Tales of a Huppa Holder


by Allison Kaplan



Jewish wedding tradition, so I’ve been told, considers carrying the huppa (ritual canopy held over over bride and groom in Jewish weddings) to be a higher honor than the more social conventions of serving as a bridesmaid or groomsman.

Having stood up in a wedding for the first time this past weekend -- as a huppa holder, no less--I can understand why carrying the bridal canopy is a position held in such high esteem. Much more can go wrong when you’re balancing a quarter of the bride and groom’s symbolic home than when you’re just holding a bouquet and looking pretty.

I was very much aware, throughout my appointment as huppa holder, that if I went down, the very fabric of the bride and groom’s house would collapse. I didn’t fall. But thank goodness for wedding rehearsals.

It hadn’t crossed my mind, prior to my cousin’s wedding rehearsal, that weddings don’t just spontaneously come to order, with couples expertly waltzing two-by-two down the aisle at precisely the right moments.

Enter: the wedding planner.

At once, my cousin’s wedding planner had us quietly lined up single file, afraid to so much as breathe until she sternly whispered "go".

But more than her orchestrating abilities, I’ve never seen someone so prepared. I’d like to hire a wedding planner just to follow me around so I wouldn’t have to carry a purse. If a button pops off my jacket, she’s got thread to fix it. If I get a little hungry, she brings snacks that won’t stain (white food, this is apparently called in the wedding world). And if the snack leaves an aftertaste, no problem. The wedding planner always carries mints!

No wonder wedding planners don’t come cheap.

The day of the big event, we huppa holders required an extra practice session. And it’s a good thing, because our whole routine had been disrupted. The smooth, bare bamboo poles we used in the rehearsal were now covered with delicate leaves and flowers. I could barely find a place to grab hold.

And the stairs. There hadn’t been any stairs when we practiced. Now there were two. Having nearly lost my balance when the huppa pole stayed on the first step as I ascended to the second, I learned the most important rule in huppa holding: Raise that pole up high.

It must have looked good when the four of us reached the bimah (stage) and spread out to our appointed corners without ripping the huppa. Now all I had to do was stand quietly--glancing from time to time to make sure the huppa wasn’t resting on the over 6-foot-tall groom’s head.

The rabbi offered perhaps the most important piece of wedding advice just before we went on. I was expecting some philosophical thoughts on love, commitment and attending Friday night services. But the rabbi came through with these practical words I contemplated throughout the entire ceremony: Don’t lock your knees!

Just as I was feeling a little fidgety on stage, worried the muscles in my hand could very well be permanently locked around that bamboo pole, the bride addressed me. "Psst," she said. "Move over".

Move over? The stage was all of four feet wide. And hey, the wedding planner never said the bride was allowed to boss me during the ceremony. So I evaluated the huppa, certain that my pole was not properly angled, and therefore causing the fabric to hang askew in a manner bothersome to the bride.

Not the case. But my cousin told me again to move, this time motioning which direction with her bouquet. The rabbi, meanwhile, was pouring wine or something.

Thankfully I got the message without causing her to miss an important question. My cousin was afraid our seriously petite grandma couldn’t see and wanted me to scoot out of her sight line. Not the treatment an honorable huppa holder might expect, but for my grandma, I can let it go.

I’ve attended a lot of weddings in the last couple of years--now that my friends are approaching their sobering mid-to-late-twenties. But the experience of being part of the wedding--especially for someone with whom I used to play pretend fast food restaurant (we took the orders, our brothers played customers)--is rather extraordinary.

I think my cousin put it best, as we were summoned from the dressing room to pose for bridal party pictures. Looking like she had stepped out of a fairy tale, my cousin the bride turned to me and said, "Isn’t this just the weirdest thing we’ve ever done?"

That, indeed, it was.



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