Saturday, December 14, 2013

A Traditional Jewish Queer Wedding?

Our beliefs and practices are informed by Orthodox Judaism, and it is important for Emet and I to have a traditional Jewish wedding as much as possible because we recognize the importance of tradition. That being said, we know that under Jewish law, our marriage will not be valid. So, we are having many discussions about which Jewish traditions we find appropriate and relevant to us and which ones we need to alter or eliminate all together.

Copyright White Rose Kallah
Traditions of a Jewish Wedding Ceremony:
  • The couple does not see each other for a week prior to the wedding.
  • The bride and groom go to the mikveh in order to enter into their marriage spiritually clean.
  • Both the bride and the groom have separate rooms for guests to greet them prior to the wedding (kabbalat panim).
  • The ketubah is signed by two Shabbat-observant men.
  • After the kabbalat panim, the groom goes to the bride's room and places a veil on her, called the badeken, to symbolize that he is not solely interested in her physical beauty.
  • Under the chuppah (the marriage canopy), there is the betrothal blessing (kiddushin) over wine, when the groom gives the bride a ring, and the nisu'in, when the husband unites with the wife under the chippah through the Sheva Brachot, or Seven Blessings.
  • Following the ceremony, the couple goes to the yichud room, where they spend a few minutes together for the first time alone after the ceremony.
How we as a queer couple want to maintain tradition:
  • We will not see each other for the week leading up to the wedding.
  • We will go to a mikveh.
  • While we plan to see each other prior to the Kabbalat Panim, in order to take pictures, we likely will have two separate rooms for the kabbalat panim.
  • We are altering the kiddushin and the Sheva Brachot slightly to be more relevant and meaningful to us, though we are maintaining much of the wording.
  • We will have the yichud, as well.
What I've learned about Jewish tradition is that while we have customs that are passed down through history, each generation has changed them to be more relevant to their lives. You may not hear this from observant Jews, but even their practices have been informed by the commentators of a generation ago, and it is important for Emet and I, as a queer couple who wants to maintain tradition to figure out a way to keep important aspects of it present in our wedding ceremony and our life.

There has been much discussion lately about religious GLBT people. Who we are, how we balance religious practice and being queer, and how we relate to each group (religious and GLBT people), as though they are separate identities. I'm very lucky that I can be an active member of both communities and that there are many, many queer Jews out there doing the exact same thing.

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing this process in your blog. Something to think about is that if you want a halachically binding vow and wedding ceremony, it's completely possible. It won't be kiddushin because halachically that doesn't have any weight in a same-sex ceremony, but I just heard this gorgeous shiur about how to have a halachically-binding, incredibly beautiful same-sex wedding (given by an Orthodox rabbi) that speaks deeply to what it means to be in a same-sex relationship, as opposed trying to make a different-sex story (mainly about adam/eve and Jews procreating) fit onto us. It was a fantastic shiur and got me really excited about my own wedding someday, IY"H. I'd love to share it with you if you're interested. Mazal tov on your upcoming simcha!

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    1. Hi! Thanks for commenting! I'd love to hear more information. Please email me at twofrumqueers@gmail.com. Thanks so much!

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