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NWJew

Opinion

My Wedding Nightmare

January 11, 2009 09:37
2 min read

I went to a non-Jewish wedding. It was a nightmare. If you’ve ever seen the Martin Scorsese movie “After Hours” you’ll have some idea of what I'm talking about.

This wedding was in a place called The Countryside. I don’t know exactly where that is. It doesn’t matter really. All I know is that there are no Jews there. It was midwinter, and we had been invited to the reception only, the church being too small to accommodate everyone. That suited us just fine. It’s cold enough in the winter, but even colder inside a church, strangely.

The venue for the reception was an old Tudor manor house and we were invited for 7pm. Perfect. We spent a relaxing day exploring The Countryside and then changed into our formal get-up before making our way to the dinner and dance. As we entered the place we were aware that there weren't many people around, but were assured that this was the right location. Ushered into a large and dimly lit room that doubled as a cold storage warehouse, we found two other couples and a small bar. It turned out that we weren’t early, but that the main party hadn’t yet finished eating and were somewhere else in the building.

I asked if there would be any more to eat, since, with the time gone 7pm I was likely to faint if I was to be denied my evening meal. “Oh yes,” I was told, “there’ll be sausage rolls and chipolatas later”. “What!” I demanded, “When was the evening meal being served?” It transpired that the wedding party was, in fact, coming to the end of the evening meal and we had been invited to drive all the way to The Countryside for a disco. Who on earth sits down for their evening meal at four in the afternoon? More to the point, who invites someone to a party for 7pm without feeding them?