Diwali 2023: Priyanka Chopra Shares Glimpses Of Daughter Malti Marie’s First Rangoli, Check It Out – News18

Priyanka Chopra shares daughter Malti Marie Jonas's first Diwali Rangoli.

Priyanka Chopra shares daughter Malti Marie Jonas’s first Diwali Rangoli.

Priyanka Chopra marked her Diwali by sharing a snap of Rangoli, which was supposedly drawn by her daughter Malti Marie Jonas.

The festival of light- Diwali is finally here on November 12 and the entire country is celebrating it with pomp and gusto. Even the tinsel town has joined the festive celebration, with back to back Diwali parties. Amid all the Diwali posts pouring in, Priyanka Chopra shared the snap of her daughter Malti’s first Rangoli.

On Sunday, Priyanka Chopra took to her Instagram stories and posted an image of a colourful Rangoli, which was drawn in the pattern of a Pink flower. The doting mother and Citadel actress shared the picture with a heart emoji, folded hand emoji and baby emoji. She also wrote ‘First Rangoli’ , that indicates Malti was the one behind it.

Take a look:

Priyanka Chopra got married to singer Nick Jonas on December 1, 2018. They dated for a short while before getting married and now have a daughter together named Malti Marie Jonas. Nick and Priyanka are both very close to their families and often spend time with each other’s parents. Recently, Priyanka’s mother Madhu Chopra spoke about how she knew if Nick would make a good husband for Priyanka or not.

Speaking to Bollywood Hungama, Madhu said, “We liked him immediately. He is a very likeable person. Like how I had discussed with my husband, I had discussed with Nick also because you can’t get to know if the person is right for my daughter or not by seeing their face once, so my daughter had to choose. I had a nice long discussion with Nick alone to know how he is as a person. After that, I realised that he was just the right person for my daughter. He was what I wanted for Priyanka.”

Speaking about whether Madhu had any apprehensions about Priyanka not marrying an Indian, she said, “My daughter had studied abroad, so she has not felt any difference between white, black and brown. She studied abroad at a time when all these things (skin colour) were normalised. We were also with her so it was normalised for us as well. Our whole family was in America. These things are very normal in our family at least. So I was not worried about white or black, I never had an issue with colour.”

“I just kept feeling that she is going very far away from me. I had a bit of apprehension that she’ll be so far away but then I also felt that it is okay, we can always reach each other in fifteen hours,” Madhu Chopra said.