The Jewish Wedding Now
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About this ebook
This complete, easy-to-use guide explains everything you need to know to plan your own Jewish wedding in today’s ever-changing world where the very definition of what constitutes a Jewish wedding is up for discussion.
With enthusiasm and flair, Anita Diamant provides choices for every stage of a wedding—including celebrations before and after the ceremony itself—providing both traditional and contemporary options. She explains the Jewish tradition of love and marriage with references drawn from Biblical, Talmudic, and mystical texts and stories. She guides you step by step through planning the ceremony and the party that follows—from finding a rabbi and wording the invitation to organizing a processional and hiring a caterer. Samples of wedding invitations and ketubot (marriage contracts) are provided for inspiration and guidance, as well as poems that can be incorporated into the wedding ceremony or party and a variety of translations of traditional texts.
“There is no such thing as a generic Jewish wedding,” writes Anita Diamant, “no matter what the rabbi tells you, no matter what the caterer tells you, no matter what your mother tells you.” Complete, authoritative, and indispensable, The Jewish Wedding Now provides personalized options—some new, some old—to create a wedding that combines spiritual meaning and joyous celebration and reflects your individual values and beliefs.
Anita Diamant
Anita Diamant is the bestselling author of the novels The Boston Girl, The Red Tent, Good Harbor, The Last Days of Dogtown, and Day After Night, and the collection of essays, Pitching My Tent. An award-winning journalist whose work appeared in The Boston Globe Magazine and Parenting, and many others, she is the author of six nonfiction guides to contemporary Jewish life. She lives in Massachusetts. Visit her website at AnitaDiamant.com.
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Reviews for The Jewish Wedding Now
22 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5How to create a wedding that is fully embracing of Jewish tradition and spirit and very modern.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Guide to planning a conemporary Jewish wedding. Browsed for information.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I was lucky enough to have a friend lend me her copy of this book when I got engaged a few months back. She told me that it was super helpful for her when she was planning her wedding, and it might help me too. I've flipped through it a few times, and it's already been really useful in answering questions I have about planning my wedding. It is inclusive, not focusing on one way of doing things (for example, it talks about Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform customs and traditions), which I really appreciated. I also really like the explanations of certain things (like the chuppah, breaking of the glass, etc.) - I plan to use this as a resource for quick descriptions of different components of the wedding when I have to make programs for it, and also to refer family/friends to if they have any questions as we get planning. Overall, definitely a must for anyone planning a Jewish wedding!
Book preview
The Jewish Wedding Now - Anita Diamant
Praise for
The Jewish Wedding Now
"I know you. You wish you already knew someone who would explain what’s what in Jewish wedding land. Someone who loves the gorgeous Jewish tradition and all that it offers. Someone who also gets that the modern world is actually a tremendous asset. Someone who has good taste and isn’t afraid to say it like it is. Well, your wish came true. Anita Diamant is that person, and The Jewish Wedding Now is all you need. I pray all your wedding dramas get resolved so easily."
—Noa Kushner, founding rabbi of The Kitchen, a religious start-up in San Francisco, www.thekitchensf.org
.
"No two weddings are alike, and in The Jewish Wedding Now Anita Diamant has spot-on advice for every couple—from the most traditional to the most cutting edge. Whether your wedding is interfaith, LGBTQ, very observant or just Jewish, she will walk you through every step of this emotionally fraught, ritually complex and spiritually fertile life-cycle moment. Without judging what couples should choose or avoid, Diamant explains, teaches, describes, and inspires."
—Rabbi Rick Jacobs, president, Union for Reform Judaism
"I have recommended Anita Diamant’s earlier editions of The Jewish Wedding Now to countless couples I’ve married for twenty-five years. This newest edition is in many ways more a new book than just an update. Diamant takes on the realities of Jewish life as it really is—with depth and sensitivity. LGBTQ, multifaith, Jews-of-color are present in the fullness of who we are—not only as apologetic add-ons. Issues of complicated family structures at weddings are confronted directly. Divorce is an acknowledged reality in our communities and families. Kudos to Anita Diamant! This book will serve the Jewish community—as we truly are—well!"
—Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum, DD, senior rabbi, Congregation Beit Simchat Torah, New York
"Anita Diamant has given us a gift with The Jewish Wedding Now, which refreshingly offers us depth, inclusivity, and accessibility. This is a must-read for Jewish couples planning their special day to be cherished forever!"
—Rabbi Dr. Shmuly Yanklowitz, founder and president, Uri L’Tzedek: Orthodox Social Justice
This revised version of a beloved classic offers an accessible, diverse, and sensitive guide for Jews who love and those who love them to create meaningful weddings and marriages. It’s not just a book about love, it’s a book about making love and life matter more in a fast-changing world.
—Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie, founder of Lab/Shul, New York, www.labshul.org
"The Jewish Wedding Now is a precious resource, revealing the spiritual gifts of Jewish wedding traditions to a wider community of loving partners and ritual practitioners. LGBTQ families and interfaith families should be embraced by Jewish tradition, and Anita Diamant’s words (and heart) open the door to Jewish wisdom as wide as it was always meant to be. With this new gift from one of the world’s most eloquent, sensitive teachers, a couple’s celebration might end up transforming the entire world. To couples hoping to create a meaningful wedding, individual spiritual seekers, and ritual facilitators of every variety, I cannot recommend The Jewish Wedding Now highly enough!"
—Rabbi Menachem Creditor, Congregation Netivot Shalom, Berkeley, California
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CONTENTS
Epigraph
Preface to the Third Edition
Introduction
PART ONE
MARRIAGE IN JEWISH TRADITION
Marriage in the Twenty-First Century
PART TWO
CREATING YOUR JEWISH WEDDING
Finding Your Rabbi
Time and Place
Invitations and Information
Clothes and Rings
Your Ketubah
Ketubah Texts
Your Huppah
Witnesses and Guests
A Jewish Checklist
PART THREE
JOY AND GLADNESS
Celebrating Your Engagement
Tenaim/Engagement
The Families
Community
The Wedding Simcha
Tzedakah
Menus
Laughter, Music, and Dance
Photography/Videography
PART FOUR
GETTING READY, HEART AND SOUL
Mikveh
The Blessing of Memory
Fasting and Prayer
PART FIVE
THE WEDDING DAY
Before the Huppah
Processional
Circling
Under the Huppah
Blessings and Rings
The Seven Blessings
Shattering the Glass
Brit Ahuvim, Lovers’ Covenant: A Reformulation of the Jewish Wedding
Seven Blessings: Translations, Alternatives, and Readings
After the Huppah
Yichud
Blessings for the Meal
AFTERWARD
Newlyweds
A Jewish Home
Divorce
Liberal Get
Mikveh
Tay-Sachs and Allied Diseases
APPENDICES
Birkat Hamazon, Blessings after the Meal (Short Version)
Traditional/Orthodox Documents
Orthodox Tenaim
Orthodox Ketubah
Prenuptial Agreement
Orthodox Get
Eshet Chayil—A Woman of Valor
Resources
The Jewish Wedding Now Ketubah Artists
Glossary
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Permissions
Notes
Index
For Jim
my beloved, my friend
Ebb and Flow Ketubah
© Robert Saslow Design
Image courtesy of www.ketubah.com
The main function of observance is not in imposing a discipline but in keeping us spiritually perceptive.
—Abraham Joshua Heschel
PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION
When The New Jewish Wedding was first published in 1985, most American Jews knew little about the traditions and customs that have distinguished Jewish weddings for centuries: the ketubah—the Jewish marriage certificate—was a rabbinic formality at best; klezmer music was a corny exercise in nostalgia; just the words Jewish wedding summoned the vanished world of Fiddler on the Roof or the extravagant excess of Goodbye, Columbus.
The second edition of The New Jewish Wedding came out in 2001, when klezmer had achieved the status of funky/cool roots music and Jewish calligraphers and graphic designers had reclaimed the ketubah for a new generation and made it universally available on the Internet. The second edition also reflected the full inclusion of women in all aspects of Jewish life and the community’s emerging embrace of its own diversity.
As in past editions, this one features contemporary art, liturgy, translations, and resources to inform and inspire meaningful Jewish choices. But it also reflects profound changes in American Jewry. While Ashkenazi culture is still dominant, there is new appreciation for the rituals, cuisines, music, and customs of other Jewish communities around the world. Jews of color, LGBTQ Jews, and those with roots in other countries and cultures enlarge and enrich the range of Jewish experiences and choices for everyone.
There is also a shift away from the hyphenated Judaism of past generations; boundaries between denominations are less distinct and affiliation rates are lower. The advent of an open Orthodoxy
has started a new conversation about the differences between liberal and orthodox Judaism. Many prefer not to apply labels and describe themselves as post-denominational or just Jewish.
The world has become a smaller place, but the huppah, the wedding canopy, has become a very large tent, open to Jews of all descriptions and denominations, and to people unconnected to any religion (nones
),I
Jews by affiliation
(those who are in effect marrying in),II
and people from different faith traditions. The status and validity of some of these weddings is the subject of intense debate—par for the course in all things Jewish—but this edition reflects the facts on the ground.
I hope that readers of all descriptions will find ideas, information, and a warm welcome in its pages; to that end, the language in this edition reflects a more expansive notion of gender, both in its use of pronouns (they rather than he/she), and in most cases couples and beloveds rather than brides and grooms, although even those words may now be understood as inclusive of brides and brides
and grooms and grooms.
There is no chapter devoted to LGBTQ couples nor is there one for intermarrying couples because The Jewish Wedding Now is a menu for all who wish to include meaningful Jewish choices as they plan their ceremony and celebration: choices that are the same for everyone. As in past editions, it assumes the reader’s interest and intelligence, but no experience or knowledge of vocabulary, customs, and laws. And while its purpose remains the same, I wondered whether it was time to reconsider the title. Thirty years on, has change outstripped continuity? Can The New Jewish Wedding still be new?
After much thought I decided to call this edition The Jewish Wedding Now. Under the huppah, time dissolves. All the lists and decisions about where, when, what to wear, whom to invite: it all recedes into a radical now. Your wedding takes place in the same time zone as the first wedding, when God braided Eve’s hair and stood with Adam as a witness. Your wedding is the first wedding in the world and it is also the ultimate wedding—the latest chapter in a story that extends back four thousand years and will continue into the unknowable future.
I hope this book will help you create that crazy-sacred now at the heart of every wedding when two people under the huppah publicly declare that what they want for their only wild and precious
III
lives is to share it with each other.
Wishing you a joyful wedding and a long and happy marriage.
Mazel tov.
I
. Nones is a term from surveys of religious affiliation where none
or none of the above
is one of the choices.
II
. See page 14
for more about Jews by affiliation.
III
. Mary Oliver.
Shin Washi Paper Ketubah
© Temma Gentles
Image courtesy of www.ketubah.com
Introduction
According to Jewish law, the requirements for a kosherI
wedding can be summed up in a few words: a bride accepts an object worth more than a dime from a groom; the groom recites a ritual formula to consecrate the transaction; these actions must be witnessed by two people who are not related to either bride or groom. That’s it.
The traditions associated with Jewish weddings—the canopy, the breaking of a glass, the presence of a rabbi, even the seven wedding blessings—are customs. Custom—in Hebrew, minhag—changes over time and differs among cultures, nations, and generations; customs can vary wildly from one synagogue or neighborhood to the next.
Customs are not trivial; they are the heart and soul of rituals, and while some minhagim have been discarded and forgotten, others persist and carry even more symbolic and emotional weight than some religious requirements. Customs are not set in stone. Over the centuries Jewish weddings have been celebrated with variations in ritual and minhag that reflected the needs and values of different times and places.
The nostalgic fallacy that there was once a standard, universal, and correct way to do a Jewish wedding ignores differences in everything from clothes to the fact that for centuries some Jews practiced polygamy.
Throughout history, Judaism has been a living tradition, examined, debated, and reinvented, generation after generation. Jewish weddings are grounded in the past, but they have always been the stuff of the irrepressible present.
This history of dynamic change is just as Jewish as the huppah and the seven wedding blessings. Yet, this kind of book would have been unthinkable before the twentieth century. Until then, most Jews lived in close-knit, homogenous communities. Families were as generous and hospitable as their means allowed, but ceremonies and celebrations—from the words spoken under the wedding canopy to the menu—were familiar to everyone.
Today, communities are scattered, culturally diverse, and even virtual. We don’t share a common ritual language, and many of us have never been to a Jewish wedding. Our celebrations are mounted by professionals, whose main focus is on the reception, not what goes on under the huppah. There is a lot of hand-wringing and breast-beating about how this represents a terrible loss. But the truth is, Jews of the twenty-first century cannot marry the same way their parents did, much less their great-grandparents. The world has changed too much; our expectations of marriage are not the same. To be emotionally and spiritually authentic, our weddings need to synthesize the sum total of our experience, which includes the reality of our