Yet there’s creative possibility. Hybrid formats emerge: micro-documentaries that honor ancestral context, interactive digital albums that let distant relatives add testimony, or intentional privacy-respecting livestreams shared with defined circles. Tech can amplify relational depth rather than merely broadcast it, if designed with cultural sensitivity. “Vivah YTS” is not a single phenomenon but a palimpsest: layers of continuity and disruption writing over and through one another. It tells a story about how rites that once anchored local networks adapt within globalized circuits of attention and distribution. The marriage ritual persists, but its borders blur — between private and public, sacred and performative, memory and media. The outcome depends on choices communities make: whether to let technology fragment ritual into consumable artifacts or to harness it to sustain the relational meanings at the heart of vivah.