After 47-years together Australian Jewish couple have same-sex wedding

Two men who have been together for almost half a century become first same-sex Jewish pair to tie the knot since gay marriage became legal down under

Ilan Buchman and Oscar Shub stood under a Chuppah

Two men who have been in a relationship for 47 years became the first Jewish same sex couple to be married in an Australian synagogue.

Australia legalised same-sex marriages five months ago.

At their wedding ceremony earlier this month, Ilan Buchman and Oscar Shub stood under a Chuppah. Each groom circled the other three times and the seventh revolution they did together simulating a figure eight. And each man broke a separate glass simultaneously.

Rabbi Jeffrey Kamins, the spiritual leader of Sydney’s Emanuel Synagogue, told JTA: “It was an incredible honor and privilege, on behalf of Emanuel Synagogue, to officiate at the first same-sex ceremony under the legislation.”

Emanuel Synagogue is a pluralist congregation, including the Masorti, Progressive and Renewal streams of Judaism, which all have advocated for marriage equality in Australia.

“Oscar and I have been partners for 47 years and after 47 years our fondness for each other is as strong as it ever was and hopefully will continue to be so,” Buchman told JTA.

Ilan Buchman and Oscar Shub waited 47-years to get married

In Shub’s speech at the wedding he said: “Who would have believed in 1971 that I would be standing here tonight married to my partner, my best friend, and the love of my life for the past 47 years’. That says it all.”

Buchman told JTA the new legislation is “important and life changing for so many gay people, particularly young people coming to grips with their sexuality, and for their parents to realise that their gay child can live life exactly as everyone else.”

He acknowledged that the legalisation of same-sex marriage “took a long time to come.”

Shub added: “I feel that after years of discrimination we have a duty to ease the passage for the young generation of LGBTI people who are coming out to be accepted by their communities.”

A second same-sex wedding is scheduled at the synagogue early next month, to be officiated by Kamins and Rabbi Jacqueline Ninio, who has been a strong advocate of marriage equality in the Jewish community for over a decade.

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