Beyond glass-breaking: Beyond Breaking the Glass; A Spiritual Guide to your Jewish Wedding.Stone, Adam
The Jewish wedding ceremony ends with a famous bang. Stomping on a glass is one of the best-known features of Jewish weddings. Traditionally, the groom did the deed; today the couple often share the honor/pleasure, smashing one or two napkin-wrapped glasses. ...
The breaking of a glass takes place at the end of the Jewish Wedding ceremony. The groom stomps on a glass to crush it and the guests shout, Mazel Tov! Congratulations! Our wedding pillow is used during the ceremony to hold the glass while the groom steps on it. After the ceremony, ...
For this video, we asked the Jewish community for their advice on what type of glass to smash at a wedding and even how to smash it. So, we took some of their advice and actually smashed a bunch of different items, a bunch of different ways.
Where to find moreBreaking the Glassepisodes: https://www.podpage.com/breaking-the-glass/ https://jewishrhody.com/breaking-the-glass Episode Transcriptions: https://www.podpage.com/breaking-the-glass/blog/ Looking for more Jewish Rhody Media?
acceptance speech, just ahead of her boss, President-elect of the USA, Joe Biden. The sound of that shattering glass will reverberate across the world as it begins to experience the multidimensional consequences of a woman in power in the second highest office in the most powerful cou...
the prequel. saul is still the same old seedy lawyer, although now he's going by the name jimmy mcgill. it's hard to tell if this is a pseudonym or the revelation of his real name. back in saul's first breaking bad appearance, he claimed that he wasn't really jewish, and thus ...
Breaking the Glass: New Tendencies in the Ritual Practice of Modern Jewish Orthodox and Alternative WeddingsIntroduction Breaking the glass became one of the pivotal features of a Jewish wedding...Prashizky, AnaInstitute for Community Studies at Bar Ilan UniversitySociological Papers...
The parallel between his ceremonial breaking of the glass in his wedding and the breaking of the glass of Jewish shopkeepers' windows in Germany in 1938; His father's experience with Kristallnacht; The advice his father offered him.Rosen
Wiener, Nancy H. Beyond Breaking the Glass: A Spiritual Guide to Your Jewish Wedding. New York, NY: CCAR Press, 2012.Amy Weiss