Sephardic Wedding Ceremony
8 many sephardim do not practice yihud seclusion of the bride and groom after the ceremony.
Sephardic wedding ceremony. For this you should consult with a local sephardic rabbi. 7 the text of the wedding berachot is slightly different using a sephardic siddur would solve that problem. Sepharadim have never practiced minhagim 66 until the wedding of the young couple i mentioned above that invoke mourning penitence or even contrition.
In many sephardic communities it is also customary to call the hatan to the tora the day of the wedding when the wedding is celebrated monday or thursday. A wedding day is considered a yom tov a festive event and the sephardic bride and groom do not fast. Nowhere is the richness of the sephardic customs more apparent and more widely embraced than in the traditional sephardic jewish wedding traditions.
There are some wonderful sephardi wedding and engagement customs that trace back to the island of rhodes then turkey now greece where my family lived before coming to america. Traditions beginning with trays of homemade candies prepared especially for an engagement to delicacies for a party for the bano di novia bath of the bride. While wedding ceremonies vary common features of a jewish wedding include a ketubah marriage contract which is signed by two witnesses a chuppah or huppah.
In the sephardic tradition a wedding celebration begins before the chuppan ceremony. Wedding canopy a ring owned by the groom that is given to the bride under the canopy and the breaking of a glass. During the ceremony the sephardic bride does not circle her groom seven times as is the ashkenazic.
Although both ashkenazi and sephardic jewish weddings include the two ceremonies erusim betrothal and nisuim marriage the minhagim vary quite a bit. In sephardic circles any association with death or tragedy at an auspicious moment like a wedding ceremony would be very much frowned upon and regarded as a bad omen. The chuppan is the canopy under which the bridal couple stand.
A jewish wedding is a wedding ceremony that follows jewish laws and traditions. Many sephardic jews especially jews from morocco begin their wedding celebrations several days before the actual ceremony starting with an elaborate party for the friends of the bride. Also sephardic jews have no tradition of bedeken or veiling of the bride.