Are Egalitarian Jewish Weddings Possible?
A marriage
tradition steeped in property law really has to stretch to be legally
egalitarian.
By Heidi Gralla
Reprinted with
permission from lilith.org/">Lilith magazine.
For centuries, Jewish brides and grooms have been married
under a huppah [marriage canopy], a
symbol of the Jewish home. Traditionally, the groom placed a ring on the
bride's finger and declared her "consecrated" to him. The bride said
nothing. Nothing.
If the huppah was representative of the home, then what did
the bride's silence say of what was expected of her in marriage?
"For me, the thought that only the groom initiates and
only the bride receives is not reflective of a relationship," said Shira
Milgrom, rabbi of Congregation Kol Ami, a Reform synagogue in White Plains, New
York. "For a wedding to be complete, both bride and groom need to initiate
and receive, and both bride and groom need to speak."
Like many of her colleagues, Milgrom is committed to
performing weddings that maintain Jewish tradition but make the bride an equal
partner in the process. It's not an easy task considering that the basic
premise of the traditional ceremony was that the groom acquired his bride…. The
terms of his acquisition were laid out in the ketubah, the formal wedding contract, signed of course by male witnesses. So while many couples
start out thinking they can create an egalitarian wedding simply by changing a
few words or sharing the breaking of the glass, many rabbis will counsel them
to dig much deeper….
Change Develops Slowly, Even in the Liberal Movements
The Reform movement began addressing these issues as early
as the 1850s, but changes in every stream of Judaism have come very slowly, and
at times paradoxically. For instance, according to Conservative movement
policy, a woman can be ordained as a rabbi and therefore can officiate at
weddings, but she still has to find two men to sign as witnesses on the
ketubah. Even in more liberal denominations, change may have been slowed by the
knowledge that such weddings--and the offspring they produce--will not be
considered legitimate by Orthodox authorities who wield power in Israel and
around the world.
The Legality of a Two-Ring Ceremony
Many feminist-driven innovations have found their way into
the Jewish wedding, but nothing seems to have sparked as much thought and
debate as the ring ceremony. Traditionally, this ceremony was meant to
symbolize the kinyan, or acquisition,
of the bride. The groom would place the ring on the bride's finger and say
"Haray at mekudeshet li b'taba'at zu
k'dat Moshe v'Yisrael"--"By this ring you are consecrated to me
in accordance with the traditions of Moses and Israel." Most non-Orthodox
rabbis now routinely have the bride and groom exchange rings--a ritual that
appears, to family and friends in the audience, to be wholly egalitarian. But
there is little agreement among rabbis on whether the bride may say "Haray atah... ," consecrating the
groom to her in return.
Some say this mutuality is a violation of halakhah, or Jewish law. If the bride
and groom make an even exchange of rings and vows, that cancels out the
acquisition. Rabbi William Lebeau, a vice-chancellor at the Conservative
movement's Jewish Theological Seminary, believes that "there is still
meaning to maintaining the traditional format." He argues that the bride
is not silent in accepting the ring. "Her public receipt of the ring, and
the symbol of their having made a mutual commitment is the proclamation she
makes," he said. While he is not eager to have her say "haray
atah," Lebeau encourages the bride to say some words of Jewish text
accepting her husband's acquisition of her.
Such responsive statements certainly elevate the bride's
role in the ceremony, but many Reform and Reconstructionist rabbis--and a few
Conservative ones--argue that anything other than the "haray atah" is
still a consolation prize for the bride. "The other things don't have
force," said Conservative rabbi Carol Levithan, who helps teach a course
for engaged couples at Manhattan's Jewish Community Center on the Upper West
Side. "This is the language that traditionally made the marriage."
Partnership Law Instead of Acquisition
But it may be time to do away with the acquisition formula
altogether. In her groundbreaking book Engendering
Judaism, Rachel Adler, a professor of religion and social ethics at Hebrew
Union College, points out that the acquisition of one human being by another is
no longer considered morally acceptable. So if it's wrong for the groom to
acquire the bride, this isn't really rectified by the bride's doing the same to
the groom.
Adler proposes an entirely new approach, in which couples
are entering into a brit ahuvim or
"lovers' covenant." The ring ceremony would be replaced by "a
form of kinyan that was used in ancient times exclusively for partnership
acquisition." In this form, partners pool symbols of their
resources--personal items, possibly their wedding rings--in a bag, and then
lift the bag together while reciting a blessing of their choice. (Adler
suggests the [traditional] blessing… upon seeing a rainbow: "Blessed are
you...who remembers your covenant and is faithful to your covenant and keeps
your word.")
But most non-Orthodox rabbis--and most engaged
couples--still seem uneasy with radical innovations. "There's the power of
a few words that come from a long time ago that makes the moment a sacred
moment," said Sandy Eisenberg Sasso, rabbi at Congregation Beth El Zedeck,
a Conservative and Reconstructionist synagogue in Indianapolis. "Sometimes
I think there's an effort to add so much that we lose the power of the symbols:
the Hebrew words or phrases that the emotions immediately respond to, that
evoke that sense of history."
Ketubah--Legal or Personal?
Another component of the wedding that has been adapted to
embrace feminism is the ketubah. Traditional ketubot were simple documents that
laid out the financial terms of the marriage, including a "purchase
price" for the bride's virginity, but said nothing about love. Nowadays,
many couples write their own, including personal facets of their relationship, such
as things they like to do together, or a pledge to share all housework.
"To me, the ketubah--their sacred vows to each other
which will hang on their wall and be looked at every day--should contain in
their own words their most sacred commitments" as well as some specifics
about their relationship, said Fred Dobb, rabbi of Adat Shalom
Reconstructionist Congregation in Rockville, Maryland. "I joke that you
can even include things about toothpaste and toilet seats. I'm three-quarters
facetious on that."
Regardless of what a couple puts in their ketubah, the
process of sitting down together to discuss their relationship and their future
can be a very important step in the marriage process, rabbis say. The finished
document then becomes a blueprint that the couple can refer back to, not so
much for toothpaste etiquette as for a reminder of the shared love and
aspirations that brought them together on their wedding day.
Rabbi Arthur Waskow and his wife, Phyllis Berman, leaders in
the liberal Jewish Renewal movement who officiate jointly at weddings, require
couples to write what he describes as "a real ketubah," addressing
such issues as child care, gender roles, and property ownership.
Like the innovations in the wedding ceremony, egalitarian
changes to the ketubah make some nervous. Even some outspoken liberal rabbis
are concerned that an alternative ketubah won't be considered a legal document
under Jewish law. When a couple uses an unusual ketubah, Levithan, the JCC
rabbi, has them sign a traditional one, too. (Levithan, however, draws the line
at male-only witnesses.)
Changing Customs, Not Laws
For more visible displays of equality, couples most
frequently consider other rituals that are not so entrenched in Jewish law.
Rabbis rarely object to having both bride and groom break a glass, or to having
them circle one another in a variation on the ritual in which, traditionally in
Orthodox weddings, the bride circled the groom seven times to protect him from
evil spirits or the glances of other women. The bedeken, or veiling ceremony, in which the groom peeks under the
bride's veil, is based on the biblical mix-up when Jacob was tricked into
marrying Leah instead of Rachel. To complement the tradition of the groom
putting the veil over the bride's face just before the wedding begins, some
rabbis are having the bride place an article of clothing--like a yarmulke
[skullcap]--on the groom.
None of these modifications really address the feminist
problems that arise from the original rituals: To what extent did the woman's
circling put her in symbolic (or actual) thrall to her husband? Is the very
reference to the veiled Leah an insult to women in an age when we no longer
hide our faces? To what extent does the breaking of the glass signal male
power--or his potency--later that evening?
Still, for those who are not tripped up by historical
echoes, new interpretations may signal a new ethic. Dobb uses the adaptation of
the bedeken to reinterpret the meaning of the custom. "It's about deeply
knowing the other and about seeing through whatever veils circumstances put
upon on the other," he said. He takes the same approach to other aspects
of the wedding: "We need to emphasize the spiritual and emotional side of
the symbol rather than its historical side."
Heidi Gralla is a
freelance writer living in New York.
Reprinted with
permission from LILITH, the
independent Jewish women's magazine. Subscriptions ($21/year) and sample copies
available from Lilithmag@aol.com, http://www.lilith.org/
or toll free from 1-888-2-LILITH.