According to the Torah, Jews are not allowed to marry non-Jews. Possibly in other sects of Judaism, it is not considered against the religion, but in most families it is frowned upon.
Most Orthodox or Conservative Jews would only marry a Jew and a non-Jew if the non-Jew converts to Judaism.
Interfaith marriages outside the traditional realm of Orthodox Judaism are on the increase; the inherent fear is that the Jewishness of their children will be diminished through marriage due to the demands of the competing religions, and that the children of such marriages will be confused by their upbringing. The same fear exists in marriages between Catholics and Protestants.
Orthodox Answer:
A Jew and non-Jew cannot marry. Note that Judaism does not require everyone to be Jewish to go to heaven. A non-Jew need only follow the 7 Laws of Noah, given after the Flood, to be considered righteous. While a Jew must follow all 613 Commandments of the Torah. As their service to God is different so are the requirements of a marriage, therefore a Jew and non-Jew cannot marry.
Another answer:
While, technically, the rule in Judaism is you are only supposed to marry other Jewish people, many Jews don't follow this rule. Many Jews aren't religious. The Jewish identity is a very complex identity and is as much cultural as it is religious.
Note that intermarriage is gradually causing the disappearance of broad segments of the Jewish people.
In addition to the Torah's prohibition against intermarriage, there are very many cases in which the spouses use the religious difference as fuel to add to the flames once they're already fighting over other matters. Maintaining a marriage is hard enough without the interfering factor of different religious backgrounds.
Also, there is the question of how to raise the children. A seemingly kumbaya-type peace-loving interfaith education very often turns out to be confusing to the children, who now have no complete identity. Statistics show that mixed-marriage children are less likely to practice any religion at all, than are their single-faith peers (even those of minimally-religious homes).
In actual practice, intermarriage amounts to assimilation, the product of which is descendants who may no longer see themselves as part of the religious heritage of either parent.
Passover is usually only celebrated by Jews
Where can you marry an illegal allien?
Jews were always allowed to marry, but not always able to practice their faith.
If you marry an illegal, that person is considered a citizen. But when you divorce that person their citizenship is revoked. STATED BY AUTHOR
No, it is not illegal.
Yes, it is.
Yes, they can.
To marry an illegal immigrant in Greece you can go to a local marriage office. However, this is not advised.
Yes and and two illegal immigrants can marry although they are not here legally. It doesn't matter.
well if they are in Mexico then they arent an illegal immigrant anymore. If you love them then yeah marry them.
yea u can marry
NO!