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I never thought I’d marry ‘in’, but now my chupah awaits

It’s a relief to have found a partner I love and to be able to marry in the religion that is rooted so deep in my marrow

July 7, 2022 14:08
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Groom smashing the glass in a Jewish wedding, under the huppah
3 min read

So I’m marrying in then. After all that. After all the cross-wearing girlfriends and familial disagreements and tortured internal wrangling; the visions of taking my child to choir practice or camping or whatever it is that gentiles do with their kids on weekends; wondering whether any of my family would turn up to my wedding, or whether I’d impose some form of arduous and unsolicited conversion process on my beloved.

In the end none of it mattered, because later this month, under a chupah in Devon, I’ll be marrying a Jewish girl by the laws of Moses and Israel, grinding a lightbulb into dust with my heel, wearing my tallit if I can remember which drawer of my old bedroom it’s currently sitting in, celebrating a tisch but “going easy on the whisky” as my rabbi has told me to, doing that terrifying thing where the blokes chuck you up and down inside a table cloth, and then not going easy on the whisky because my speech will be finished and the rabbi will have gone home.

It will be a Reform wedding, which is not what I grew up with, but it will also be the full chatunah, as they say in Israel, or chuseneh, as they say closer to home in Golders Green.

Life’s outcomes often seem inevitable when you look back at them and now that the wedding is here, it’s difficult to imagine not enacting all these terribly familiar rituals. Would it even be a wedding without a belting rendition of Od Yishama? Do the nuptials even count if you haven’t sweated through two shirts on the dancefloor and caused a misguided uncle to slip a disc while chair hoisting?