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<p><strong><font color="#000000">Rebecca Kanthor (C) and Liu Jian (R) smile during their traditional Chinese wedding in Dong'an at the central province of Henan, February 9, 2011. </font></strong></p><p><strong><font color="#000000">Rebecca Kanthor moved from New York State to China eight years ago, where she met Liu Jian, a young musician from the central Chinese province of Henan. After several years together they decided to get married in a traditional rural wedding. </font></strong></p><p><strong><font color="#000000">In the ceremony, the groom arrives on a horse while his bride is carried around the town by four men, announcing the marriage. Liu is the first person from Dong'an to marry a foreigner. Beyond headlines about climate change and trade relations, Rebecca and Liu's union is symbolic of the growing cultural integration between China and the United States. Since the 1972 visit to China by U.S. President Richard Nixon, the two countries have developed what is arguably the most important relationship among major powers with huge economic implications. Now, three decades in, the United States and China have settled into what some describe as a "mature marriage," bound together by mutual interests and mutual respect. Picture taken on February 9, 2011.</font></strong><br/> </p><p>
Rural Wedding On Horse
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Rural Wedding On Horse
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Rural Wedding On Horse
</p><p><strong><font color="#000000">Liu Jian rides a horse during his traditional Chinese wedding in Dong'an at the central province of Henan, February 9, 2011.</font></strong>
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Rural Wedding On Horse
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