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Jeanne
Beginner October 2010

Jumping the Broom

Jeanne, on April 20, 2010 at 3:14 PM Posted in Planning 0 13

Is anyone Jumping the broom? I am and I wanted to share a website I found that has beautiful brooms for this ritual. http://www.broommagic.com/shopexd.asp?id=166

Broom jumping is most famous in the United States as an African American wedding custom. During the antebellum period in the United States, slave marriages were not recognized as legal or binding. The broom jumping ritual was a symbolic act within slave communities for marriage. Many African American couples are taking back this custom and incorporating it as part of their modern ceremony. Broom jumping was not done only by slaves however, poor whites in the South and in New England, as well as Gypsies also used this marriage ritual. The jumping of the broom is of Welsh and Celtic origin. In the Celtic ritual, it is a symbol of fertility. Several couples interested in history or pagan ritual also are now adopting this custom in their weddings.

Modern Meanings:

Done as an act of remembrance and to honor the ancestors of the past. Compared to the Jewish wedding ritual of crushing a glass for the destruction of the temple. A broom itself represents cleanliness, the hearth and family. It can also represent fertility. The jumping of the broom is a leap of faith into marriage. In some parts of Africa, ceremonial brooms are used to sweep away evil.

13 Comments

Latest activity by E&D, on September 21, 2014 at 11:38 AM
  • MIA 2 CHI
    Devoted March 2011
    MIA 2 CHI ·
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    I am jumping the broom and my wedding party and family is going to help decorate the broom at the rehearsal dinner so it will be really special. The me and FH will hang the broom somehwere in our house as rememberance of our wedding day. So excited to see someone who isn't African-American carrying on this tradition.

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  • Mrs. Kline (Sass)
    Master December 2010
    Mrs. Kline (Sass) ·
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    I would break my leg so no I am not.

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  • FMW ~ BatLlama
    Master May 2011
    FMW ~ BatLlama ·
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    Haha yeah I'm with Sass. Let my broken toes be a reminder. I'm not allowed to take my feet off the floor, they do that enough on their own anyway. I actually broke my arm by trying to jump over something...

    Great idea though! I just wouldn't wanna spend my honeymoon in the emergency room =P

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  • Patricia Fearon
    Patricia Fearon ·
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    I designed ceremony programs for a bride who was doing that. I was intrigued, I never heard of it before!

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  • Cheleigh
    Devoted April 2010
    Cheleigh ·
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    I'll try to show you a photo of my and DH jumping the broom.

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  • yadayada
    Master October 2009
    yadayada ·
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    Haha I had a (white) coworker who did this at his wedding. I don't know if it may be offensive to your African-American guests but at his wedding this older, very funny black lady yelled out "Oh My God!" in surprise/amazement when they did it. I never found out whether she was offended or just trying to be funny, but wanted to point it out in case you might have some guests who could get offended.

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  • K
    Master October 2011
    Kiss My ·
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    I was looking up pagan ceremonies and saw this one as well. I am considering putting it in our wedding.

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  • Camlynn2
    Super August 2010
    Camlynn2 ·
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    Truthfully, I currently live in SC where the Gullah culture/heritage is quite large. Jumping the broom is common practice at AA weddings here. I honestly have never heard of any non-AA couples doing it as it is commonly associated with slavery. I personally am NOT doing it as I have so many other parts of my heritage that I want to expose our guests to, not just the parts they think they see like the browness of my skin. We're tying in some Native American features as my husband and I are both of NA decent.

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  • L
    Master March 2011
    LutaWolf ·
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    What NA ceremonies are you doing camlynn2? we are doing the water cleansing ceremony from my Cherokee decent.. Symbolizing the washing away of all others.

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  • C D Mattison
    C D Mattison ·
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    If you're "jumping the broom" in your ceremony, we would like to suggest the perfect gift for the parents of the bride & groom (and a terrific Groom gift too!): The Kente Wedding Coin. The Holden Marks Kente Wedding Coin was inspired by the traditional African Wedding Kente Cloth used to commemorate a wedding wish of unity, elegance and honor. Free engraving for your wedding date & names. Please visit our site for more information: www.holdenmarks.com/hol-kente.html

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  • C D Mattison
    C D Mattison ·
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    The Kente Wedding Coin:

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  • A
    Just Said Yes April 2012
    Amanda ·
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    Thank you for the website info...I plan on jumping the broom and was not sure where to look.

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  • E&D
    Expert July 2015
    E&D ·
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    Thank you for the assistance, but these brooms definitely say "Witches Broom"...this might not be the most appropriate for such a special tradition.

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