(c) Melina Magdalena 2008
"God, our merciful Father, I'm wrapped in a robe of light, clothed in your glory that spreads its wings over my soul. May I be worthy. Amen."
Yentl (1983)
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Press the four edges neatly.
Send the square to a friend with a request, and a deadline for action.
Wait to see what comes back.
Receive it with delight. Add it to the growing pile of calico squares, no longer plain, but decorated extravagantly, simply, naively, elegantly, with flair - each and every one.
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Open up the pressed hems.
Join them to make a large square.
On the ascribed day toss the large square over the framework of a pagoda, with four open sides. Create sacred space for a solemn and joyful ceremony and celebration.
The sky expands over the park. The river extends nearby. The chuppah, made by contributions from many loving hearts and hands, lies between earth and sky, waiting for the moment to begin.
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Acknowledge the gathering.
Honour the day. Remove your shoes. Enter the chuppah. Marvel at its beauty. Take the hand of your beloved, and begin the ritual.
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In the story of the Angels, the one who grants Sarah's wish also refers to her habit of laughing. As evidenced by her jealous treatment of Hagar, Sarah doesn't think much of her barren self, but has the dignity and presence of mind to conform nonetheless to the traditions of hospitality and welcoming the stranger.
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The presence of God in their lives might feel no less ephemeral and transient. Jews often pray that God's wings might shelter them and keep them safe, in just the same way that a tent can shelter those inside its walls.
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Yentl takes her father's tallit (prayer shawl). She wraps herself in the tallit and she feels herself to be in the presence of God.
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Psalms 36:8–11 is traditionally recited:
מה יקר חסדך א להים, ובני אדם בצל כנפיך יחסיון. ירוין מדשן ביתך, ונחל עדניך תשקם. כי עמך מקור חיים, באורך נראה אור. משך חסדך לידעיך, וצדקתך לישרי לב.
Transliteration: Ma yakar hasd'kha Elohim, uvnei adam b'tzel k'nafekha yehesayun. Yirv'yun mi deshen beitekha, v'nahal adanekha tashkem. Ki im'kha m'kor hayim, b'or'kha nir'e or. M'shokh hasd'kha l'yod'ekha, v'tzidkat'kha l'yish'rei lev.
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Some might find the idea offensive. Some might label it perverse. Others might be indignant because the chuppah is reserved for Jewish-Jewish couples, and not for mixed marriages. Another group of people protest - what value remains, when you persist in picking apart rituals and blending them together in such a confused and watered-down form?
Then there are our detractors who say things like - why on earth would you want to ape heteronormative practice? No one is exacting this toll upon your relationship. You do not know your future. Why complicate matters by setting yourselves up to fail? Who benefits, from your attempts to commit publically to your partnership? This is a private matter. This is folly. It serves no purpose. Pure self-indulgence.
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- What significance has a ritual if it has no personal value? Whom does it benefit? Are we so superstitious as to believe that making the right moves and paying lip-service will automatically confer some kind of benefit upon us and our lives?
- Mine is a faith that grows and transforms in the same way that I respond and change according to the experiences that shape me. It makes sense to me then, that my rituals and prayers are not static and rigid. My ritual and prayer response is in keeping with my experiences.
- Yes, we are a same-sex couple, and we come from different faith backgrounds. We seek to bring our lives together by enacting a solemn and joyous ceremony of our own creation. Neither of our faith backgrounds offers us their sacred space in which to do this. It is left to us to create our own sacred space for that purpose.
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Like many people who are unable to conform to societal norms, we have both spent years examining and questioning ourselves and decrying our places in the world. We wandered long and wondered bitterly like Sarah why our fates did not bring us the happiness we craved.
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