Q: My boyfriend and I have been together for three years and have been talking about getting engaged and married within the next year or so. The problem is, he was raised Jewish and both of his parents are very religious (they keep kosher, strictly observe the Sabbath and holidays, etc.) and neither he nor I are religious at all. His parents know that I am not Jewish, which is going to be more of a problem for them as our relationship progresses.
When we first started dating, I told my boyfriend that I was open to considering conversion (since I donât care about religion at all, if converting to Judaism would make things easier with his parents then that was fine with me). However, in researching the conversion process, I realized it is much more involved than just saying to a rabbi, âOk, I want to be Jewish now,â and so I have taken conversion off the table. I would have to take at least a yearâs worth of classes, meet with a rabbi, live kosher, and other requirements that I donât feel comfortable taking on if I am not actually intending to live a Jewish life post-conversion.
Iâve talked to my boyfriend and explained the reasons above why I donât think conversion is the right choice. He understands, but told me that if Iâm not Jewish when we get married, that his parents wonât attend the wedding. If I am Jewish but the ceremony isnât performed by an orthodox rabbi, they wonât attend. If itâs not in Hebrew, they wonât attend. While Iâm not sure that heâs not exaggerating about those points, I am sure that if they do attend the wedding that they will likely be a source of negativity during our âbig day.â
My question is, how do we resolve this situation? We would have to hold the wedding on a Sunday (which I donât love but would be willing to do to appease his parents). Obviously I am unwilling to convert to please them. Since neither my boyfriend nor myself is religious in the slightest, having the ceremony performed by a rabbi is out of the question. How do we make them happy (so that their negativity doesnât affect our wedding)?
âAnonymous Shiksa
A:
Dear AS,
I hate when I have to be the bad guy. But Iâm gonna be the bad guy. You probably canât do anything to make your in-laws happy.
Even if you did everything on your partnerâs bullet list. Even if you converted. Even still, youâre not religious people, and his parents wish you were. Theyâre probably deeply concerned about assimilation, about the loss of their Jewish practices (and frankly, thatâs whatâs happening after all). So you could try, you know? Add this or that in an attempt to appease them (maybe incorporate a rabbi or some Hebrew into the ceremony without that being the only part), but thereâs a good chance theyâll never be happy. They want you (and their son) to be practicing in the orthodox tradition, and you just arenât those people.
Rather than trying to figure out what you can do to smooth this over, you and your partner have to determine if itâs okay with you that it canât be smoothed. You guys are both signing on for thisâyouâre marrying into this family, and heâs making a clear step away from his parentsâ faith, forcing them to acknowledge that he already doesnât practice the way they wished. It probably wonât be cozy from here on out. After this, itâll be disagreements about holidays, raising possible children, and on and on. Marriage is a long road, and this is only the beginning.
Are you both alright with that? If so, you need to start from a place of respectfully accommodating their beliefs, even if you wonât be adopting them yourselves. That means, for example, having the wedding on a Sunday since they wonât be able to attend on a Saturday. More than that, itâll be on you to learn something about that culture, even if itâs not your own. (For example, if you donât know why a Saturday wedding isnât possible for them, nowâs the time to ask.)
But I do have a quick question. Your partner is listing all these things his parents will want at the weddingâdoes he want them? Iâm only going off of an email here, but it sounds like heâs making these demands into your responsibility, for you to okay or veto (not cool). Heâs not a particularly religious guyâis he really okay with incorporating all of this? Does he think this pressure will end at the wedding day? How does he feel about the clear strain this will put on his relationship with his parents and their community? It sounds like he might be turning a blind eye to just how deep some of these divisions go, and how they will affect his life. Thatâs not something you want your partner realizing a year or two into forever.
Thereâs a point where you have to live your own life. And for your partner, that means deciding how much of his parentsâ faith he wants to incorporate into his life, or coming to grips with their absence if he opts not to. For you, it means deciding if youâre willing to sign on for this tension.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO ASK APW A QUESTION, PLEASE DONâT BE SHY! IF YOU WOULD PREFER NOT TO BE NAMED, ANONYMOUS QUESTIONS ARE ALSO ACCEPTED. (THOUGH IT REALLY MAKES OUR DAY WHEN YOU COME UP WITH A CLEVER SIGN-OFF!)
H/T to Meg for collaborating on this post, Using her experiance as a convert to Judaism