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If you were to marry and/or date someone who is a different religion and also from a different place then you are from, do you think you will eventually change? I believe in compromising on certain issues. For example, muslim and catholic. Could that work? Asian American and Russian could that work?

2006-07-29 12:35:43 · 18 answers · asked by Nikki 2 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

18 answers

My finance and I are of different religions I am a Christian and he is Muslim, although we are of different religions I love him and vice versa we compromise with our relationship. He knows that my family and I celebrate holidays Christmas, Thanksgiving,etc.. he doesn't participate by choice, but he is fine and we are very happy and very much in love. And our families love each other and get along very well, so everything works well!

2006-07-29 12:49:46 · answer #1 · answered by Ms. Hot Chocolate 3 · 2 2

Muslim and Catholic - never.

Asian American and Russian - hard to tell because you give no information as to your starting points.

Here is the foremost no-compromise issue: religion.

Muslim and Catholic will not work, unless both of you are non-practising and don't really care about the tenets of your faith. Catholics marrying non-Catholics must get their spouse to agree to raise any ensuing children in the Catholic faith. The Muslim religion, even more than some Christian sects, is not just a religion but a way of life. Can you see a devout Muslim changing his or her way of life and allowing children to be raised Catholic? Conversely, do you think it would work the other way around?

Asian-American and Russian: are we leaving religion out of this equation?

"Asian" covers a great deal of ground. As for Russians - or anyone else, for that matter - you would have to look very closely at the fiance(e) and his/her family. You never marry just the person unless (s)he is orphaned totally; family becomes part of the subtext of the marriage. Are they an accommodating crowd? or do they stick to tradition - no matter how outdated or outre - because that's what they do? Are there areas that involve taboo on one side but not the other? Does religion come into it and if so, how flexible is each side?

And finally, it is very good that you feel that you can compromise on certain issues. And the intended? Now is the time to find out whether you two can compromise on the same issues, otherwise it's not good. You don't want nasty surprises once you are married.

2006-07-29 12:51:03 · answer #2 · answered by kerangoumar 6 · 0 0

Anything can work if all the right ingredients are there. One thing you must have is respect for the other persons background or choices of religion. You can not change someone if they are thinking you are always attacking them because of something the grew up with. Some times it might help if the two of you go out and do things that neither or you would normally do. Such as going to a different kind of church. However, do not go out and do anything that makes either of your feel uncomfortable. Tell the truth to the other person and make sure they know how you feel and think. If you can not be yourself then there is no way it will work. Just be yourself and nothing more or less. People are raised differently and from different places and we can not help that. We love who we love. Our heart has a mind of it's own. However, love is not enough. You must have respect, faith, trust, communication, commitment, and understanding. With all these main things and the little things elsewhere a relationship will work if it is meant to. Good luck.

2006-07-29 12:41:03 · answer #3 · answered by lmfansler 2 · 0 0

Obviously, you wouldn't marry a person who is as different from you as night and day if you didn't expect to change a little. Now, some combinations can work, and others can't. For example, I can see a Russian and an Asian getting married and having a beautiful life together. However, I don't see a Russian getting with a Muslim at all. It all depends on the people, their love for each other, and where both people are at in life.

2006-07-29 12:39:09 · answer #4 · answered by King Matthew 2 · 0 0

I am Muslim, and a Muslim man can marry a woman of any religion, but a Muslim woman must marry a Muslim man. Personally, I only want to marry a Muslim man..But to answer your question--2 people of 2 races and cultures can definitely get along. But when it comes to religion--that can be tough..See, Islam is a very disciplined religion. We are Muslim 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. We are supposed to pray 5 times a day, we cant drink, smoke or eat pork--and we try to dress modestly. We try to live clean lives.Most important, we fast for 30 days during the month of Ramadan, and we take that VERY seriously--.. So, it can be hard to get along with someone who isn't also doing what we're doing...

And a Muslim man IS NOT going to change--if anything, they may try to make you dress modestly and stuff..But keep in mind that a Muslim man can marry a Christian or a Catholic--but with the condition that your children WILL be raised Muslim--no exceptions. And you will not be able to bring pork or alcohol and cigarettes in the home. And Muslims believe in keeping their bodies very clean, so your man will not be happy if your 'female hygene' is not up to par. And there is definitely NO Christmas or Christmas gifts given to the children--that is considered blasphemey...Good luck

2006-07-29 13:29:35 · answer #5 · answered by Plus-Sized &Proud 4 · 0 0

It could work but you don't try to find out those answers after you get married. I would probably have a relationship for a very long time before I would make it permanent. You also have to consider the role the families play in it. Some of these foreign culture families are real crazy.

2006-07-29 12:58:00 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

sturdy question, it is not worry-free to be compromising and not sense similar to you're being bossed around. The trick for me besides is attempting to work out the vast photograph (the apparent this is) instead of having hung up on info. this is sturdy to alter up your thinking and be much less boxed into your opinion. it may air out your perspectives and supply you a much less stale attitude on existence. a metamorphosis could nicely be valuable if this is going to become a guess to be distinctive for a whilst. you are able to constantly bypass lower back on your individual techniques and thinking afterwards... no person is your boss incredibly except you supply them that capability. in case you're constantly the boss is that any relaxing?

2016-10-08 11:37:31 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

it can work! i'm hindu and my boyfriend of several years is christian. it's about compromise. of course, if helps that hinduism doesn't have a "we're the only ones who are right or else" mentality, and my bf isn't suuuuuper relgious... but we've discussed how we're going to raise our children, and as long as neither partner insults the other's religion, or tries to convert children to only one religious belief i don't see a promlem. counseling for those couples who can't work it out seems like it should work too.

2006-07-29 12:39:45 · answer #8 · answered by alexitexmexi 1 · 0 0

I wouldn't (and didn't) marry someone of another faith - Faith issues are too complex to change or compomise on. The Bible is clear on that. Before I married, I dated outside my faith and found I was the only one changing and compromising. It definetly was not worth it. I wouldn't go there. Period.

2006-07-29 12:41:30 · answer #9 · answered by Kare♥Bear 4 · 0 0

Sure - as long as you don't find their relgion or views unacceptable, and vice versa. I was engaged to a very devout Mormon who wanted to raise any children as Mormon, and we had an understanding that I was not ever going to be Mormon, so we were able to compromise...

2006-07-29 12:38:37 · answer #10 · answered by merigold00 6 · 0 0

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