Posts Tagged ‘Traditions’

Traditions Tuesday – Episode 2.3


I decided to step a bit outside my comfort zone this week and talk about a cultural wedding tradition I am unfamiliar with, but I’m looking forward to the day I get to work with this bridal couple! As I am always looking to expand my cultural knowledge and understanding of traditions far and wide, I came across a great wedding planner out of California – My Bride Story. Esther’s site is chalk full of goodies and nuggets of inspiration. Her approach to topics and honesty is refreshing. I’ve gathered a few gems from her collection that I will share with you, of course with my own perspective on the topic.

What I am sharing with you today, as I mentioned before, is beyond my current repertoire of knowledge, and was inspired by Esther extensive information on the Paebaek – the Korean Wedding Ritual. With her permission, I am very excited to be able to share with you a quick video demonstration of the ritual from start to finish! I want to go over the quick basics before you watch so you have an understanding of what is there.

A Paebaek ceremony is a traditional Korean ceremony performed at weddings. The ritual is the groom’s family acceptance of the bride and a way for the bride to pay her respects to the groom’s family.

The engaged couple will enter together dressed in ceremonial Korean wedding attire called hanbok. Their parents, the honorees, will be seated in front of a table laden with various edibles and tea (or soju – rice wine). The couple will bow deeply to the honorees, and then kneel as one pours tea/soju. Once each honoree drinks the tea/soju, they impart wisdom, advice or a wish for the couple’s future.

Finally, the honorees will throw dates (symbolizing girls) and chestnuts (symbolizing boys) which the bride will try to catch in her apron. According to legend, the number of dates and chestnuts caught signifies how many children she will bear. Later in the evening, the couple is supposed to eat the dates and chestnuts that were caught.

Traditionally, as noted above the ceremony is set in respect to the groom’s family, but now often includes relatives on both sides of the family participating and offering blessings to the couple. The ceremony is traditionally limited to family only, but increasingly Paebaeks are performed in front of guest, especially here in America.

In respect to cultural fusion, Korean-American couples incorporate both a Western ceremony and a Paebaek ceremony, with the Paebaek following the Western ceremony, often during cocktail hour.

So now that you have a quick understanding, take a look at the intricacy of this tradition.

Paebaek Demonstration from Full Circle Eventi on Vimeo.

The traditional costume is, for me, the most striking visual of the ceremony, and quite detailed as well. I am absolutely in love with the hanbok! I secretly want to wear one (I guess it’s really not a secret anymore!) I never knew that Sandra Oh, of Grey’s Anatomy, actually worn a modernized hanbok to a few red carpet events, but here’s an images from her hanbok red carpet look. There is so much detail about the hanbok, I think I will have to leave more information for another post! Hee, hee . . .


 

Tradition Tuesday – Episode2.1

In preparation for my upcoming excursion to the Hawaiian Islands, I am beginning the “aloha spirit” right her at Full Circle Eventi! I will be sharing many beautiful images from Hawai’i over the next few days, but in honor of tradition Tuesday, let talk about Hawaiian wedding customs. As with many other cultures, there are many we can discuss, but I will stick with three for this time around. The Koa wood and Ti leaf ring blessing, the Ti Leaf and Lava Rock Ceremony, and the Hawaiian Wedding song.

Koa Bowl and Ti Leaf Blessing of Rings


(Beach Weddings Hawai’i)

This ceremony commemorates these vows and your love?

The Dard (officiant) hands a Koa bowl to (Groom). A few moments before the service, the Dard dips the Koa wood bowl into the Pacific Ocean in order to perform a Hawaiian blessing over the rings. Koa, which is the hardest of our Hawaiian woods, has been used over the centuries to build the outrigger canoes, tools and utensils. Koa is a treasured and valuable hardwood that represents integrity and strength, which are foundational qualities of a marriage. The Ti leaf represents prosperity, health and blessing of body, mind and spirit. The officiant begins by dipping a Koa wood bowl into a body of water. The leaf is dipped into the bowl, and the water is sprinkled three times over the rings while the following chant is recited: “Ei-Ah Eha-No. Ka Malohia Oh-Na-Lani. Mea A-Ku A-Pau,” means: “May peace from above rest upon you and remain with you now and forever.”

The water has a double significance. One is a washing back into the Pacific, as it were, symbolically, of any hindrance to relationship, disappointment or hurt from the past. In Hawaiian this is called Ho’oponopono or reconciliation, a letting go by grace and aloha so that the second aspect of the water may be profoundly true for the two of you today: it represents a brand new beginning as husband and wife.

Ti leaf and Lava Rock

The Dard again, takes a lava rock and Ti leaf to perform the final blessing. The lava rock is symbolic of the moment you made a lifetime commitment to one another. It is wrapped in a Ti leaf and left at the ceremony cite as an offering, prayer and blessing which remains steadfast at the place of your marriage, marking the birth of your union, while your rings are a symbol of that commitment that travel with you wherever you go. The rock marks the entrance into a promised land, that of marriage, full of rich promise and unlimited potential.

Hawaiian Wedding Song

Perhaps one of the most touching elements of the ceremony, or more easily adapted into the reception is the Hula to the Hawaiian Wedding Song. The Hawaiian Wedding Song, Ke Kali Nei Au, is usually played during the ceremony, although it would work nicely as the first dance at your reception as well. It was originally written in Hawaiian in1926 by Charles King, and has been translated into English and covered by several artists; most notably Elvis Presley in the movie, Blue Hawaii. But instead of trying to describe it, I found a beautiful demonstration of a bride who learned the hula just to dance for her husband as a surprise on their wedding day.

more about “Hawaiian Wedding Song“, posted with vodpod

Adding Spice to your life,

Lia

PS. If you are interested in learning the Hawaiian Wedding song to dance for your husband and are in the Metro Detroit area reach out to Auntie Fran of Polynesian Fantasy Dancers.  She is a wonderful teacher!

 

Tradition Tuesday ~ Episode 1.4

In continuing the tradition of Tuesday and yesterday’s Jewish holiday inspired imagination board, I decided to discuss a very well know Jewish wedding tradition, breaking of the glass. Many non-Jewish people are familiar with the common occurrence of breaking glass at the end of the ceremony, but why and from where these traditions stemmed, very few can answer.

The Meaning of Breaking the Glass

The custom dictates that a glass placed on the floor, and the groom (chatan)shatters it with his foot. The most widespread meaning attached to the glass-smashing ritual is that it symbolizes the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70AD. As the Temple functioned as the centre of worship in Judaism, its destruction has been devastating to the Jewish people. By remembering this national sadness during the joyous festivities of a wedding, Jews “set Jerusalem above [their] highest joy” (Psalm 137). This celebration of Jewish identity is seen as auspicious for the new couple, placing the beginning of their married life within the framework of the joys and sorrows of Jews throughout history.

This generally marks the conclusion of the ceremony and successful smashing is herald with shouts of “Mazel Tov!” In Maurice Lamm’s article ‘The Breaking of the Glass’ he notes that Jewish opinion is divided on whether the glass to be smashed ought to be the nuptial cup, the betrothal cup or simply a ‘prop’ glass. Nowadays an old light bulb is sometimes used instead inside the cloth, as it is easier to smash. Traditionally the groom (chatan) is the one who breaks the glass; in more modern circles, the bride (kallah) may participate.



Left, Dmitry Gudkov viaFlickr; Top, Vagabond Journey; Middle, Jewish Gift Place; Bottom, Bridal Wave

Alternative Meanings for the Glass-Smashing Ceremony

Several different meanings have been devised for the ceremony. One interpretation is that the fragility of the glass symbolizes the fragility of trust, commitment and love that make up a marriage; the implication being that couples must be careful not to ‘smash’ those qualities. Another view is that the breaking of the glass is a break with the past: the marriage is to last as long as the glass remains broken, ie. forever. Breaking the glass may also be a reminder to the wedding guests not to get drunk and forget themselves at the wedding reception. Jewish men may also joke at the wedding that this is the last time the groom gets to ‘put his foot down’!

Breaking the Glass in Mixed-Faith Unions

Generally speaking, a Jew who marries a non-Jew must forsake some of the traditions of a Jewish wedding. Among these is the ceremony of smashing the glass. Some mixed-faith weddings adopt a different ritual such as a unity candle or sand-pouring ritual to end the service on a similarly high note, although the meaning of these rituals is not identical to the glass-smashing ritual.

Side Note

In Israel, the Ashkenazi custom is that the glass is broken earlier, prior to the reading of the ketubah (marriage contract). Sefardim always break the glass at the end of the ceremony, even in Israel.

 

Tradition Tuesday * Episode 1

Tuesday’s is about traditions. Be it modern American tradition, cultural traditions, or fusion traditions, today is dedicated to discussing part of the Wedding, Ceremony, and Reception. Tuesday’s will feature couples celebrating their weddings and their traditions. The layout will include the layout of the day, location, and all the cultural elements, such as Henna Party, the signing of the Ketubah, Sangeet, Rope Ceremony, Pinning the Veil, Seven Steps, Dancing in the Hog Trough, etc.

If you are a bride to be or a newlywed and would like to share your upcoming or recent ceremony and reception traditions, we’d love to hear from you. Send your submissions to be featured to submission@fullcircleeventi.com. Please include pictures (especially any that feature the tradition), and a short write up on the day layout, where the ceremony and reception took place, and a list of the cultural traditions you implemented. We’d love to hear from you and feature you in one of our upcoming posts.

top photography by Ellen Roy Photography, bottom right photography by Marcin Harla, left shoes by Prada

For today, we’re featuring a great replacement for the bridal bouquet toss. I’ve seen some nasty fights in my days, could be called a true cat fight to win the bouquet. At one recent wedding, I would have called a personal foul on one of the guest in any basketball court (over the back). But she held on for dear life. In fact both of them did.

Do you want to incorporate a fun, non-humiliating, find-out-who-will-marry-next tradition into your wedding? Do you dread standing up with other girls while the DJ plays Single Ladies or Girls Just Wanna Have Fun for the traditional and often humiliating bouquet toss?

If you answered yes to one or more of these questions, I have a great idea for you.

Instead of tossing a bouquet and subjecting their girlfriends to bodily harm, Turkish brides use shoes. No we are not tossing shoes instead of flowers. Before the ceremony, the single women autograph the sole of the bride’s wedding shoe. You can do this with just your bridesmaids or you can include it as an activity at your bridal showers, After the shoes have made their way down the aisle and danced the night away, Turkish legend has it that the person whose name has faded the least will be the next to marry.

Just one more reason to enjoy dancing the night away!

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