T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
786.1 | one data point | ULTRA::ZURKO | The quality of mercy is not strained | Tue Sep 12 1989 09:50 | 11 |
| Well, it's sure tough to answer this one.
Every wedding I can recall, with the exception of one, a man gave the bride
away (a few wedding's I've been to are fuzzy...).
On why; I can only speak for myself. I didn't think much about it (it's so
dopey; if he wouldn't give me, I'd go without him!). I did try to get my mother
to walk down the aisle and 'give me away' too. She refused. I couldn't get a
cogent reason from her on why. Collusion, and fear of disapproval, come to
mind.
Mez
|
786.2 | | VLNVAX::OSTIGUY | | Tue Sep 12 1989 10:17 | 14 |
| From what I understood at my wedding, the minister (female) had to
include the 'giving away' of the bride. There are certain things that
have to be done at a wedding and every part has a name. Like the
"Interigation (sp?)" which is 'do you take this women to blah blah
blah" and so on.
I didn't want to 'be given away' since I was older and already living
with my husband and hadn't been anyone's 'dependent' for almost 10
years. So what we did was, my husband and I together walked down the
alise. When the question, 'who gives this women blah blah blah' my
family all said 'we do'. Both males and females in my family.
Anna
|
786.3 | How we did it | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Sep 12 1989 10:22 | 13 |
| Since I'm Lutheran and Neil's Jewish, we took the things we liked
best from each wedding ceremony and put them together. Since I
had been living on my own for several years, and Neil and I were
paying for the wedding, which was being held where we were living,
it seemed rather pointless for my father to hand me over to my new
head of household. Not to mention that I didn't like the
symbolism.
So we had both our parents give both of us away. I'm told that's
the traditional Jewish wedding procession, and it represents the
union of the two families, or at least their approval.
--bonnie
|
786.4 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Sep 12 1989 10:26 | 37 |
| Tradition, of course. (Shades of Fiddler on the Roof) ...and symbolism.
The father, whose name the daughter bears, is giving up his offspring to
be wed to another. While the importance of last names has changed the way
some people call themselves after marriage, the symbolism of giving away
the bride is clear.
In the many weddings I have attended, swept up after, and been in, the
Bride has one rule: do it the way you want it - it is your day.
Of course, that may be a throw back to tradition, as well. May as well
have the bride awiting the Groom to promenade down the aisle.
If there are traditions that cause friction in *your* wedding, do without
them (where something stolen and something green). However, if a friend
or relative wants to hold to certain traditions (being given away), allow
them the latitude to incorporate "stone age" traditions in their marriage.
-------
Some interesting wedding occurences:
In churches where there are three aisles, ushers seat the guests from the two
side aisles. This gives the first-comers seats close to the middle aisle to
see the Bride *and* keeps the center aisle untouched until the Bridal party
walks on it. (Purity)
I have seen a few weddings now where the couple and the wedding party face
the congregation and the minister has his back to the congregation.
P.S. If I am around for my daughters' weddings, I want very much to be
the one to bring her to her new husband. For a father (like me, I
suppose), giving my daughter away will be very difficult and this
ritual helps somehow pyschologically; sort of like "being there"
and "being a part of it."
I suppose the brother symbolizes the family (as does the father)
from which the bride comes. Enough chat...
|
786.5 | yuck | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Sep 12 1989 11:35 | 10 |
| I think the symbolism in "giving away the bride" is gut churning.
The idea that all women must "belong" to a man - first to daddy
and then he gives her to her husband - sickens me. If my daughter
gets married, I certainly hope she and my ex-husband don't act out
this tradition. Of course, I don't believe in organized religion
anyway, so I also would hope she doesn't get married in a church
anyway.
Lorna
|
786.6 | this is what I did | BARTLE::LESSARD | | Tue Sep 12 1989 11:39 | 15 |
|
Most weddings I have attended (and my own two years ago!)
have had both parents escort the bride to the altar. I
liked the security of one on each side, and this was
a meaningful moment for them as well! The symbolism
for my husband and myself was that two families were
now joined together.... I never thought of it in the
traditional sense of the daughter is being given away! I
thought this was great idea, even though at 28 I may have
qualified as an older bride! I would go for a brother
escorting his sister!
(these were Catholic weddings if that makes a difference)
|
786.7 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Dictated, but not read. | Tue Sep 12 1989 11:47 | 19 |
| In this country, I believe that "giving away the bride" is mostly just
a carryover, and as much a part of the wedding as is tossing of rice,
even tho that has lost its symbolism of conferring fertility upon the
couple.
Recent weddings that I've attended have had both parents walking the
bride down the aisle and "giving away" the bride. I like that. For my
wedding, which will be very informal, my former stepchildren have asked
if they can "give me away". I think they're just glad to see me
happily settling in and want to be part of that.
In countries where marriages are arranged, and there is a dowry or
bride prize, "giving away the bride" has much more significance. It is
a part of the contract, as in legal "consideration" or compensation.
Many abuses of the dowry and the bride prize system have been
documented here and elsewhere, and in light of the Valuing Differences
policy of Digital, probably should not be rehashed.
Marge
|
786.8 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Sep 12 1989 12:49 | 9 |
| Re .3
For the record, this wedding that's coming up is a Jewish wedding.
But as far as I know, only the bride is being given away, and by
her brother.
(Incidentally, anyone know what the smashing of the glass symbolizes?)
Dorian
|
786.9 | Give Yourself Away | GIAMEM::MANDERFIELD | | Tue Sep 12 1989 13:42 | 19 |
|
I was just married in June, in a catholic church. I was having major
problems with my family and they refused to pay for the wedding.
I also had been out of the house for six years and had been self
supportive during that time. And, six months before the wedding
I had moved in with my fiance (we have been together for seven years).
SO, I decided I would walk myself down the aisle. I walked down
alone and then when I got to the halfway point (it was a looong
aisle) my husband-to-be walked up from the other end to meet me
and then we walked together the rest of the way.
It was really nice and it shocked everyone because noone knew but
my husband and I.
Whenever we tell someone about it Kelly (my husband) always sais
that it symbolized the fact "his wife will never have to walk
alone again."
Brenda
|
786.10 | tradition, stomp | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Sep 12 1989 15:11 | 23 |
| re: .8
Neither of us is very religious, so I wouldn't want to claim that
we got either the Jewish or the Lutheran ceremony right. The
pastor who married us checked with a rabbi he was friends with
about whether what we wanted was appropriate -- maybe there's more
than one tradition.
We included the smashing of the glass, which supposedly symbolizes
the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem. What that has to do
with weddings, I'm not sure. There's an associated tradition that
whoever breaks the glass first will control the marriage. My
father-in-law tells us that when he and mother-in-law got married,
he needed a glass for the ceremony and asked his sister if she had
a glass he could borrow. He didn't say what he wanted it for, so
she, being an older sister concerned that her brother was clumsy,
gave him a heavy water tumbler that he wouldn't be likely to
break. He didn't notice, wrapped it up in the cloth, and
proceeded to stomp away, unable to break the stupid glass. My
mother-in-law, being a well-brought-up lady, didn't try to beat
him to it . . .
--bonnie
|
786.11 | Just a tradition | TOOK::TWARREN | Stand in the place where you work... | Tue Sep 12 1989 15:25 | 13 |
| To my knowledge, giving the bride away is just another tradition
that goes along with the whole ceremony. When one of my close
friends from college got married, both parents walked her down
the isle. My sister is getting married next May and both of
my parents are walking her down the isle, and my roommate- who
is getting married next July is having her mother walk her down
the isle (her father is not participating in the wedding).
Like every tradition, things can (and often should) be tinkered with.
Terri
|
786.12 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Tue Sep 12 1989 17:37 | 3 |
| Re .10
Thanks - that's a great story!
|
786.13 | oh those chains that bind | AZTECH::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Sep 12 1989 23:43 | 10 |
|
Lorna, your comments reminded me of the words to an old folksong
called "The Wagoner's Lad"
"Hard is the fortune of all womankind
she's always controlled, she's always confined.
Controlled by her parents until she's a wife,
a slave to her husband the rest of her life"
liesl
|
786.14 | | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Letting Go: The Ultimate Adventure | Tue Sep 12 1989 23:58 | 9 |
| I attended a wedding several years ago in which both parents walked the
bride down the aisle. When asked by the minister, "Who gives this
bride to be wed?" Both parents stood and together proudly announced,
"With our love, our daughter freely gives herself to be wed."
Neat.
Carol
|
786.15 | My mom was too traditional to walk me down the aisle | ACESMK::POIRIER | | Wed Sep 13 1989 09:58 | 11 |
| My Father was the only one that walked me down the aisle. I asked my
mom to walk with us but she refused - she's so traditional sometime.
Instead of having the "Who gives thes woman......" the minister asked
both my parents "Do you commend Suzanne to David's care?" and then he
asked Dave's parents "Do you commend David to Suzanne's care?"
A little different - we liked it.
Suzanne
P.S. Commend means to "praise or represent as worthy or qualified;
recommend"
|
786.16 | More on the breaking of the glass | TLE::GOODMAN | I don't have a personal name yet... | Wed Sep 13 1989 10:23 | 11 |
| >We included the smashing of the glass, which supposedly symbolizes the
>destruction of the temple in Jerusalem. What that has to do with
>weddings, I'm not sure.
This is true it does symbolizes the destruction of the temple. A wine
glass is traditionally used which represents the sweetness of life. It
reminds us that even in the happiest of times we must remember that
there is sadness in this world. It is also the symbolic end of the
wedding ceremony.
Robin
|
786.17 | | SPGBAS::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Sep 13 1989 11:55 | 5 |
| Like in .3, my twin sister had both my parents escort her down the
aisle.
--Lynn
|
786.18 | The way we did it -- | BARTLE::GODIN | This is the only world we have | Wed Sep 13 1989 12:55 | 13 |
| My first wedding followed the tradition of father escorting me down
the aisle and "giving me away." I didn't like the symbolism then,
but was too nice to rock the boat. The marriage didn't last.
For my second wedding, Ron and I were preceeded down the aisle by
(1) best man escorting matron of honor, (2) my two children (ages
14 and 16 at the time) -- I believe we finally talked David into
lending Laura his arm, but I'm not sure, then (3) Ron and me. When
the minister asked, "Who gives this woman...," my children said,
"We do." We all liked the symbolism of the children, who had been
with me forever, including Ron in our new family circle.
Karen
|
786.19 | 10 days to go! | AKOV13::JPARSONS | | Wed Sep 13 1989 13:13 | 12 |
| Well, dad is escorting me down the isle in 10 days! It's a very short
isle at that - small church. I asked my mother if she'd like to escort
me also, but she decided it was a moment for daddy and me. When the
minister asks "who gives this woman..." Daddy will reply "her mother
and I do". We look at it as a symbol of the joining of the two
families. I've never felt to be either my father's or my fiance's
posession or property. I just look at it as a very sentimental moment
for daddy and I. I'm not sure if he'll be holding me up, or I'll be
holding him up! At any rate, I will cherish the moment for always.
Judy
|
786.20 | Several Ways to Go | CISM::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Wed Sep 13 1989 13:43 | 24 |
| I was 28 when I married two years ago [does that qualify me as an
"older" bride???]. I asked my father to walk me down the aisle,
and that he did. We never had that question asked about who gives
this woman. Catholic ceremony; it wasn't there. I'm glad. But
I had been out of the house for several years. But Dad & Mom still
helped with the costs of the wedding. I was thrilled to have my
dad walk me down the aisle. I was thrilled to have the dance with
him to Daddy's Little Girl... because I was always was, and always
will be.
My younger sister married a little over a year ago. She had both
parents walk her down the aisle. That was her preference and kind
of nice, too.
I attended a wedding several years ago where the bride had a natural
father [who she loved] and a step-father, who she had lived most
of her life with and loved, also. She wanted to offend neither.
So she and her fiance walked down the aisle together [a Catholic
ceremony]. That was real nice, too. Kind of like, "We're starting
on this thing together..."
But for heavens sake, don't be caught up in what people think, want,
what does this mean, etc. Do what YOU WANT. And be happy. Enjoy
your day, and may you have a wonderful marriage.
|
786.21 | still other ways...! | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Wed Sep 13 1989 17:23 | 23 |
| I second .20 -- have a wonderful wedding and do what makes YOU happy!
Those of my friends who have chosen to be escorted down the aisle by
their fathers did it as a final close moment with Dad; a symbolic,
special last walk. A closing between old and new.
Others, who see life more politically, find it outdated and even
offensive to think of their fathers "giving them away."
About family marriages:
When I was 13, my best friend's mom got married to George, the guy
she'd been living with for a year or so. She was five months pregnant
and starting to show. It was truly their kind of wedding. The place
was a log cabin; the "official" was a friend; the "gowns" were sack
dresses; the preamble was games of tug-of-war, fresh strawberries, and
folk music. Nobody gave anybody away.
This was in the early 70's so it may not surprise you know that all
five of them stood up front in the cabin and got married together:
my friend, her sister, their mom, George, and little "glerp."
Afterward we all had food and a square dance and shaving cream fights
in the dark. It was a great wedding. !
|
786.22 | Why not give away the groom? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Sep 14 1989 14:10 | 12 |
| Re .4
"the symbolism of giving the bride away is clear"
I guess I'm just dense, but to me the symbolism of giving the bride
away isn't all that clear. As you say, the father of the bride is
giving up his offspring to be wed to another; but isn't the groom's father
(and, for that matter, his mother) doing exactly the same thing?
Why wouldn't it make just as much sense for the groom to be given
away as for the bride? I know it's "tradition," but that answer
seems to beg the question...it doesn't really explain *why* the
tradition is what it is.
|
786.23 | historical significance [not my idea] | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Thu Sep 14 1989 14:24 | 16 |
| re.22 [just in case]
'giving away the bride' does not symbolise the giving up of an
offspring. It symbolises the transfer of chattel. The father
transfers his title to 'this woman,' so to speak, to the husband.
Traditionally, the groom is not 'given' because the man-child passed a
point past which he was no longer considered a child, but rather a man
and no longer his father's chattel. Girl-children may have become
women, but did not cease to be chattel and what disposition was made of
them was in their father's hands.
Widowhood often brought an end to chatteldom, but certainly not
wifedom.
Ann
|
786.24 | more on breaking glass | VIA::BAZEMORE | Barbara b. | Thu Sep 14 1989 21:18 | 16 |
| At one wedding I went to the couple explained that one of the
traditions of the broken goblet is that the marriage will last
until someone puts all of the pieces together again. The groom's
pesky brother gathered up the glass in the napkin and threatened
to take it home and glue it together.
On the other tradition: there was no aisle at our wedding (outside
by the river) and no one was "given away". Though all the parents were
there and they seemed happy enough.
I loved the wedding where a friend was getting married for the second
time and her two kids, age about 6 and 8, gave her away. Seems like
they should have a lot more say in the matter since they'll be living
with the couple.
Bb
|
786.25 | | LDYBUG::PINCK | Amy Pinck, Long Live the Duck | Thu Sep 14 1989 23:54 | 17 |
|
I am just planning my processional. I like what I am
planning... what do you think?
First of all, there will not be any 'who is giving the
woman...' it is just not traditional in my family so I
did not have to deal with it.
First my fiance's parents will walk him down the isle (I
got their OK). Then everyone else in the party will
be escorted (Including Grands). Then both of my parents
will walk me half way down the isle where my fiance will
meet us. Then I will walk the rest of the way with
my fiance and my parents will follow behind.
Yes, there is a little bit of handing over the
'chatle' but there is also joining of two families.
|
786.26 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | The man from Fung Lum | Fri Sep 15 1989 00:43 | 4 |
|
re chattel:
Sometimes theres even a bill of sale (ketuba)...
|
786.27 | | LDYBUG::PINCK | Amy Pinck, Long Live the Duck | Fri Sep 15 1989 10:45 | 5 |
|
I thought the ketuba basically gives the woman rights
if the man leaves her?
|
786.28 | It Also Spells Out His Responsibilities As A Husband | FDCV01::ROSS | | Fri Sep 15 1989 12:19 | 8 |
| Re: .27
> I thought the ketuba basically gives the woman rights
> if the man leaves her?
And when *that* fails, Amy, there's always her lawyer. :-)
Alan
|
786.29 | Re. Glass Breaking | CURIE::TZELLAS | Set Def [Atlantic.City] | Fri Sep 15 1989 16:56 | 20 |
|
A funny story about the glass breaking at a Jewish wedding.
I was maid of honor at a wedding for my girlfriend (who is jewish)
and her fiance (who is Chatholic). They were married at the hall
in which they held the reception. They had a Rabbi and a Priest
marry them. The rabbi (i believe he was a cousin of the bride)
would explain some of the jewish traditions to everyone as
the ceremony continued. When it came to the glass breaking part
the rabbi looked at the groom and said very seriously
"well Kevin, this will be the last time you will be able
to put your foot down"
Everyone broke up laughing it was funny.
About giving away the bride. My sister is getting married
next Spring, and since my father died last year, she asked
her Godfather (who is an Greek Othodox priest) to give her
away. He will also help out our priest in the Alter.
Kathi
|
786.30 | Three Generations | TUNER::KINSEY | It's the Journey, Not the Destination | Fri Sep 15 1989 17:35 | 9 |
| The first time I married I walked down the aisle and about half-way
my father met me and "gave me away" to my husband.
Just recently re-married, I had my father to my right (was told
I should be "under his heart"), and my 14 year old son to my left.
I felt 3 generations walking down the aisle together was nice and
felt right.
Helaine
|
786.32 | Perhaps It's Not The Ritual | FDCV01::ROSS | | Tue Sep 19 1989 10:25 | 12 |
| Re: .31
> < Another Illusion Shattered >
Whose illusion?
I've just put in a Note in BAGELS, asking about the glass-breaking,
and what it symbolizes/represents.
When I get some replies, I'll post the reasons here.
Alan
|
786.33 | Jewish weddings | HPSCAD::TWEXLER | | Tue Sep 19 1989 12:36 | 29 |
| In Jewish weddings, the tradition is for the groom's parents to walk him down
the aisle and the bride's parents to walk her down the aisle. It has nothing
to do with 'giving away.' As my mom is fond of saying these days, when a child
is born into a Jewish family, the parents and rabbi bless the child (at his
bris, her naming) praying that the parents raise the child 'to torah
{study/first five books of Bible}, to good deeds and to the huppah {wedding
canopy}.' So, in a sense, when a child gets married, the parents have
fulfilled their final responsibilities to the child and the walk down the
asile is a symbol of that, of the parents standing by their children as they
enter the next stage of life.
I feel a little uncomfortable with this, because I know there are people out
there who do not WANT to make a lifelong committment to a significant
other--and this leaves them out ... but I must say I have trouble
understanding such people...
Sorry for the sidetracking, but someone asked about the ketubah... a ketubah
is a Jewish marriage certificate. If you were Jewish a couple thousand years
ago or you are Orthodox today, a couple getting married gets a ketubah,
written in Aramaic, the Jewish business langauge of a couple thousand years
ago. It basically promises that the groom will take care of the bride and
lays out how the bride will be provided for. If you are Reconstructionist,
Conservative, Egalitarian, or Reform your ketubah might be in Hebrew and/or
some other langauge, might include a provision where the bride can ask for a
divorce, might include promises of how the two of you promise to be caring
and work to build a Jewish home... in short, whatever the couple wants to
put into it.
Tamar
|
786.34 | RE: Jewish custom of breaking glass | CADSE::FOX | im lo achshav, ei matai? | Wed Sep 20 1989 17:34 | 60 |
| re: "what does stomping on the glass mean at a Jewish wedding?"
Note: I am a Jew, but I am not a rabbi, although I have done some
studying of Jewish Law, particularly wrt weddings, since my brother
turned to me as the "rabbi in the family" for information. I'd
be happy to correspond with people wanting to know about other
Jewish wedding rituals, but there's a wealth of information in
the BAGELS notesfile.
I was always taught that the breaking of the glass symbolized the
destruction of the Temple. Also, most of our ceremonies and rituals
include the theme of "remember sorrow in the midst of joy" (for example,
even during the part of the Passover Seder when we are supposed to be
rejoicing over our liberation, we remember the victims and martyrs of
pogroms and other anti-Jewish acts). It would not be inconsistent
for this "sorrow" reminder to be part of the wedding ritual.
I also seem to remember that the rendering of a utensil to be unusable has
some symbolism in Talmudic thought, I *think* with regard to permanance
as a "steady state condition", but I can't at the moment remember
enough about it to say whether that applies to this case.
In modern usage, the stomping of the glass symbolizes the end of the
formal ceremony, and is the signal to shout "Mazel Tov!", and
begin the reception festivities. :-)
SET MODE=anthropological_ digression:
It seems that some members of the anthropological community spend
their days thinking up reasons for why some ancient customs exist.
Some of these reasons subsequently turn out to be specious (I could
rant and rave about the "Jews are prohibited from eating pork because
of trichinosis in ancient times" rationale, but I won't --
do I hear sighs of relief? :-).
So there has also been an "anthropological" theory put forward that the
breaking of the glass represents the rupturing of the hymen.
While I am not an anthropologist, this would seem to me to be
"gilding the gold, and painting the lily", because,
in Orthodox (and some, if not all, Conservative) wedding ceremonies,
once the final blessings have been said, the groom and bride retire to
a private room, where they are supposed to immediately consummate the
marriage.
Two kosher witnesses (there are laws determining the "kosherness") are posted
outside the (closed!) door of the room; they are not there to witness
the "consummation", but rather to see to it that no one enters and
interrupts this delicate activity (so the bride or groom can't later
claim that the marriage was unconsummated, due to the interruption).
Now, of course, there's no way that most modern brides and grooms could disrobe
enough to consummate in the 10 minutes granted them :-)
To my mind, this part of the ceremony, which is *clearly an ancient
part of the wedding ceremony and NOT a modern addition*, obviates the need
for a symbolic gesture meaning the same thing.
Bobbi_who_is_FINALLY_recovered_from_her_brother's_wedding (long
dress, heels, and hose, UGH :-)
|
786.35 | where there's a will | AZTECH::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Sep 20 1989 20:01 | 5 |
| Wasn't it also an "old tradition" to have the wedding consummated
immediately and the bloody sheet brought out as proof of the bride's
virginity? I've also heard that a small chicken bladder full of
blood was able to procure the same results in an emergency if a
bride was afraid the aformentioned blood might not appear. liesl
|
786.36 | escorted without given away | SANDS::RUSSELL | | Wed Sep 20 1989 20:15 | 28 |
| I was married eight years ago. Both my father and the groom's father
were dead. It was an Episcopal ceremony. We worked out the ceremony
we wanted with our priest. My brother escorted me down the aisle --
which was a good thing as I was very nervous and his steadying arm was
necessary.
When we got to the alter, bro kissed me on the cheek. He did NOT put
my hand into my husband's hand or any such "handing over" activity.
The ceremony entirely skipped over any giving away part. Our Mothers
both particiapted by reading our chosen bible quotations: my Mom read
the old testament (Psalm 150) his Mom read from the new, two quotes
actually, the parable about gifts followed by the quote about how the
greatest gift is love.
I've been to many weddings before and since that ran the gamut of style
from naked in a stream (really!! so was the minister!!) to formal
wedding with all the traditions intact.
Two asides: I'm divorced now and it feels nice to be able to talk about
my wedding. I feel sorta out of it when other people have a discussion
about weddings. I feel like I cannot particiapte as mine was not
"successful." Also, the marriage ceremony was so planned
out and so meaningful; the divorce does not seem real in comparison.
All the lawyer and court stuff does not seem a fitting offset to the
beginning. Ought to have a divorce ceremony to mark the new phase in
life. Something meaningful and life affirming, something that marks
the end and the beginning with as much dignity as did the wedding.
|
786.37 | ...TOGETHER... | CYPRES::HERRERA_LI | | Wed Sep 20 1989 20:21 | 24 |
| Back to the base note....
My husband and I walked down the aisle together. We decided
"together" to get married, so that was the way we wanted to
start our married life. Our family situations made this an
easy conclusion for us (my father died a few years ago, and
his parents do not live in the U.S.). I would have wanted
to do this even if my father was alive....he knew how
independent I was/am, and I have a big problem thinking of
myself as being "given away". I am the only person who can
"give" myself to anyone, and we chose to give ourselves to
each other for LIFE on our wedding day.
Our ceremony did not include the "who gives who" bit (Catholic
with a wonderful priest). He asked us each individually,
"Do you come here freely to give yourself to (spouse) in
marriage?" I wanted to scream "YOU BET I DO!!!" ;-)
The honeymoon isn't over yet!!!
Linette
|
786.38 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Sep 21 1989 09:18 | 6 |
| Re .35
Why was it so important that the bride be a virgin? Did anyone ever
worry about whether the groom was? Did it have anything to do with
men trying to make sure any offspring were their own and not someone
else's?
|
786.39 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Dictated, but not read. | Thu Sep 21 1989 13:42 | 6 |
| re .35:
This tradition goes on today in some very small towns in very remote
areas of Greece.
Marge
|
786.40 | a little birdie told me | AZTECH::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Thu Sep 21 1989 15:50 | 12 |
| < <<< Note 786.38 by GEMVAX::KOTTLER >>>
<
< Re .35
<
< Why was it so important that the bride be a virgin? Did anyone ever
< worry about whether the groom was? Did it have anything to do with
< men trying to make sure any offspring were their own and not someone
< else's?
<
I'll take this up in the side issues to abortion topic as soon as I locate it.
I heard a very interestng theory about this. liesl
|
786.41 | | NSSG::FEINSMITH | I'm the NRA | Mon Sep 25 1989 09:58 | 6 |
| RE: .38, when my Grandmother sold her house, while cleaning out
closets, we found her original marriage contract (her family was very
"ol;d country") which presented her as "Gussie the virgin" at least 3
times in the document. This was in the earlier part of the 1900's.
Eric
|
786.42 | | NZOV01::MCKENZIE | All the while,The Dragon Slept | Mon Sep 25 1989 16:55 | 7 |
| Re: .0
Ummm....you might be interested to know that at our recent wedding
My Wife was given away (Ie:"to me") by her uncle (her dad was sick and unable
to attend) and I was given away (Ie:"to her") by my Mum!
Phil
|
786.43 | And no maids of honors/best men either.... | SSDEVO::GALLUP | rock me down like a slot machine | Tue Sep 26 1989 19:44 | 11 |
|
I won't be "given away" at my wedding (if anyone was crazy enough to marry me,
that is) because, right now, I'm totally self-sufficient.....my parents
will no longer be "losing me" out of their family....I'm already on my
own....therefore, I'll be only giving myself to my partner.
Besides.....it's MUCH more dramatic being the only one walking down the isle!
:-)
/kath
|
786.44 | More on Jewish wedding law | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Wed Sep 27 1989 15:22 | 45 |
| Since I'm in the midst of planning a Jewish wedding, let me
explain some of the traditions we uuncovered.
All four parents walk down the aisle, first the groom with his
parents, then the bride with her parents. The groom welcomes the
bride under the chuppah (marriage canopy), which symbolizes his
house (so there is some sexism there.)
Nobody gives away either person, and the officiator doesn't ask if
there are any objections to the marriage.
The ketubah is not so much a contract as a record of an oral
contract. It is signed not by the bride and groom, but by two
witnesses, who record that they saw the groom give the bride a
ring (of more than some minimal value) and the bride willingly
accept it. (Normally a contract is valid if it is accepted,
marriage is the only case where the acceptence must be willing.)
The bride accepting the ring makes the marriage valid, so neither
person is asked "Do you take ...?" The ketubah is one of two
things that belong to the bride (the ring is the other). The groom
agrees to provide a considerable sum of money (and accepts the
bride's dowry for a fixed sum that is more than the real value).
He doesn't actually have the money, but he agrees to mortgage the
shirt off his back to provide it in case of divorce. A couple
cannot legally live together without a ketubah, so it must be
replaced immediately if it is lost.
The smashing of a glass is an old tradition, with many symbolic
meanings: The destruction of the temple, remembering sadness even
in happy times, a reminder that somethings are irrevocable (the
glass can't be repaired.) It's origin may have been when a rabbi
broke an expensive goblet at a wedding which was too riotous, and
not sufficently mindful of celebrating the blessing of marriage.
The yichud (private time after breaking the glass) is purely
symbolic of consumation, and may always have been so. Sex (in
marriage) is a blessing, and there are requirements that it be
gentle, with foreplay and not be rushed. Since 10 minutes is
clearly not long enough for unhurried sex, the yichud is mainly
symbolic. There should be food in the room so the couple can eat
their first meal together in peace. (It may be the only food they
get that day, as they're supposed to fast before the wedding, and
may be too rushed to eat at the reception.)
--David
|
786.45 | CANDLES TO SYMBOLIZE UNITY | OFFPLS::DESHARNAIS | | Mon Oct 16 1989 14:09 | 25 |
| I think the "giving away" part comes from way back when a girl got
marry she had accumulated a dowery (linens, china etc) and the father
gave his daughter away with that. Like many "traditions" it is just
something started hundreds of years ago and no one ever questioned
the tradition. Now a days, people question the reason for everything.
My daughter got married June 1988. Both families Catholic. She wanted
the traditional wedding march to enter on her father's arm. What
preceded was the priest coming out and announcing that Lisa and Greg
have come today to enter marriage and leave their families (She was on
her own for several years, he lived at home) to start a new life
together. Then the priest asked both sets of parents to come forward
and his parents and my husband and I walked down the aisle up to the
alter and each couple lit two white candles as symbols of our families.
then his parents and I sat in the front pews and my husband walked back
down the aisle and then proceeded the bring my daughter down to alter
where her fiance met her my husband kissed her and gave her hand to
her fiance and the ceremoney began. We all thought it was beautiful!
Once they were married they walked over to the two candles and with
one wick between them lit the large white candle in the center (of the
two lit by the parents) and blew out the two smaller candles to
symbolize their new life together. It was very touching.
Barbara
|
786.46 | We had the candles too! | WORDS::SIMPSON | Igloo | Tue Oct 17 1989 16:17 | 22 |
| We did a similar thing.
The mothers of the bride and groom tend to play a smaller part than
anyone else at the actual ceremony. (everyone knows how much they
did in preparation!) So, my brother-in-law walked my mother-in-law
down the aisle and she remained standing. My brother then did the
same with my mother. Our mothers then lit the candles that we would
later light one candle from. We received many comments as to the
warmth that our ceremony created.
At rehersal when my dad was asked 'who gives this woman to be married
to this man?' he replied in a jokingly "I'm not giving her, he's
taking her away!" The day of the wedding, however, he said
"Her mother and I"
When my dad walked me down the aisle lifted my veil and gave me a kiss
then put my veil back down for the remainder of the ceremony. My
husband lifted it at the end for our first kiss as husband and wife.
He had always wanted to do this, and me being such a fool for romance
I didn't mind one bit! :-)
-Michelle-
|
786.47 | | SAC::PHILPOTT_I | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Nov 16 1989 09:12 | 27 |
| When I got to this one in my catching up I decided to do a bit of research. I
have checked with a lawyer (here in Britain) and with a Church of England vicar.
The consensus goes like this:
1) A woman under the age of legal consent and majority must have her guardians
permission to marry. The Guardian or his (note this is literal - the woman must
have the permission of a male guardian) representative answers the question to
signify consent (just as the priest asks the congregation if anyone knows of a
legal impediment to the marriage.)
2) A woman who is the heir of an entailled fortune must have the permission of
her executor. Traditionally this is her father - and this is the aspect that has
historical chattel significance.
3) Historically a woman was delivered to her groom as part of an arranged
package and she was escorted to the church by an armed escort to ensure she
wasn't abducted by rival claimants. Since women didn't usually carry arms the
escort was usually a man - typically the person who gave her in marriage.
Incidentally "gave" in this case is one of the verbs that has changed meaning
significantly since the middle ages and originally didn't imply "gives away"
(as in property donated without fee being payed), but rather signified the
granting of permission. Thus in the CofE service no one needs to give the Bride
in marriage if she is an adult and in personal possesion of her property.
/. Ian .\
|
786.48 | | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Thu Nov 16 1989 11:31 | 13 |
| re .47
I don't see a difference in the usage of "give" in this case.
To require your male-only guardian or executors permission to marry
implies that this person has the right to give a woman's future
and hopes, if not her body. What happens if she truly loves an
unacceptable suitor and her benefactor denies her the permission
to marry? Are not her dreams given away? And what are we without
our dreams and hopes?
-maureen
|
786.49 | | SAC::PHILPOTT_I | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Fri Nov 17 1989 04:35 | 44 |
|
Marriage as a contractual system existed long before the marriage
ceremony became a church service. Until then (1200?) marriages might be
blessed in the church porch, but the actual marriage was a purely civil
affair.
The idea of giving (as in property) didn't come into it: potential
brides were effectively *sold* for bride-price and future inter-family
dynastic benefit.
However when it comes to canon law there was a division: a woman who
had reached adult-hood could give herself (ie consent to the ceremony
of her own free will) in marriage [she had in fact transitioned from
being a maid to being a mistress - the mistress of her own destiny] -
only minors (and heiresses) needed permission, and indeed that (escept
for heiresses) is still the case today. If the guardian refuses
pemission then the couple can appeal to a law court and have a judge
grant permission - in which case an officer of the court will appear
at the ceremony and signify that consent exists.
The service in effect existed to prevent a terrible violation of
liberty that had occurred in earlier days of brigandage - that of
kidnapping a young woman and then forcing her through a marriage
ceremony. Now the priest would first ascertain (from the congregation)
that the marriage would be valid within canon law (not closely related
or previously betrothed or currently married), that the woman was not
being coerced - the latter both by asking her guradian if she might be
too young to make a valid choice herself, and also by asking her
personally if she consented. Yes in former times the additional
restraint existed for heiresses, but this has long passed from British
law - today only under-18s require a male guardian to "give them in
marriage". The presence of the guardian is not a sign of diminishment
of the bride, it is a symbol of the guarantees that the marriage is
indeed a matter of free and personal choice. It does *not* imply that
the guardian has the right to give away her future and hopes for the
simple reason that she also must give consent at the ceremony. If the
*only* permission given were that of the guardian, then I would have to
agree with you.
I still see a difference between giving away property and granting
permission and bestowing parental blessings on the union.
/. Ian .\
|
786.50 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Wed Nov 22 1989 14:24 | 13 |
| <** Moderator Response **>
I would like to thank Dorian Kottler for the kindness and generosity of
spirit she displayed in deleting her .31 in this string.
An objection was made to her note by an individual who then refused to
even respond to my request for further information, instead taking his
complaint to Corporate Personnel. Although everyone who reviewed the
note found it innocuous, Dorian volunteered to delete it rather than
have it serve as the focus for continued acrimony.
in Sisterhood,
=maggie
|