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Foreward

Some Thoughts on Marriage

The "Vort" or "LeChayim" - Celebrating the Engagement

Gifts to Kallah and Chassan - What to Give and What Not to Give

The Date, Timing and Location of the Wedding

Comportment of Chassan and Kallah During Time of Engagement

Preparations of Chassan and Kallah for Marriage

Preparations of the Chassan for Marriage

Preparations of the Kallah for Marriage

Preparations of Parents for Their Children's Marriage

Should Problems Arise After the Engagement

Wedding Preparations

The Week of the Wedding

The Wedding Day

The Kabbalas Panim and Chuppah

The Wedding Celebration

Eternal Joy - Volume 2
A Guide To Shidduchim & Marriage
Based On The Teachings Of The Lubavitcher Rebbe,
Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson
From The Time Of Engagement Through The Wedding Day
Engagement And Marriage


Chapter Twelve
The Week of the Wedding

by Rabbi Sholom B. Wineberg

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  Wedding PreparationsThe Wedding Day  

Additional Tzedakah

Both chassan and kallah should increase their distribution of tzedakah in the days immediately preceding their wedding.

(Simchas Olam, p. 64)[1]

Chassan And Kallah Refrain From Meeting

For a week before their wedding, chassan and kallah refrain from meeting, even during the day.

(Sefer HaMinhagim, p. 75)

Chassan And Kallah Refrain From Speaking On The Phone

The Rebbe once said that for the same reason that chassan and kallah refrain from meeting during the week of their wedding, they should also refrain from speaking on the phone during that week.

(Kovetz Binyan Adei Ad, p. 20)

A Chassan Is Not To Be Alone Before The Wedding

The Rebbe, my father-in-law, issued a directive that several days prior to his wedding - he did not indicate how many days - a chassan should not be alone for reasons of shemirah (guarding, protection) [from an ayin hara and the like].

In Pirkei d'Rebbe Eliezer (conclusion of Chapter 16) it states that the chassan should not be alone. However, it seems that the reason there is for the intent of honor (kavod), something that applies after he is married.

From the Rebbe, however, I heard that the chassan is also not to be alone several days prior to the marriage as well, for reasons of shemirah.

(Likkutei Sichos, Vol. I, p. 52)

Chassanim Guarding Each Other

Reb Shmuel Levitin, of blessed memory, once asked the Rebbe whether chassanim may guard each other.

The Rebbe replied that it depends on whether the reason for guarding the chassan was for the sake of shemirah [from an ayin hara, mazikim, and the like], or for the purpose of honor, since "A chassan is similar to a king."

If for the latter reason, chassanim may not guard each other. If for the former reason, one chassan may guard the other.

(Introduction to Mekadeish Yisrael)[2]

Studying The Directives Of The Rebbe's Father

The Rebbe once told a chassan during a Yechidus that he should study the wedding customs in Igros Levi Yitzchak[3] that relate to the Rebbe's wedding and the preparations thereto.[4]

Chassan And Kallah Should Review Pertinent Wedding Laws

In the days prior to the wedding, both chassan and kallah should review the pertinent laws of marriage, so as to assure that none of the detailed laws have been forgotten.

They are also to make sure to study those additional marriage laws that they have yet to study.

(Simchas Olam, p. 64)[5]

Reviewing Reishis Chochmah

The Rebbe once told a chassan during a Yechidus that several days prior to his wedding he was to review - in greater depth than the first time - the pertinent chapters in Reishis Chochmah.[6]

The Shabbos Preceding The Wedding The Chassan Is Called Up To The Torah

The chassan is called to the Reading of the Torah on the Shabbos before the wedding.

Since a chassan and kallah maintain the world in existence because they will bring up children who will engage in the study of Torah, a chassan is called to read the letters of the Torah which sustain the ten creative utterances [by which G-d continually brings the world into existence].[7]

(Sefer HaMinhagim, p. 75)

"From It All The Days Are Blessed"

The Zohar[8] writes concerning Shabbos that "from it all the days are blessed": all the days of the week derive their blessing and vitality from the preceding Shabbos.

Indeed, this is one of the reasons for the custom whereby before his wedding a chassan is called to the Torah not on the nearest preceding day on which the Torah is read,[9] but specifically on the preceding Shabbos[10] - for Shabbos encapsulates all the days of the week that are blessed through it.

... Being called to the Reading of the Torah draws down an additional measure of the everlasting vitality of kedushah. (This occurs over and beyond the kedushah that is spontaneously elicited by the Shabbos day itself, which is[11] "sanctified in and of itself.")

This additional measure of the everlasting vitality of kedushah is hinted at in the wording of the blessing recited at the conclusion of each aliyah: "...and planted eternal life within us."

This takes place by virtue of what is said in the preceding phrase: "He has given us the Torah of truth." For true, uninterrupted life ("eternal life") is possible by virtue of kedushah ("the Torah of truth"), which is infinite.

Being called to the Torah on the Shabbos before a wedding thus lends strength to the wedding, so that the home being built will indeed be a[12] binyan adei ad - "an everlasting edifice," with[13] dor yesharim yevorach - "blessed with a generation of righteous offspring," with children and children's children occupied in Torah and mitzvos. For, as is well known,[14] in this way the power of the Infinite One becomes manifest in finite created beings.

(Toras Menachem - Hisvaaduyos, Vol. I., pp. 119-125)

Even Greater Power Is Granted When Aliyah Is Not Only On A Special Day But In A Special Place

Even greater power is lent to one who is privileged to have been called to the Reading of the Torah in the room in which my revered father-in-law, the Rebbe [Rayatz], prayed and studied; this is the room in which he formed a bond with the yechidah - the innermost nucleus of the soul - of every single Jew whom he received at yechidus.

This privilege even further enhances the "eternal life that [G-d] planted within us"; life that is true and uninterrupted, because it is imbued with holiness, which is infinite.

(Toras Menachem - Hisvaaduyos, Vol. I, p. 125)

We Do Not Call Up More Than The Seven Individuals

... So, too, in the minyan of the Alter Rebbe - and he was always the Torah reader - they did not add to the seven aliyos - even on a Shabbos of a wedding.

If, however, it is very necessary to do so on a Shabbos of a wedding, then this can be done by having the additional people do their own reading.

(Likkut Yud-Daled Kislev, p. 115)[15]

When The Chassan Failed To Be Called Up On The Shabbos Preceding His Wedding

Once, when a chassan was unable to have an aliyah on the Shabbos preceding his wedding, the Rebbe directed that he receive an aliyah the following Monday.[16]

(Kovetz Binyan Adei Ad, p. 21)

   

Notes:

  1. (Back to text) See there footnote 11.

  2. (Back to text) Soon to be published by Kehot. In light of the above two citations, it would seem that prior to their marriage, chassanim may serve as shomrim for each other.

  3. (Back to text) Likkutei Levi Yitzchak, Likkutim-Igros, p. 206ff.

  4. (Back to text) Related by Rabbi Leibel Groner.

  5. (Back to text) See source cited there.

  6. (Back to text) As related in a Teshurah.

  7. (Back to text) Derushei Chassunah, 5689 (reprinted in Sefer HaMaamarim - Kuntreisim, Vol. I, p. 19, see there at length).

  8. (Back to text) II, 63b; 88a. In the original Aramaic, minei misbarchin kulhu yomin.

  9. (Back to text) Such as Monday or Thursday.

  10. (Back to text) See also Sefer HaMaamarim - Kuntreisim, Vol. I, p. 19.

  11. (Back to text) Beitzah 17a.

  12. (Back to text) From the Seven Blessings pronounced under the chuppah. See Likkutei Torah, Parshas Pekudei, p. 4d ff.; and elsewhere.

  13. (Back to text) Tehillim 112:2.

  14. (Back to text) See Sefer HaMaamarim 5657 [1897], p. 176ff.; and elsewhere.

  15. (Back to text) Responsa of the Tzemach Tzedek, Orach Chayim 47c. See there at length.

  16. (Back to text) He was also - as is the custom - bombarded with candies.


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