So my fiancee and I are not religious at all. We like the traditions and values of our religion but do not practice (i dont eat pork or shelfish and go to temple for the holidays) Our families are more observant and my Uncles and cousins are Lubavitch. We decided to ask my cousing to marry us but after discussing we are concerned that they are making to many requirements... The one that pushed us over the limit was not only does my fiancee have to go to a mikvah but he wants her to take mikvah lessons. Has your Rabbi (orthodox one) made any demands on you?
Re: Orthodox Rabbi making requirements to mary us...
This might sound harsh, but, I really don't mean it that way! I don't think it's about the rabbi making demands on you. It's about him not compromising his beliefs. As a rabbi, he should be taking his responsibilities very seriously. He has to marry you the way he feels is most halachically correct, and I, personally, would have a hard time respecting a rabbi who was willing to compromise his beliefs at the request of a bride and groom.
I think it's nice that you're choosing an orthodox rabbi out of respect for your families, however, if you feel strongly against the things being asked of you and can't come to terms with them, you might want to re-consider the rabbi choice.
The Knot lost my info, but, I've been married since 6/19/05!
A lot of my friends who got married by R and C rabbis had to do some type of couples counseling or classes (not sure if that's standard) so its not completely off the wall that the rabbi ask you to do something, its not like he's requiring you to do it forever. What kind of demands is he requiring? Nothing seems crazy out of the ordinary for an O rabbi--and trust me there are O rabbis who add all kinds of extraneous requirements based on their community standards. I know you might think he's being stringent, but it sounds like he's taking who you are into consideration and just making you do the things that as an O rabbi he can't compromise on.
For some perspective, our O rabbi does plenty of weddings for people are not remotely O and his requirements were a) that he review the ketubah to see that they met O requirements, b) that I go to the mikvah--I was already planning to, but I think he mentioned this as well, c) that the people reading the 7 blessings under the chuppah be Jewish (per O standards), I don't remember if he required they be male (ours were so I didn't ask) and d) that if I was wearing a sleeveless gown I wear something to cover my shoulders under the chuppah. Oh and our ketubah signers had to be male and observant (I'm not sure he's made that a requirment for non-O couples though).
There is a way to get around the double ring thing--but we're Sephardi so maybe our signing the ketubah under the chuppah facilitated that. Hatzlacha!
We already gave into one ring ceremony, all witnesses will observant males. We are doing a tisch bedekin first. We are not having a female singer or cd s playing music with female voices. We are going to have a seperate men and womans dancing for the first big dance. Now even we were told that is not enough but we have to have an actual mechitzah put in or the orthodox wont dance. My fiancee is going to the mikvah. Of course it will be glatt kosher affair on a Sunday. So i think we are doing are part. And yes maybe its just a few hours but at some point its enough. There has to be a line drawn where we have to be realistic we are not religious and I dont want to force my fiancee to sit through 4-6 hours of lessons on something to be honest doesnt matter to her.
I was just curious if there are any other surprises we didnt think of or havent gotten to...
1. Stick with the orthodox rabbi and respect that he's going to require things of you that you're probably not going to like.
OR
2. Get an officiant more in keeping with your own values and beliefs.
I'd strongly recommend 2, but if you stick with 1, I think you need to expect and understand that there are probably a lot more things that are going to come up that you won't like but will have to do. It's really not up to the rabbi to compromise his beliefs for your wedding.
For me this:
We are not having a female singer or cd s playing music with female voices. We are going to have a seperate men and womans dancing for the first big dance. Now even we were told that is not enough but we have to have an actual mechitzah put in or the orthodox wont dance.
Implies something other than the rabbi making restrictions for a halachically acceptable wedding. Yes, these things are halacha, but don't affect the validity of the wedding. These go to how comfortable your Orthodox family will be in participating in your wedding. If not for your family circumstances I would say the above could be nixed. However, he's correct with saying your O relatives are not going to dance without the presence of a mechitza. At this point this is less about the rabbi making demands and more him trying to find a balance between you and your family. You need to decide how much you care about their particiapation v, your happiness. Where's your comfort level, find it and stick to it?