bridal on the cover A local wedding brims with love — for each other, for family and friends and for the beauty of Judaism. Straight From The Heart LYNNE KONSTANTIN ARTS & LIFE EDITOR AMANDA DUMOUCHELLE PHOTOGRAPHER I Meredith and Yoni made a donation in each guest’s name to the American Friends of Magen David Adom, Israel’s national emergency service. t all began with a bike ride. The former Meredith Cohen grew up as a congregant at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield, where her parents, Linda and Rick, have been active. Although she’d been raised in a kosher home, “and Judaism had always been central to who I am,” she says, “the way in which I connect to Judaism has been and continues to be a journey. I spent every Friday night with my family for Shabbat dinner, but that was the extent of my Shabbat observance.” When a brand-new young, cool and undeniably handsome rabbi found his new home at Shaarey Zedek, Meredith’s mom sug- gested she show him the fun side of living in Michigan. “I was like, ‘No, he’s a rabbi,’” Meredith says. “’I don’t know what to do with a rabbi.’” Her mother made the point that she wouldn’t think twice if he were a woman. She acqui- esced, begrudgingly. It was late June, and she ended up taking Rabbi Yoni Dahlen on a very long, hot bike ride around Detroit’s Belle Isle. “I think it’s such an unexpected place,” she says. “You wouldn’t think, living in Southfield, that something like that would be so close. I thought it would be cool to show him there are these fun, unique aspects of Detroit, and that there’s so much nature within the city.” The day went well. “I wasn’t thinking of it as a date,” Meredith says. “It was a 90-degree day, we both were sweaty. I was not trying to impress him at all. “That night he asked if I wanted to go to a movie with him. I thought, he’s new in town, he just wants someone to do things with. We had dinner first, and we were both talking about how happy we were being single.” By the third date, however, things became clearer to her. “But,” she says, “he says it was the first date.” The pair were inseparable from there although they kept it a secret, even from her parents. “He was the rabbi of our shul,” Meredith says. “And they loved him. We didn’t want people to feel weird. But I do remember being in shul and watching everyone trying to fix him up with women. He’d just smile.” In February, the couple took a quick trip to Hocking Hills, Ohio — and Yoni was a man with a plan and a ring in his pocket. “We went for a hike in the woods when we got there,” Meredith says. “He had planned to wait until later in the trip — but we came to this opening with a little wooden swing, so he suggested we sit down there for a few continued on page 54 52 January 25 • 2018 jn ABOVE: Meredith and Rabbi Yoni Dahlen seal it with a kiss. RIGHT: Yoni and the flower girls. FAR RIGHT: The couple circle each other under the chuppah, flanked by Meredith’s parents, Linda and Rick Cohen, to the left, and Yoni’s parents, Kermit and Mari Dahlen, to the right.