The narrative structure of these digital novellas typically revolves around specific, high-stakes emotional tropes:
In traditional legal terms, "Benami" refers to a transaction or arrangement where an object or property is held by one person but secretly belongs to another. Rangeen Kahaniyan translates this concept into a marital and romantic context.
Sameer, a Gulf-based businessman, had two Benami Shadis — one in Dubai with an expat colleague, another in Lucknow with his childhood sweetheart. Neither wife knew about the other. Both weddings used fake names on documents, arranged through a broker who specialized in “anonymous marriage contracts.”
The narrative structure of these digital novellas typically revolves around specific, high-stakes emotional tropes:
In traditional legal terms, "Benami" refers to a transaction or arrangement where an object or property is held by one person but secretly belongs to another. Rangeen Kahaniyan translates this concept into a marital and romantic context.
Sameer, a Gulf-based businessman, had two Benami Shadis — one in Dubai with an expat colleague, another in Lucknow with his childhood sweetheart. Neither wife knew about the other. Both weddings used fake names on documents, arranged through a broker who specialized in “anonymous marriage contracts.”