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NY Jewish Bridal Examiner

Aspects of the Jewish wedding: on to the chuppah

October 26, 10:47 PMNY Jewish Bridal ExaminerAriella Brown
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The chuppah is the quintessential symbol of the Jewish wedding.  The traditions associated with it allude to the history of the Jewish people and Biblical texts, as well as the values that form the basis of the marriage.

As we recall the destruction of the Temple even at the moment of our greatest joy (see -Why-we-break-a-glass-at-Jewish-wedding)it is customary to place ashes on the groom's head before he enters the chuppah.  The groom, as well as the bride, remove all jewelery (though the bride typically retains her headpiece) before proceeding the chuppah.  One reason was offered in Evoking-Yom-Kippur.  Another reason, advanced by Rabbi Zev Cinamon in his book, Beyom Chasunaso, is to show that the couple is not marrying for material status but "because of admiration and love that exists between them" (p. 46).

Traditionally, candles are held by the parents of the couple while walking down the aisle. (To safeguard them from blowing out, they may be enclosed in hurricane lamps.) The candles are a reminder of the giving of the Torah at Sinai, which was accompanied by the sounds of thunder and flashes of light. The verse in Song of Songs that mentions "yom chasunaso" [his wedding day] is also taken as a reference to the celebration of the bond between G-d and his people enacted on the day the Torah was given.

The groom proceeds to the chuppah accompanied by his parents and is followed by the bride who is flanked by her parents.  (Hasidim will instead have the groom accompanied by his father and his bride's father, while the bride is escorted by her mother and the groom's mother.)    It is a nice reflection of the parental involvement, and equal treatment for the groom and the bride.  In contrast to having only a father figure for the bride who "gives her"  in marriage, the traditional Jewish procession gives mothers an equally active role for their sons as well as their daughters.

Some people arrange for their siblings, grandparents, nieces, and nephews to also walk down the aisle, but that is more a matter of personal preference than customary requirement. Some people's practice is for the groom to escort the bride (without her parents) for the final steps to the chuppah.  As he would have arrived before her, he takes some steps over to return with her.  Some may find that romantic, but one really should check if the custom is within the family before adopting practices.

The chuppah, with its sheltering roof, represents the home that the bride and groom are entering into together upon marriage. ( Accordingly, some see elements of chuppah in the veiling ceremony, see   -the-bedeken). While some people prefer to have the chuppah under the stars, that is not mandated by all customs.  I've been to weddings that held outdoor chuppahs even on freezing winter days and chuppahs held indoors.  Still, many halls will place the chuppah under a skylight to satisy those who want to have their chuppah under the sky.

Upon arriving at the chuppah, the fathers usually find some place to go, though the two mothers usually stay in the circuit,  in a quite literal sense, accompanying the bride as she circles the groom.  In most communities the bride circles the groom 7 times, though some do only 3, and Sephardic brides do not circle their grooms at all. Those who interpet the bride's circuit as a sign of submission -- an illustration of the fact that she is making her husband the center of her existence -- are simply projecting their own interpretation onto the ritual.  Such a view is not based on authoritative sources.   Actually, the circuit demonstrates women's strength and significance.

The bride's circle is alluded to by a biblical verse referring to a woman going around a man (Jermiah 31:22).  Now if the bride were circumscibed by a circle made by her husband, one may interpret it as signifying the contrast between the man's freedom of movement and being fixed in place.  But that clearly is not the case.  Rabbi Cinamon  quote sthe Talmud's statement,"'whoever lives without a wife lives without a wall' The Marhasha explains that this is because a wife protects her husband from sinning" (p. 47).  So the bride in circling the groom is actually shown as a capable individual who protects her husband.  The praiseworthy woman is also described as having the properties of a wall in Song of Songs (8:9).  

In Made in Heaven: A Jewish Wedding Guide (New York: Moznaim, 1983) Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan points out that the number 3 corresponds to the the number of obligations the Torah sets for a husband toward his wife:  "food, clothing, and conjugal relations."  In a footnote, he also suggests the number "relates to the three methods of contracting kiddushin"  (p. 159).   The number 7 is a very significant one in Jewish thought, which is central to the Seven Blessings at the center of the wedding celebration (to be addressed in another post). Seven is not only the number of days in creation, but also the number of "shepherds of Israel"  -- Abraham, Issac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, Aaron, and David -- as well as the number of "prophetesses" ennumerated by our Sages -- Sarah, Miriam, Deborah, Hannah, Abigail, Huldah, and Esther.   While the bride circles her groom, she evokes their merit in her prayers for a successful marriage (p. 161).  Evoking the prophetesses through the bridal circuit s an affirmation of the distinguished roles women have had in Jewish history. 

Related article: breaking plates the-betrothal-and-the-ring symbolism-of-the-ring  -standing-under-the-chuppah

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