He decided to show his wedding on the phone screens; that’s why he asked both families in Egypt and Algeria and all their friends in Germany to follow his live video; to share joy and laughter.
The newlyweds held their wedding at the embassy, following preventive precautions, and the bride took memorial photos.
After the newlyweds agreed on the marriage date, Muhannad wrote on the social networking site a post reported by the newspaper sites:
Stay home and follow our joy from my residence. It’s an honor to invite all our close friends to stay home and follow the live broadcast on my personal social network page, on Spring Festival evening at eight o’clock, Cairo time, to scatter flowers, light candles, and beat tambourines.
By following us, our happiness will be complete. Never forget to prove your attendance by liking, commenting, or sharing the video of the ceremony.
Sabrina Massadi adorned herself with makeup cosmetics, while Mohannad wore his suit.
Everyone waited for that moment, as it was a wonderful, unique experience, and a global wedding, despite the coronavirus pandemic that forced them to choose such strange ceremony.
The newlyweds were surprised by their neighbor, Andrew Azar -a German engineer of Egyptian origin who lives in the opposite building- playing beautiful violin music for them from his balcony, while his German wife was playing the piano in the meantime. The newlyweds danced a quiet dance enjoying those tunes.
The whole thing seemed extraordinary, rare, yet remarkable and simple. The bride was overwhelmed with happiness as if she were over the moon, meantime Muhannad was also happy with the unconventional wedding, but they missed the lively Egyptian and Algerian wedding atmospheres.
Websites and news agencies reported the details of their wedding, and in a press interview, the bride told an Algerian newspaper reporter that their marriage was the simplest wedding ceremony in the world, continuing, “I styled my hair and adorned myself, and wore the dress that I had bought on the internet while I am here at home; the virus, which ended and threatened tens of thousands lives, did not block the way of our happiness.
While Muhannad said: “With light hearts, we paid attention to the smallest details and measures,” adding that while documenting the wedding, a plane kept flying over the place; so they felt frightened. They discovered later that it belonged to a television channel making a video of the first marriage to take place in the time of Coronavirus in the embassy; to be shown in a TV program after the approval of the newlyweds!
The newlyweds held their wedding at the embassy, following preventive precautions, and the bride took memorial photos.
After the newlyweds agreed on the marriage date, Muhannad wrote on the social networking site a post reported by the newspaper sites:
Stay home and follow our joy from my residence. It’s an honor to invite all our close friends to stay home and follow the live broadcast on my personal social network page, on Spring Festival evening at eight o’clock, Cairo time, to scatter flowers, light candles, and beat tambourines.
By following us, our happiness will be complete. Never forget to prove your attendance by liking, commenting, or sharing the video of the ceremony.
Sabrina Massadi adorned herself with makeup cosmetics, while Mohannad wore his suit.
Everyone waited for that moment, as it was a wonderful, unique experience, and a global wedding, despite the coronavirus pandemic that forced them to choose such strange ceremony.
The newlyweds were surprised by their neighbor, Andrew Azar -a German engineer of Egyptian origin who lives in the opposite building- playing beautiful violin music for them from his balcony, while his German wife was playing the piano in the meantime. The newlyweds danced a quiet dance enjoying those tunes.
The whole thing seemed extraordinary, rare, yet remarkable and simple. The bride was overwhelmed with happiness as if she were over the moon, meantime Muhannad was also happy with the unconventional wedding, but they missed the lively Egyptian and Algerian wedding atmospheres.
Websites and news agencies reported the details of their wedding, and in a press interview, the bride told an Algerian newspaper reporter that their marriage was the simplest wedding ceremony in the world, continuing, “I styled my hair and adorned myself, and wore the dress that I had bought on the internet while I am here at home; the virus, which ended and threatened tens of thousands lives, did not block the way of our happiness.
While Muhannad said: “With light hearts, we paid attention to the smallest details and measures,” adding that while documenting the wedding, a plane kept flying over the place; so they felt frightened. They discovered later that it belonged to a television channel making a video of the first marriage to take place in the time of Coronavirus in the embassy; to be shown in a TV program after the approval of the newlyweds!