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Day of Wedding: Difference between revisions

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==Fasting on Your Wedding Day==
==Fasting on Your Wedding Day==
# Some have the custom for the bride and groom to fast on the day of their wedding. <Ref> Rama EH 61:1, Sh"t Maharam Mintz 109, Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 146:1, see [http://www.torahmusings.com/2013/12/fasting-on-ones-wedding-day/ TorahMusings] for potential explanations of this practice, [http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/481616/jewish/Fasting-On-the-Wedding-Day.htm chabad.org] </ref> However, most sephardim don't have this custom. <ref> Birkei Yosef OC 470:2, Sh"t Yechave Daat 4:61 </ref>
# Some have the custom for the bride and groom to fast on the day of their wedding. <Ref> Rama EH 61:1, Sh"t Maharam Mintz 109, Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 146:1, see [http://www.torahmusings.com/2013/12/fasting-on-ones-wedding-day/ TorahMusings] for potential explanations of this practice, [http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/481616/jewish/Fasting-On-the-Wedding-Day.htm chabad.org] </ref> However, most sephardim don't have this custom. <ref> Birkei Yosef OC 470:2, Sh"t Yechave Daat 4:61 </ref>
==Holding Hands==
==Holding Hands==
# Some hold that it is inappropriate for the bride and groom to hold hands before the chuppah. <Ref>Rav Soloveitchik (quoted in M'peninei HaRav p. 272)</ref>
# Some hold that it is inappropriate for the bride and groom to hold hands before the chuppah. <Ref>Rav Soloveitchik (quoted in M'peninei HaRav p. 272)</ref>
==Practices for the Week Before==
# There is a minhag that the chosson and kallah shouldn’t see each other for the week before the wedding.<ref>There is no actual source for this minhag in the Gemara or the Rishonim. Shu”t Maharshdam 31 quotes a minhag that chasan and kallah should avoid seeing each other from after the shiduchin, i.e. engagement, until the wedding. The Radak (Bireishis 24:64) writes that it is proper for a woman to be modest in the presence of her betrothed and not be seen by him until they are married. Rav Elyashiv in Mevakshey Torah 25:280, 27:48 says that the chasan and kallah shouldn’t see or speak to each other, even on the phone, during the week before the wedding.There are a couple of reasons that are given for the minhag. Some suggest that it is a harchaka, a way of distancing oneself from violating any prohibitions. See Rabbi Binyamin Forst’s sefer Laws of Niddah pages 458-459 for more information. </ref>
==Links==
==Links==
* [http://www.yutorah.org/lectures/lecture.cfm/768266/Rabbi_Zvi_Sobolofsky/Halachic_Checklist_For_Your_Wedding_Day Halachic Checklist For Your Wedding Day] by Rabbi Zvi Sobolofsky
* [http://www.yutorah.org/lectures/lecture.cfm/768266/Rabbi_Zvi_Sobolofsky/Halachic_Checklist_For_Your_Wedding_Day Halachic Checklist For Your Wedding Day] by Rabbi Zvi Sobolofsky
==Sources==
==Sources==
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