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Novosti News

2.11.2016. 7:21
mješoviti brakovi
 

Intermarried couples whose weddings were officiated by Jewish clergy as the only officiant are more highly engaged in Jewish life than other intermarried couples, a new study has found. (Ashley Novack)

At a summit meeting held last week at the National Museum of American Jewish History, several hundred communal professionals, rabbis, scholars, philanthropists and young intermarried couples gathered to discuss engagement of interfaith families in Jewish life.
There is widespread communal agreement that intermarriage has reshaped the landscape of American Jewish life, but a lack of consensus regarding how best to respond to this development. At the forefront of the controversy has been rabbinic officiation at intermarriage ceremonies.

Prema novoj studiji, bračni parovi iz mješovitog braka,  koji su provedeni  jedino sa židovskim "clergy", u mnogo angažiraniji u židovskom životu nego ostali mješoviti brakovi.

Široko je poznata  činjenica u zajednicama da  su mješoviti brakovi  preobrazili američki židovski život, ali nema suglasnoti kako najbolje odgovoriti na ovakav razvoj događaja. Najveća kontroverza je o ulozi rabina u ceremoniji mješovitog braka.Da li treba rabin ili kantor voditi takvo vjenčanje pripada u teološka pitanja. Ali je i pitanje o utjecaju koji uloga rabina ima ja židovski karakter doma i obitelj koju par koji se vjenča bude stvarao. U suprotnosti sa dugotrajnim mišljenjem da je izbor židovskih  provoditelja ceremonije simbolično, a ne stvarni akt vjrnčanja, sada postoji jaka evidencija o vezi između rabinskog djelovanja na bvjenčanju i uključenja bračnog para u "Židovski život "
 
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Our new report, “Under the Chuppah: Rabbinic Officiation and Intermarriage,” explores the trajectories of Jewish engagement of a large group of young adult Jews married to Jewish and non-Jewish spouses. As part of a long-term follow-up study of 2001-2009 applicants to Birthright Israel, we surveyed 1,200 married young adults. We explored differences among three groups of couples: inmarried couples, intermarried couples who had a sole Jewish clergy officiant (i.e., no non-Jewish co-officiant) and intermarried couples who married under other auspices such as a justice of the peace, friend or family member.

The data are unequivocal that intermarried couples whose weddings were officiated by Jewish clergy as the only officiant are more highly engaged in Jewish life than other intermarried couples.