NFT or non-fungible tokens have been on the rise recently. But thanks to the ongoing pandemic, many couples have also been opting for digital weddings where they exchange virtual tokens and even have a digital priest.?
This, however, hadn't happened in India until now. A Pune couple has become the first in the country to host a blockchain wedding from the OpenSea platform.?
This couple named?Shruti Nair and Anil Narasipuram took their vows while seated before their computers and in the presence of a 'digital priest' Anoop Pakki, reported Times Now.
The groom, Anil shared how this occurred via a thread on Twitter,?"On Nov 15, 2021, Shruti Nair and I got married! Given the era of Covid that we live in, we decided to keep it small with a courthouse wedding, also known as a 'Registered Marriage' in India. We also decided to immortalize our union using blockchain technology."
"In an online ceremony, officiated by our very own 'digital priest' Anoop Pakki, Shruti and I made our marriage 'blockchain official' with an Ethereum smart contract that consecrated our commitment to each other in the form of an NFT minted on OpenSea," the post added.
He continued by saying that the image they used to create the NFT was of his?wife's engagement ring with the wedding vows embedded in the image itself.?The special token was named ¡®ekatvam¡¯, which means ¡®oneness¡¯ in Sanskrit.
¡°We won¡¯t make any big promises, but we will do everything we can to make this work. Through all our disagreement and conflict, we hope to grow our understanding of each other and ourselves,¡± their vow on the NFT read. ¡°We don¡¯t expect to be the whole village for each other, but we will be by each other¡¯s side, hand in hand, walking through this adventure, together,¡± they promised.
Guests for the couple joined them via Google Meet where the couple read out their vows and after receiving a ¡®blessing¡¯ from the digital priest. After this, the groom confirmed the transaction to transfer the NFT to his wife¡¯s digital wallet. ¡°Shruti and I sat next to each other on our laptops and completed the transaction in a 15-minute ceremony officiated by Anoop,¡± he wrote, sharing a few pictures of their special day.
¡°The transaction took a few minutes (and about $35 in ETH gas fees) after which we were pronounced husband and wife by our digital priest!¡± he added.?
After this, a confirmation by the priest read: ¡°By the power vested in me by Ethereum, it is my honour and delight to declare you married.¡±
How exciting!
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