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Couples torn in considering Sept.
11 as wedding date
By EVAN BERLAND
The Associated Press
TRENTON, N.J. - Sept. 11 conjures
varied memories for Yolanda Coleman.
For most of her life, she knew
the date as her father's birthday.
Three years ago, the businesswoman
was working in lower Manhattan and watched firsthand as the World
Trade Center towers crashed down.
Now, Coleman and fiance Carlos
Gamboa plan to put their own stamp on the date - by getting married.
"At first I was a little
mixed," said Coleman, 35, of Piscataway. "I think three
years later there's a bit of distance. We want to replace those
negative memories with something that's positive."
New Jersey couples-to-be and
wedding facilities find themselves conflicted this year - the
first time that Sept. 11 has fallen on a Saturday since before
the terrorist attacks. The state's proximity to New York, with
its many commuters who head into the city, still finds many grieving
for loved ones and colleagues. Nevertheless, steep discounts
and the wedding season's limited number of choice dates are expected
to help draw couples to the altar.
"It really does strike
people as, 'Boy, that's a hard anniversary' and not enough time
has gone by and, especially in our area, many of us know people
who were killed," said Sharon Naylor, a Madison-based author
of 23 books on wedding planning.
On the other hand, said Naylor,
"It is a Saturday in September and those days are not so
easy to find."
Kyle Brown, head of the Bakersfield,
Calif.-based Bridal Association of America, said his informal
research shows that that nearly three times the number of brides
are registered for Sept. 18 compared to Sept. 11.
Based on the work done by his
invitation printing business, Brown said the date appears to
be eschewed by all but some military couples who have told him
they want to "honor" the day by being married.
Erik Kent, who runs a wedding
planning site, NJWeddings.com, said some of the couples he assists
are getting married on Sept. 11. But more are choosing the Saturday
before or after, he said.
Coleman said she expects to
save as much as $6,000 on her 200-person wedding at a West Orange
banquet hall that features what she called "Old World charm"
and French doors opening to gardens. There, guests will hear
the bride and groom's African American and Guatemalan backgrounds
reflected by a band playing R&B and Latin music, and by watching
Coleman and Gamboa, of East Orange, "jump the broom"
- an African American ritual created by slaves who could not
legally marry. She's also planning a moment of silence.
Jacqueline Farthing refused
to get married at the Ramada Inn in Toms River on Sept. 11.
"That was the absolutely
only time they had available and I said no, I'd rather do it
in August," said Farthing, 29, a Trenton teacher who lives
in Toms River. "I just don't want my anniversary to be the
anniversary of all those deaths."
A cancellation allowed her
to scoop up a reservation for Friday night, Sept. 10.
One man in Farthing's wedding
party lost his brother-in-law in the attacks; she is planning
a morning prayer service during a day-after brunch.
Couples who do choose Sept.
11 for their weddings should try to be sensitive to invitees
who may be offended "because there is no right way to feel,"
said Millie Martini Bratten, editor-in-chief of Bride's magazine.
Bratten said she has found
the date is more an issue on the East Coast, especially around
New York area, Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C., where the four
planes crashed.
She said people who got married
in the days and weeks after Sept. 11, 2001, had to make similar
emotional decisions.
"Life goes on and there
is great happiness and weddings are all about hope and the future,"
Bratten said. "There's no need to be ashamed of happiness."
Nancy Androsky, a Byram Township
native, said Sept. 11 worked out for a variety of reasons. Considerations
included her fiance's brother heading to college in August, and
Jewish relatives who will be observing holidays in late September.
"Once we say it, everyone
kind of just pauses for a second and some people react, 'Why
did you choose that day?' But it doesn't bother us," said
Androsky, 24. "We get it from everybody. It's the day we
chose and we're happy with it, and if they're not, it is their
problem."
By now, Androsky's initial
worries about the date have taken a back seat to preoccupation
with more typical details, such as her Mount Olive reception
site's three serving stations - pasta, salad and carving, with
turkey and roast beef - and the purple and white rose bouquet
she will carry.
"It is a sad day and we're
going to make a happy memory of the day," said Androsky,
of Ellicott City, Md.
That sentiment may be a tougher
transformation for a venue such as The Bernards Inn in Bernardsville,
about 40 miles from New York City.
There are tentative plans to
host a birthday party at the inn this Sept. 11, but no wedding
receptions are booked that day.
The inn held six funeral and
memorial services for people who died Sept. 11 three years ago,
on what assistant general manager Diane Carr says has "almost
become a reverent day."
"We are extremely sensitive
to it because we lost so many people and a lot of the brides
that might be coming here to look at us for a wedding site may
have lost family members or friends and out of respect for that
they would not pick a wedding day that might be sad," Carr
said.
She said she has gingerly approached
brides, offering discounts as low as $100 per person - rather
than the usual $160 - for five hours of open bar, food and a
wedding cake. While every other weekend at the inn is booked,
with weddings also planned for Sept. 10 and Sept. 12, Carr said
nobody has paused to even consider that Saturday.
"It'll probably be the
last possible day that somebody wants to pick. I think it's going
to be a long time before somebody picks it as a wedding day,"
she said.
©2004 Copyright Calkins
Media, Inc. All rights reserved.
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