Anonymous wrote:Update: my daughter is converting and when she has completed the process, they will marry. It will take a year at least. She is going to sign a prenup that ensures their children will be raised Jewish.
The dinner was great and I think her boyfriend/fiancé is a wonderful man.
The only issue I have is that his mother is disappointed he is marrying a convert. I respect my daughter’s decision and their decision as a couple, and I am trying hard to be respectful of the process. I am excited but also don’t want to be question lady. He was quite good-looking and extremely warm and welcoming and kind. He knocked my socks off! They want to have a large family, which is weird because my daughter has never expressed that desire before. I also appreciate he was honest about his mom. He said he will always love and respect his mom but he loves my daughter completely and wants to spend the rest of his life with her. I think he was worried I would be resistant but it’s not my life or choice. I will support them.
Thanks to everyone who chimed in. I am mostly excited I am hopefully going to have some gorgeous grandchildren someday. I did think about how they will be unable to experience Easter or Christmas, but there’s lots of good things they will have in their lives and that’s all that matters. My daughter is over the moon so over the moon I go with her.
I wonder if grandchildren will think their non-Jewish grandparents are “weird?” I will do anything that encourages a good relationship with them and respect their religion and lifestyle, I hope that is not a disrespectful way of terming it.
Anonymous wrote:
The only issue I have is that his mother is disappointed he is marrying a convert.
Anonymous wrote:The mother is disappointed that her son is marrying a convert, and has expressed this before the couple is married, even made it known to you?
I would recommend that the couple do not live in the same city as MIL
Too much meddling, your daughter is already not good enough
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update: my daughter is converting and when she has completed the process, they will marry. It will take a year at least. She is going to sign a prenup that ensures their children will be raised Jewish.
The dinner was great and I think her boyfriend/fiancé is a wonderful man.
The only issue I have is that his mother is disappointed he is marrying a convert. I respect my daughter’s decision and their decision as a couple, and I am trying hard to be respectful of the process. I am excited but also don’t want to be question lady. He was quite good-looking and extremely warm and welcoming and kind. He knocked my socks off! They want to have a large family, which is weird because my daughter has never expressed that desire before. I also appreciate he was honest about his mom. He said he will always love and respect his mom but he loves my daughter completely and wants to spend the rest of his life with her. I think he was worried I would be resistant but it’s not my life or choice. I will support them.
Thanks to everyone who chimed in. I am mostly excited I am hopefully going to have some gorgeous grandchildren someday. I did think about how they will be unable to experience Easter or Christmas, but there’s lots of good things they will have in their lives and that’s all that matters. My daughter is over the moon so over the moon I go with her.
I wonder if grandchildren will think their non-Jewish grandparents are “weird?” I will do anything that encourages a good relationship with them and respect their religion and lifestyle, I hope that is not a disrespectful way of terming it.
No,they won't think you're weird. I mean, they will if you're weird. But being of a different religion is not weird, it's just different.
Anonymous wrote:Update: my daughter is converting and when she has completed the process, they will marry. It will take a year at least. She is going to sign a prenup that ensures their children will be raised Jewish.
The dinner was great and I think her boyfriend/fiancé is a wonderful man.
The only issue I have is that his mother is disappointed he is marrying a convert. I respect my daughter’s decision and their decision as a couple, and I am trying hard to be respectful of the process. I am excited but also don’t want to be question lady. He was quite good-looking and extremely warm and welcoming and kind. He knocked my socks off! They want to have a large family, which is weird because my daughter has never expressed that desire before. I also appreciate he was honest about his mom. He said he will always love and respect his mom but he loves my daughter completely and wants to spend the rest of his life with her. I think he was worried I would be resistant but it’s not my life or choice. I will support them.
Thanks to everyone who chimed in. I am mostly excited I am hopefully going to have some gorgeous grandchildren someday. I did think about how they will be unable to experience Easter or Christmas, but there’s lots of good things they will have in their lives and that’s all that matters. My daughter is over the moon so over the moon I go with her.
I wonder if grandchildren will think their non-Jewish grandparents are “weird?” I will do anything that encourages a good relationship with them and respect their religion and lifestyle, I hope that is not a disrespectful way of terming it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dumb question here...
If OP's DD converts, and a decade later they divorce for whatever reason, would that impact custody of the kids? What if DD wantsbto become a Christian again?
(I would support my kids to convert to religion X is they truly believe in religion X, but I'd be very suspicious if either wanted to do so as a response to fiance's demands)
It's an interesting question actually because assuming they have a religious ceremony, they will have a Jewish marriage license as well as a secular one. Which means that in order to get divorced and re-married religiously, the man must give the woman a "get" -- a permission. If he doesn't, she can't have a religiously sanctioned second marriage. (Doesn't impact civil marriage of course) Presumably if there were re-conversion considerations that could be an issue.
However, you are assuming that she is converting just to marry him and has no interest in it of her own accord. Most such conversions would not be blessed by a rabbi. Jews do not proselytize or seek to convert people. Converts are welcomed once they convert, but conversions require genuine faith and desire to convert, and a lot of work. You have to take a class, there are religious rituals associated -- it's not just an affirmation of faith -- it's not for the faint-hearted. And most rabbis will want to be sure that she genuinely wants to convert and isn't just doing so to marry her husband. So while of course a decade later she could decide to go back to her Christian faith, it's a lot to assume for someone who has genuinely converted, joined a community, raised a family in that community, etc.
I have a couple Jewish family members whose origins are Christian. Pretty sure my aunt, who never formally converted to Judaism from Catholicism but has practiced Judaism for 40 years and has raised Jewish children, would not suddenly up and become a Catholic if she divorced my uncle.
Thank you so much for the thoughtful answer.
I have a few friends who converted, all because of marriage, and I know it is quite a process.
Now, how can a rabbi ascertain that the desire is pure and independent of marriage, when (in my limited experience) it is always precisely because of marriage?
For example, could OP's DD go though the same exact process and become Jewish were she not planning to marry a Jewish fiance?
Yes, she absolutely could. Nothing about the conversation process is contingent on marrying into the faith. It's supposed to be a pure motivation on the part of the convert.
As for how they ascertain that the desire is pure and independent, they ask.I've never done the process nor inquired deeply of those I know who have, since I felt like it would be rude, but I imagine there is some sort of affirmation you're supposed to make.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dumb question here...
If OP's DD converts, and a decade later they divorce for whatever reason, would that impact custody of the kids? What if DD wantsbto become a Christian again?
(I would support my kids to convert to religion X is they truly believe in religion X, but I'd be very suspicious if either wanted to do so as a response to fiance's demands)
It's an interesting question actually because assuming they have a religious ceremony, they will have a Jewish marriage license as well as a secular one. Which means that in order to get divorced and re-married religiously, the man must give the woman a "get" -- a permission. If he doesn't, she can't have a religiously sanctioned second marriage. (Doesn't impact civil marriage of course) Presumably if there were re-conversion considerations that could be an issue.
However, you are assuming that she is converting just to marry him and has no interest in it of her own accord. Most such conversions would not be blessed by a rabbi. Jews do not proselytize or seek to convert people. Converts are welcomed once they convert, but conversions require genuine faith and desire to convert, and a lot of work. You have to take a class, there are religious rituals associated -- it's not just an affirmation of faith -- it's not for the faint-hearted. And most rabbis will want to be sure that she genuinely wants to convert and isn't just doing so to marry her husband. So while of course a decade later she could decide to go back to her Christian faith, it's a lot to assume for someone who has genuinely converted, joined a community, raised a family in that community, etc.
I have a couple Jewish family members whose origins are Christian. Pretty sure my aunt, who never formally converted to Judaism from Catholicism but has practiced Judaism for 40 years and has raised Jewish children, would not suddenly up and become a Catholic if she divorced my uncle.
Thank you so much for the thoughtful answer.
I have a few friends who converted, all because of marriage, and I know it is quite a process.
Now, how can a rabbi ascertain that the desire is pure and independent of marriage, when (in my limited experience) it is always precisely because of marriage?
For example, could OP's DD go though the same exact process and become Jewish were she not planning to marry a Jewish fiance?
I've never done the process nor inquired deeply of those I know who have, since I felt like it would be rude, but I imagine there is some sort of affirmation you're supposed to make.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dumb question here...
If OP's DD converts, and a decade later they divorce for whatever reason, would that impact custody of the kids? What if DD wantsbto become a Christian again?
(I would support my kids to convert to religion X is they truly believe in religion X, but I'd be very suspicious if either wanted to do so as a response to fiance's demands)
It's an interesting question actually because assuming they have a religious ceremony, they will have a Jewish marriage license as well as a secular one. Which means that in order to get divorced and re-married religiously, the man must give the woman a "get" -- a permission. If he doesn't, she can't have a religiously sanctioned second marriage. (Doesn't impact civil marriage of course) Presumably if there were re-conversion considerations that could be an issue.
However, you are assuming that she is converting just to marry him and has no interest in it of her own accord. Most such conversions would not be blessed by a rabbi. Jews do not proselytize or seek to convert people. Converts are welcomed once they convert, but conversions require genuine faith and desire to convert, and a lot of work. You have to take a class, there are religious rituals associated -- it's not just an affirmation of faith -- it's not for the faint-hearted. And most rabbis will want to be sure that she genuinely wants to convert and isn't just doing so to marry her husband. So while of course a decade later she could decide to go back to her Christian faith, it's a lot to assume for someone who has genuinely converted, joined a community, raised a family in that community, etc.
I have a couple Jewish family members whose origins are Christian. Pretty sure my aunt, who never formally converted to Judaism from Catholicism but has practiced Judaism for 40 years and has raised Jewish children, would not suddenly up and become a Catholic if she divorced my uncle.
Anonymous wrote:Dumb question here...
If OP's DD converts, and a decade later they divorce for whatever reason, would that impact custody of the kids? What if DD wantsbto become a Christian again?
(I would support my kids to convert to religion X is they truly believe in religion X, but I'd be very suspicious if either wanted to do so as a response to fiance's demands)
Anonymous wrote:Dumb question here...
If OP's DD converts, and a decade later they divorce for whatever reason, would that impact custody of the kids? What if DD wantsbto become a Christian again?
(I would support my kids to convert to religion X is they truly believe in religion X, but I'd be very suspicious if either wanted to do so as a response to fiance's demands)
Anonymous wrote:Orthodox Jews in general can marry converts (with a few exceptions) who went an orthodox conversion.