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Calgary

Calgary's usually booming Indian wedding industry put on hold by COVID-19

People who make their living from Calgarys usually booming Indian wedding industry are facing a huge financial hit while they wait out COVID-19 for what could be the rest of 2020.

Indian weddings involve gatherings of 100s of guests with many travelling internationally

A Calgary couple celebrates their wedding day. Weddings are all cancelled for what looks like the whole of 2020 due to COVID-19 leaving business facing an uncertain future. (Arshad Chaudhry)

People who make their living from Calgary's usually booming Indian wedding industry are facing a huge financial hit while they wait out COVID-19 for what could be the rest of 2020.

The large andlavish events can run for several days and can involve up to 500 guests travelling from India, the U.S. and Europe. Weddings without those families in attendanceare simply not an option for most brides and grooms.

The weddings, which usually run from March through October,meanbig money for a long line of Calgary businesses from planners, venues, hair and makeup artists, DJs, caterers, performers, dancers, photographers and many more, who all now face an uncertain future.

"Typically we'd do two to three weddings every weekend, around 10 weddings per month," said Ramandeep Sabharwal, who runs the Calgary-based wedding planning companyFusion Bollywood.

That numberhas now dropped to zero.

"We probably have lost all the revenue now. Everything iscancelled until the end of August and I don't see a very promising time for September and October also," said Sabharwal.

"It's a multi-million dollar industry in our province so we really need to have these businesses up and going," she said. "Waiting for the next season in 2021, a lot of businesses are going to have locks on their doors."

The events typicallyrun for three orfour days with many customs, prayers,traditions and ceremonies taking place before the wedding itself, with hundreds of guests attending every day.

Calgarys Magnolia Banquet Hall is a popular venue for big, lavish Indian weddings, but COVID-19 has left the venue facing a bumpy financial ride in 2020. Its owner says 80 events have been cancelled this summer. Indian weddings can last a week and involve hundreds of guests. (Jimmy Gill)

The sheer scale of the weddingsmakes meeting safety guidelines around COVID-19 an impossible task.

In Calgary, weddings take place in a handful of huge banquet halls whose owners are also worried about the future.

"The impact has been heavy. We are feeling a huge hit right now. It's scary,"said Jimmy Gill, owner of the Magnolia Banquet Hall in northeast Calgary.

Gill has cancelled 80 events planned to take place between March and August.

One solution being suggested by wedding planners and venues is to try to hold weddings over the winter season, which is a tough sell in Calgary.

"People want to do it in the summer time. Schools are off, there's better weather and relatives can travel," said Gill.

Gill thinks the ethnic wedding industry will be impacted for much longer than mainstreamweddings.

He says he's now running into problems with people postponing until 2021,creating a backlog andfrustration for families hoping to book for next year, whose plansmight now have to be pushed to 2022.

But many businesses that make their money through Indian weddings might not make it until then. Gill is hoping for some form of extended financial aid for those business who face having to waitit out for almost a full year.

Hair and makeup artist Rupi Boyal says shes been busy helping stressed-out Indian brides reschedule their weddings for 2021 while her business and the industry has ground to halt. (Rupi Boyal)

"There are bartenders, DJs, security companies, caterers, decorators. It's a chain effect with a lot of businesses attached to just one wedding," said Gill.

Hair and makeup artist RupiBoyalhas been making Indian brides look their best on their wedding day for 10 years.

She says 2021 will be a hectic year for those businesses who can survive.

"We're telling our stressed-outbrides 'it's going to be OK' and basically there'll be no vacations for us next year," said Boyal.

Boyal says Albertavendors have come up with an agreement that sees them honouring deposits until March 2021.

"It's stressing us out too,making sure they're OKand answering each and every email and the financial effects are bad. This is our busy time and we're sitting at home," she said.

Boyal says her family isdown to one income stream while she plans for a bumper seasonnext year.

"It's something we look forward to, we're passionate about this and it's never happened before when we're not doing it," said Boyal. "It feels odd to not be glamming up our brides."

Calgary photographer Arshad Chaudhry is one of many businesses navigating the collapse of the Indian wedding season in Calgary. Hes exploring new ways to make up for a devastating year for people connected to the ethnic wedding industry. (Arshad Chaudry)

"The most stressful part is comforting our brides. We're doing as much as we can to help them reschedule and help them out," she said.

Other business are finding other ways to keep goingwith the absence of the lucrative wedding season.

Photographer Arshad Chaudhryhas been trying to stay busyphotographing food forlocal restaurants and filming promotional videos for businesses.

"We are hurt badly and all our weddings except a few have been cancelled or postponed," said Chaudhry.

"We are not making any money this year so it's very hard to run our home and pay our bills," he said.

Chaudhry says his whole team is hurting right now.

Like all the others, Chaudhry says all they can do is wait, watch and hope.