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Date Amount Signature Please Circle Ad Desired: #1 - $65 — #2 - $95 — #3 - $115 Please fill out this form completely and send with your check or charge card information to: JN Rosh Hashanah Greetings 2010 29200 Northwestern Hwy. Suite 110 Southfield, MI 48034 or fax to: 248.304.0049 26 August 12 • 2010 New Vows, Old Debate Clinton-Mezvinsky wedding raises questions about intermarriage. Jacob Berkman Jewish Telegraphic Agency New York I s it possible that the first iconic Jewish picture of the decade is of an interfaith marriage? Photographs taken Saturday, July 31, show the Jewish groom wearing a yarmulke and a crumpled tallit staring into the eyes of his giddy bride under a traditional Jewish wedding canopy with a framed ketubah (Jewish wed- ding contract) in the background. The couple is Marc Mezvinsky, the banker son of two Jewish ex-Congress members, and Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of the former U.S. president and the current secretary of state. The images and scant details of the tightly guarded wedding — dubbed by some the "wedding of the century" — have raised a number of questions about the significance of the union for American Jews and what it says about intermarriage in America. We should "celebrate the full accep- tance of Jews by the larger society that this marriage represents:' said Hebrew Union College sociologist Steven Cohen from Jerusalem. At the same time, he noted, the fact that so few children of interfaith unions, particularly those between Jewish fathers and non-Jewish moth- ers, are raised solely as Jews raises the conundrum of our age: "How do we Jewishly engage and educate the intermarried, while at the same time maintaining our time-honored com- mitment to inmarriage?" Cohen asked. "In short, we should celebrate the particular marriage of these two fine individuals, but we ought not celebrate the type of marriage it constitutes and represents:' The wedding had more than just a Jewish flair. • It was officiated by a rabbi, James Ponet, head of the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale University, along with a Methodist minister. •The marriage took place under a chupah. • Friends of the couple recited the traditional sheva brachot, the seven traditional Jewish blessings given to the bride and groom. • The groom broke a glass with his foot, as is tradition. • And according to several reports, guests danced the hora and lifted the former president and the secretary of state, Bill and Hillary Clinton, in chairs during the dance. Yet some of the more liberal streams of American Judaism, which accept intermarriage if the couple's chil- dren are raised as Jews, chafed at the fact that the wedding took place on Saturday, before the Jewish Sabbath ended. The Reform movement frowns upon its rabbis conducting weddings on the Sabbath. The president of the Union for Reform Judaism, Rabbi Eric Yoffie, said the Reform movement decided in 1973 that its rabbis would be allowed to perform intermarriages, though they would be discouraged from doing so, an edict that still stands today. "She has married in," Paul Golin, the associate director of the Jewish Outreach Institute, a nondenomina- tional group that reaches out to unaf- filiated and intermarried families, said of Chelsea. "Some will say he married out, but if he was marrying out, there wouldn't have been anything Jewish. "The fact that they went to the effort to have a chupah and have a rabbi and that he wore a talks says a lot about their future direction. Otherwise, why bother?" The marriage has pushed the inter- nal Jewish community debate about intermarriage into the view of main- stream America. In the days before the wedding, the Washington Post asked several rabbis in its "On Faith" column, "Is interfaith marriage good for American society? Is it good for religion? What is lost — and gained — when religious people intermarry?" Rabbi Steven Wernick, the CEO of the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, said intermarriage is certain- ly "not ideal," but that the Conservative movement in 2008 decided that it must welcome interfaith families and