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The challenge of marrying ‘in’

'Most mixed-faith couples stay together, have children and grandchildren. It poses a challenge to us: do we find ways to include them or exclude them?'

December 11, 2020 11:35
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3 min read

It is time to be more realistic about mixed-faith marriage. The debate has raged not just in the pages of the JC recently but in the community at large over the past 70 years.

Ever since then, communal leaders have been trying to work out how to combat it with a variety of techniques — sermons condemning it, family pressure, invigorating youth clubs, student tours to Israel, the growth in Jewish day schools — but none has had great effect.

The thousands of couples who came to my seminars, “I’m Jewish, My Partner Isn’t” never asked “Rabbi, shall we get married?”, but said, “Rabbi, we are getting married — can you help?”

While there are many advantages to marrying within one’s faith, and rabbis of all denominations still see it as the best option, if one lives in an open society like modern Britain, a significant degree of intermarriage is always likely.