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   The 
	Bedeking Ceremony: The Veiling of the Bride 
	A Conservative 
	Perspective by Rivka 
	C. Berman 
 
      
      		
 
After the ketubah is signed, the groom may choose to lower the veil over 
his bride’s face. This recalls the biblical nuptial episode. Jacob’s 
father-in-law Laban put his daughter, Leah, in place of Jacob’s chosen bride, 
Rachel. The deception was possible because of the heavy veil brides wore. When 
the groom personally veils the bride, it’s a kind of insurance policy against 
bridal surprises. 
 
As a groom lowers the veil over his bride’s face, he affects a lovely symbolism. 
Just as his bride's face is enveloped by the veil, so will love envelope the 
couple. This covering is known as the bedeking (or bedecken or 
bedekung). In many Conservative weddings, this is a private ceremony 
performed where the ketubah is signed. 
 
Witnesses to the bedeking chant the words said to Rebecca as she left her 
father’s home to marry Isaac. “Our sister, may you be the mother of thousands 
and tens of thousands” (Genesis 24:60) 
 
Parents, parents-in-law, and others approach the bride and bless her with 
personal words and wishes or the traditional blessing: “May the L-rd make you as 
Sara, Rebecca, Rachel and Leah.”  
  
		 
      	
		 
      
   
         
  		   
                                              
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