A chuppah (, ) is a canopy under which a Judaism couple stand during their Jewish wedding. It consists of a cloth or sheet, sometimes a tallit, stretched or supported over four poles, or sometimes manually held up by attendants to the ceremony. A chuppah symbolizes the home that the couple will build together.
In a more general sense, chuppah refers to the method by which nessuin, the second stage of a Jewish wedding, is accomplished. According to some opinions, it is accomplished by the couple standing under the canopy along with the rabbi who weds them; however, there are other views., Chapter 18Aside from Chuppah, it can also be accomplished by consummation; however, this is discouraged (Kaplan, Ibid.).
In Yemenite Jews communities, the practice was not for the groom and his bride to stand under a canopy ( chuppah) hung on four poles, as is widely practised today in Jewish weddings, but rather to be secluded in a bridal chamber that was, in effect, a highly decorated room in the house of the groom, known as the chuppah; Yehuda Levi Nahum, Mitzefunot Yehudei Teman, Tel-Aviv 1962, p. 149 (Hebrew). The practice is reminiscent of Tosefta ( Sotah 15:9), "What are they 'the bridal chambers'? They are the scarlet overlaid with gold." (see Yichud).
There were for centuries regional differences in what constituted a huppah. Indeed, Solomon Freehof finds that the wedding canopy was unknown before the 16th century.Freehof, S. B. 'Chuppah' in D. J. Silver, In the Time of Harvest NY: Macmillan, 1963, p. 193 Alfred J. Kolatch notes that it was during the Middle Ages that the "chupa ... in use today" became customary.Kolatch, Alfred J. "The Jewish Book of Why" Middle Village: Jonathan David Publishers, Inc., 2000), p. 35 Daniel Sperber notes that for many communities before the 16th century, the huppah consisted of a veil worn by the bride.The Jewish Lifecycle, pp. 194–264 In others, it was a cloth spread over the shoulders of the bride and groom.
Numerous illustrations of Jewish weddings in medieval Europe, North Africa and Italy show no evidence of a huppah as it is known today. Moses Isserles (1520–1572) notes that the portable marriage canopy was widely adopted by Ashkenazi Jews as a symbol of the chamber within which marriages originally took place in the generation before he composed his commentary to the Shulchan Aruch.
In Biblical times, a couple consummated their marriage in a room or tent.Eisenberg, Ronald L. "Jewish Traditions: A JPS Guide". (JPS, Philadelphia: 2004, p. 35; cf. Genesis 24:67 In times, the room where the marriage was consummated was called the chuppah.Bloch, Abraham P. "The Biblical and historical background of Jewish customs and ceremonies". KTAV Publishing House, Inc., 1980, pp. 31–32 There is however a reference of a wedding canopy in the Babylonian Talmud, Gittin 57a: "It was the custom when a boy was born to plant a cedar tree and when a girl was born to plant a pine tree, and when they married, the tree was cut down and a canopy made of the branches".
Jewish weddings consist of two separate parts: the erusin or betrothal, and the actual ceremony, known as the nessuin. The betrothal ceremony, which is today accomplished when the groom gives a wedding ring to the bride, prohibits her to all other men and cannot be dissolved without a get or religious divorce. The second ceremony, the nessuin, permits the bride to her husband.
Originally, the two ceremonies usually took place separately. After the betrothal, the bride lived with her parents until the day the actual marriage ceremony arrived; the wedding ceremony would then take place in a room or tent that the groom had set up for her. After the ceremony the bride and groom would spend an hour together in an ordinary room, and then the bride would enter the chuppah and, after gaining her permission, the groom would join her.
In the Middle Ages these two stages were increasingly combined into a single ceremony (which, from the 16th century, became the "all but universal Jewish custom" and the chuppah lost its original meaning, with various other customs replacing it. Indeed, in post-talmudic times the use of the chuppa chamber ceased; the custom that became most common instead was to "perform the whole combined ceremony under a canopy, to which the term chuppah was then applied, and to regard the bride's entry under the canopy as a symbol of the consummation of the marriage. The canopy "created the semblance of a room".
There are varying legal opinions as to how the chuppah ceremony is to be performed today. Major opinions include standing under the canopy, and secluding the couple together in a room ( yichud). The betrothal and chuppah ceremonies are separated by the reading of the ketubah.
This chuppah ceremony is connected to the seven blessings which are recited over a cup of wine after the ceremony ( birchat nisuin or sheva brachot).
In Ashkenazic communities, before going under the chuppah the groom covers the bride's face with a veil, known as the badeken (in Yiddish) or hinuma (in Hebrew). The origin of this tradition and its original purpose are in dispute. There are opinions that the chuppah means "covering the bride's face", hence covering the couple to be married. Others suggest that the purpose was for others to witness the act of covering, formalizing the family's home in a community, as it is a public part of the wedding. In Sephardic communities, this custom is not practiced. Instead, underneath the chuppah, the couple is wrapped together underneath a tallit, which is a fringed garment.
The groom enters the chuppah first to represent his ownership of the home on behalf of the couple. When the bride then enters the chuppah it is as though the groom is providing her with shelter or clothing, and he thus publicly demonstrates his new responsibilities toward her.Levush, 54:1; Aruch HaShulchan, 55:18.
Symbolism
Modern trends
See also
Notes
Further reading
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