Couples reimagining Jewish wedding ceremony
From the marriage contract to breaking the glass under the chuppah, many Jewish couples adapt their weddings to celebrate gender听equality
Traditional Jewish weddings share one key aspect with traditional Christian weddings. Historically, the ceremony was essentially a transfer of property: A woman went from being the responsibility of her father to being the responsibility of her husband.
That may not be the first thing Americans associate with weddings today, but it lives on in rituals and vows. Think, in a traditional Christian wedding, of a bride promising 鈥渢o obey鈥 her husband, or being 鈥済iven away鈥 by her father after he walks her down the aisle.

Samira Mehta is director of the 黑料社区网 Program in Jewish Studies and an associate professor of women and gender studies.
Feminism has changed some aspects of the Christian wedding. More egalitarian or feminist couples, for example, might have the bride be 鈥済iven away鈥 by both her parents, or have both the bride and groom escorted in by parents. Others skip the 鈥済iving鈥 altogether. , too, have .
During research for 鈥淏eyond Chrismukkah,鈥 about Christian-Jewish interfaith families, many interviewees wound up talking about their weddings and the rituals that they selected or innovated for the day to reflect their cultural background. Some of them had also designed their ceremonies to reflect feminism and marriage equality鈥something that the interfaith weddings had in common with many weddings where both members of the couple were Jewish.
These values have transformed many Jewish couples鈥 weddings, just as they have transformed the Christian wedding. Some Jewish couples make many changes, while some make none. And like every faith, Judaism has lots of internal diversity鈥not all traditional Jewish weddings look the same.
Contracts and covenants
Perhaps one of the most important places where feminism and marriage equality have reshaped traditions is in the 鈥渒etubah,鈥 or Jewish marriage contract.
A traditional ketubah is a simple legal document in Hebrew or Aramaic, a related ancient language. Two witnesses sign the agreement, which states that the groom has acquired the bride. However, the ketubah is also sometimes framed as a tool to protect women. The document stipulates the husband鈥檚 responsibility to provide for his wife and confirms what he should pay her in case of divorce. 鈥攖he plural of ketubah鈥攄id not discuss love, God or intentions for the marriage.
Contemporary ketubot in more liberal branches of Judaism, whether between opposite- or same-sex couples, are usually that reflect the home and the marriage that the couple want to create. Sometimes the couple ; others keep the Aramaic and pair it with a text in the language they speak every day, describing their intentions for their marriage.
Rather than being simple, printed documents, contemporary ketubot are often beautiful pieces of art, made to hang in a place of prominence in the newlyweds鈥 home. Sometimes the art makes references to traditional Jewish symbols, for fertility and love. Other times, their decorations with images and symbols that are meaningful to them.
Contemporary couples will often also use their ketubah to address an inherent tension in Jewish marriage. Jewish law gives men much more freedom to divorce than it gives women. Because women cannot generally initiate divorce, ,鈥 which literally means 鈥渃hained鈥: women whose husbands have refused to grant them a religious divorce. Even if the couple have been divorced in secular court, an 鈥渁gunah鈥 cannot, according to Jewish law, remarry in a religious ceremony.
Contemporary ketubot will sometimes make a note that, while the couple hope to remain married until death, if the marriage deteriorates, the husband agrees to grant a divorce if certain conditions are met. This prevents women from being held hostage in unhappy marriages.
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Key changes in Jewish weddings represent how the wedding ceremony itself has become more egalitarian in response to both feminism and marriage equality, notes 黑料社区网 scholar Samira Mehta.
Other couples eschew the ketubah altogether in favor of a new type of document called a 鈥,鈥 or covenant of lovers. These documents are egalitarian agreements between couples. The was developed by , a feminist rabbi with a deep knowledge of Jewish law, and is grounded in ancient Jewish laws for business partnerships between equals. That said, many Jews, including some feminists, do not see the brit ahuvim as equal in status to a ketubah.
Building together
Beyond the ketubah, there are any number of other changes that couples make to symbolize their hopes for an egalitarian marriage.
Jewish ceremonies often take place under a canopy called the chuppah, which symbolizes . In a traditional Jewish wedding, the bride circles the groom three or seven times before entering the chuppah. This represents both her protection of their home and that the groom is now .
Many couples today omit this custom, because they feel it makes the bride subservient to the groom. Others keep the circling but reinterpret it: In circling the groom, the bride actively creates their home, an act of empowerment. Other egalitarian couples, regardless of their genders, : Each spouse circles three times, and then the pair circle once together.
In traditional Jewish weddings, like in traditional Christian weddings, the groom gives his bride a ring to symbolize his commitment to her鈥and perhaps to mark her as a married woman. Many contemporary : both partners offering a gift to mark their marriage and presenting a symbol of their union to the world. While some see this shift as an adaptation to American culture, realistically, the dual-ring ceremony is in both American Christian and American Jewish marriage ceremonies.
Finally, Jewish weddings traditionally end when the groom stomps on and breaks a glass, and the entire crowd yells 鈥淢azel tov鈥 to congratulate them. People debate . Some say that it reminds us that life contains both joy and sorrow, or that it is a reminder of a foundational crisis in Jewish history: the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem in 70 C.E. Others say that it is a reminder that life is fragile, or that marriage, unlike the glass, is an unbreakable covenant.
Regardless of what it means, some contemporary couples both step on glasses, or have one partner place their foot on top of the other鈥檚 so that the newlyweds can break the glass together. The couple symbolize their commitment to equality 鈥 and both get to do a fun wedding custom.
There are many other innovations in contemporary Jewish weddings that have much less to do with feminism and egalitarianism, such as personalized wedding canopies or wedding programs. But these key changes represent how the wedding ceremony itself has become more egalitarian in response to both feminism and marriage equality.
Samira Mehta is director of the Program in Jewish Studies and an associate professor of听women and gender studies听at the听.
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