have been dismissed concerns parents of Marriage. And the incident was not a unique thing in the village of Dharhara.
"We stopped doing the traditional agriculture such as growing wheat and rice. We planted the trees as much as we can as long as the tree produces and dependable," said Shyam Sunder Singh villagers.
Singh finance the marriage three children after selling fruit from trees planted when they were born.
"One medium sized mango tree valued 200,000 rupees or $ 4,245 for one season fruit. These trees have commercial value and they really helped us when daughters marry," he said.
Villagers say they save some money from selling the fruit in your bank account on behalf of their daughter.
Tree planting has been ongoing for generations.
"We heard from our fathers, and they from their fathers. It's been done by the family and villagers from the old days," said Subhendu Kumar Singh, a schoolteacher.
"This is our step to answer the challenge of carp breeding expensive, global warming and killing of newborn baby girls," he says.
His cousin, Shankar Singh, planting 30 trees when her daughter was born Sneha Surabhi. And now Sneha, 4, participate regularly watering the trees planted for him.
Villages with a population of about 7,000 people, has more than 100,000 trees, mostly mango and lychees.
If you look at it from afar, the village would like a forest plasticity.