As mentioned before, I am a Baha’i.  Mr. T leans Unitarian but doesn’t actively practice.  And our ceremony was officiated by my father, who’s ordained in the Community of Christ.  As with most “mixed” marriages, this raised questions about how to structure our wedding ceremony to meet everyone’s needs.

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(The 9-pointed-star lantern from my previous post, in action at the reception)

Mr. T didn’t have any specific requirements of his own — he just wanted to be happy with whatever we chose — so we planned our ceremony around the Baha’i wedding requirements. There are 3 requirements for a Baha’i wedding:**

1.  Consent of the couple’s parents.  Although parents may not arrange a marriage partner for their children, they must consent to the child’s choice of partner before the marriage can take place.  This honors one’s parents and helps to unite the families.

2.  A one-sentence vow: “We will all, verily, abide by the Will of God.”  This simple vow encompasses all others because, as the teachings of any religion will tell you, to live by God’s Will includes cultivating such virtues as honor, love, and fidelity.

3.  Two witnesses to the marriage vow.  My grandparents, who have been married for 65 years(!!), served as our witnesses.

00085(Grandma and Grandpa, circa 1943)

Because the Baha’i Faith does not have clergy, the local administrative body handles the details of ensuring that all civil and religious marriage requirements are met.  (Note to any Baha’i readers planning your wedding — these details are handled by the Local Spiritual Assembly of the locale where you will hold your marriage
ceremony, which may be different than your home community.)

There are no other specific marriage rites.  Most couples design a service to accompany the vows, but Baha’is are free to choose any readings, music, dance, food, dress, etc., that has special meaning to them.  In fact, the most memorable wedding I’ve attended was between a woman from Tonga and a man from Samoa — they used traditional dances in their ceremony, including a group of men doing the Hakka!

Alas, our own wedding had no Hakka.  We followed the usual American format of a couple of readings, a short speech by the officiant, and an exchange of vows and rings.

We opened with a Baha’i marriage prayer read by my mother.  For readings, if left to my own choosing, we would have used excerpts from the “Baha’i Marriage Tablet” (which may be a talk instead of a Tablet, by one of the Central Figures of our Faith, unless it’s by someone else).  But Mr. T found the language too “flowery,” so we went with something secular.  Specifically, Marriage Joins Two People in the Circle of Its Love, by Edmund O’Neill, and a Hindu Marriage Blessing after our vows.

00053(Mom reading her prayer, handkerchief clutched in hand)

For vows, we chose the traditional “for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, etc.”  We considered some more modern vows (the “hippie vows,” as Mr. T called them), but the language or grammar of those versions bugged us for one reason or another.  Also, we figured the traditional vows might mean more to us precisely because we’ve heard them so many times before.  Immediately after exchanging those vows, we said the Baha’i vow.

We chose to include the witnesses’ signing of the marriage certificate as part of our ceremony.  After the vows, we had a musical interlude where we led my grandparents from their seats to a small table in the front and waited while they signed.  I love my grandparents tremendously and am in awe of both the length and strength of their marriage, so it means the world that they played this important role in our own marriage.

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00055 (Escorting Grandma and Grandpa back to their seats)  (Photos by Punam Bean)

What unique religious or cultural traditions will be a part of your ceremony?  How will you mix your traditions with those of your partner? 

 

I am a Baha’i by religion, and Mr. Tulip is from a non-practicing, vaguely Christian background. This complicates our ceremony planning because Baha’is have only a one-sentence marriage vow, and without the long set of (Christian) traditional vows, there’s a whole lot more time to fill….

So have I been working on the ceremony? Nope. But I’ve been shopping!

While doing research into items for our lantern theme, I was terribly excited to discover that there are now paper lanterns in the shape of 9-pointed stars. There were a handful of options out there, but here’s the one I purchased:

Paperlanternstore_1966_46658541

($9.95 without cord, from Paper Lantern Store. I’m hoping the red isn’t too busy in the grand scheme of things, but it looked so cute on the website…!)

Why was this exciting, you may ask? Nine-pointed stars are often used as a Baha’i symbol. The number 9 represents the numerical value of “Baha” in Arabic numerology, and is considered a symbol of perfection or completeness because it is the highest single-digit number. (And stars? Are just pretty.) Tonight I also discovered that 9 is considered lucky in Chinese culture because it sounds similar to the word “longlasting.” Considering that our engagement date was based on Chinese number superstitions, this extra meaning is extra special — a good luck token for a longlasting marriage. By hanging the star lantern in a prominent place, we can honor both my religious beliefs and Mr. T’s Taiwanese heritage on this important day. And in a darn stylish way to boot!

Will you use any special wedding decorations to honor your religious or cultural heritage?

 

The final color of Color Week comes in handy, because I’ve been obsessing over a certain Blue topic for a few weeks now…. 

Ed has decided to paint his bedroom, a much-needed update.  He loves blue, and after hours and hours of Internet research, he purchased pure pigments in a lovely shade of Mediterranean blue.  The trouble?  His room is situated at the back of his building, and the one window gets no direct light.  Lovely for quiet naps on weekend afternoons, not so good for owners painting in darker shades without the room looking small and gloomy.

But recently, staring at the paint sample on the wall, I was reminded of the blue trim on  Mediterranean-style buildings that I used to see in Israel:

Akka_house

(House of `Abbúd, Akka, Israel)

Akka_courtyard

(House of `Abdu’lláh Páshá, Akka, Israel)

And I formed a new plan — paint Ed’s ceiling and trim blue, with the walls white.  Overall, the look would be of a Mediterranean house.  His furniture is dark wood — Chinese antiques, actually, but they should blend well with the look.  And there are many simple blue-and-white patterns to be found in
bedding.  With maybe an inexpensive Persian rug from Ebay (emphasis on
the inexpensive because the pets will inevitably shred it over time).  The interior of these houses often used dark wood, as well as lots of plants (an actual interior courtyard garden) and Persian rugs:

Akka_interior

(House of `Abbúd, Akka, Israel)

For art, among other things, I could blow up some of my altered Polaroids of the actual houses:

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(House of `Abdu’lláh Páshá, Akka, Israel)

Mazraih

(Mazra’ih, Israel)
 

Ed is open to the idea but stuck on the fact that ceilings are difficult to paint.  My theory?  If Michelangelo could handle 4 years of work on the Sistine Chapel, I figure we can handle “blue”!

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