right|220px|thumb|An Indian Hindu wedding procession, baraat, with the bridegroom on a horse, led by a brass band, [[Pushkar, Rajasthan.]] Baraat, also known as Varayatra, is a groom's wedding procession among Hindu communities in the Indian subcontinent. In the tradition, the groom has to travel to the wedding venue (often the bride's house) accompanied by his family members and friends.
right|220px|thumb|An Indian Hindu wedding procession, baraat, with the bridegroom on a horse, led by a brass band, [[Pushkar, Rajasthan.]] Baraat, also known as Varayatra, is a groom's wedding procession among Hindu communities in the Indian subcontinent. In the tradition, the groom has to travel to the wedding venue (often the bride's house) accompanied by his family members and friends.
In the previous eras, the groom used to travel on a mare, chariots or even elephants, though now often travel on vintage cars. The baraat can become a large procession, with its own band, dancers, and budget. The groom and his horse are covered in finery and do not usually take part in the dancing and singing; that is left to the "baraatis" or people accompanying the procession. The groom usually carries a sword. The term baraati is also more generically used to describe any invitee from the groom' side. Traditionally, baraatis are attended to as guests of the bride's family.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).