Yes, but we (religious Jews) don't have the custom of throwing the bouquet.
It is not a traditional practice for a Jewish bride to carry flowers during the wedding ceremony. However, some Jewish brides may choose to carry a bouquet as a personal preference or cultural adaptation. Ultimately, the decision to carry flowers is up to the individual bride and her specific wedding customs.
The Jewish ghetto police secured the deportation of Jewish people to the concentration camps. They were also not permitted to carry weapons.
Everyone had to carry ID cards. But the Nazis made every Jewish male add 'Israel' as their middle name and every Jewish female add 'Sarah'.
The German bureaucracy had paperwork that goes back for at least a century that would indicate that a person was Jewish. German birth certificates usually list your family's religion. The Nazis, additionally, made people carry around identification cards showing that they were Jewish. In many instances, the Nazis had more knowledge about Jewish heritage than the Germany citizenry and would go to the houses of Christians who had at least one Jewish grandparent and inform them of their Jewish heritage before carting them away.
It gave the public the impression that there was popular support for anit-Jewish measures. Also there were no international complaints.
its aim was to drink assassinate Stalin to ensure Hitler's athiest army would not carry with their global conquest of converting everyone to become Jewish.
Of course! Bride's don't have to carry a bouquet. Several people are allergic to flowers and thus cannot carry them. There are silk flowers (that look extraordinarily realistic) that can be used. You can carry anything you want. In my apple themed wedding I'm carrying a large red apple. Use your theme to come up with something original.
About the time of the Middle Ages, people took their one bath of the year about April, when the weather was starting to warm up. Marriages traditionally took place in June and, by that time, people were starting to smell a bit ripe. Therefore the bride would carry flowers to help cover the offensive odor. That is the theory I have read somewhere.
No restriction on flowers .
At Orthodox Jewish weddings, the groom is escorted by both fathers and the bride is escorted by both mothers. At modern Jewish weddings, the bride and groom are escorted by their parents.
her bouquet
umm... yes. I know I do. When you buy flowers you have to carry them to your mother! Therefore, yes, people can carry flowers
By the groom.
Flowers contain pollen and bees carry it to other flowers but some flowers can spread their own pollen.
Bedecken.
Generally the mother of the bride and the groom's mother get their corsages when the bride's; maid of honor; bridesmaids flowers are delivered to the bride's parent's home, but if the bride would like to give her mother a bouquet of flowers personally from her then it should be done in private (at home) or, if you want to give the bouquet of flowers to the mother then also include the future mother-in-law or it is poor etiquette and there could be some hurt feelings by the mother-in-law.
they get marriedthey are blessed by parents and the priestthey light candles togetherthe broom gives flowers to the bride and bride maids
At every Jewish wedding I've attended, the bride wore white.