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Rabbi Gloria

Independent Seattle Rabbi: Destination Weddings · Interfaith Weddings · Jewish Weddings · Baby Namings

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Gloria Milner

A Jersey City Park Wedding

August 15, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

jersey city 4 crpdA couple emailed me several months ago and asked if I could officiate their wedding in Jersey City.  They were indeed an unusual combination of backgrounds.   The groom was from the Netherlands and was working for a company who had offices in New Jersey.  He spoke several languages and was raised Catholic.   The bride was a Russian beauty who had been in the States a few years and spoke perfect English

They invited me over to their apartment in Jersey City for dinner and we spent a lovely evening getting to know each other.  They were wonderful cooking together and served a delicious fish dinner.  We spoke about the service which was for the most part a Jewish one with the groom wanting to wear a tallit and Yamulke.  Both sets of parents were flying in from Netherlands and Russia for the event .

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They planned the service in a park near their apartment in Jersey City.  Afterwards everyone was to be shuttled to a restaurant in Soho for a reception dinner.   I was invited to be a part of the party  and was pleased to be a part of this small and intimate wedding

The day of the wedding forecast was rain on and off, sometimes heavy.  At the last minute, the groom changed the park they would use for the wedding ceremony.  The new park had a large gazebo that would shield us all if the rain became heavy. 

I arrived early and met up with the singer and guitar player.  A friend of theirs was decorating the gazebo and setting up 20 chairs.  Although we felt a few drops of rain, the weather held up.  The bride, looking like a Russian princess, came down the abbreviated aisle and the service began.  They did circling to Etta James song “At Last,” which was amazing. 

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The parents gave a blessing in their native tongues, Dutch and Russian and the brother and sister translated it into English.  He broke the glass and there were congratulatory wishes in many languages.  

After the ceremony, we all boarded a party bus to Manhattan and the bus came complete with psychedelic colors and champagne.   Rap Music was played and we soon were treated to a wonderful dinner and dancing at a Soho restaurant.  The happiness and warmth their friends and family exuded was infectious.  It was a memorable event.

 

Filed Under: Ceremonies Tagged With: Gloria Milner, Jewish Ceremony, Jewish wedding, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner

Destination Wedding in Italian Heaven of Lake Como

July 27, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

A couple emailed me a year ago to ask if I would be interested in officiating a wedding in Lake Como Italy in April 2016.  What a question?  Where do I sign up?   It turns out they were a medical and engineering student couple from Ohio State based in Columbus, Ohio.   We Face-Timed and set up a time for me to visit them in Columbus that winter.  On one of the coldest weekends of the winter I flew out and stayed with them.  They toured me around the campus of OSU, had meals with them and spent time hearing about their backgrounds and upcoming service.  I left with a strong idea of who they were and had established a relationship with them.

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The spring arrived and I had organized a mini vacation around their wedding.  Arriving in Milan first and touring around, I drove to Bellagio where they had set up accommodations in  a cute Bed and Breakfast on the water.  The scenery was spectacular:  Lake Como against the snow-capped mountains of Switzerland.  I met the extended family and had time to visit some magnificent gardens near the inn that were in bloom.  The lushness of the landscaping was breathtaking.

The rehearsal dinner was at a restaurant on the water where we were treated to a dinner of wonderful fish, vegetables and deserts.  The wine offered was, of course, quite special.  Toasts and conversation flowed and again I was treated like one of the family.

lakecomo 3

The wedding day was picture perfect spring weather.  The venue they selected was Villa Balbiano, an Italian landmark featured in such movies as Star Wars and Casino Royale.  It is necessary to take a boat to this private island villa, then walk up to what feels like  a top of the mountain with a breathtaking view of the entire lake area.  We set up the ceremony on the top under the arches with chairs facing the amazing panorama.  Officiating there was one of the high points of my career as it is so extraordinarily beautiful and the couple felt like my children. 

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We toured around the villa gardens which had amazing statues and flowers then went back to the inn where a wonderful dinner was waiting.  Cocktails first in the garden overlooking the water and then a wonderful meal.  What can one say except it was too short and over too soon.   This was a destination wedding made in heaven.

 

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Filed Under: Ceremonies, Destinations, Uncategorized Tagged With: choosing a wedding officiant, Destination wedding, find a rabbi for a wedding ceremony, finding a rabbi, Gloria Milner, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner, Villa Balbiano, wedding ceremony, wedding officiant

Rabbi Gloria’s “How To” Manual for Co-officiating an Interfaith Wedding Ceremony

June 23, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

Co-officiating an Interfaith Wedding Ceremony

As an independent rabbi, I have done many interfaith wedding ceremonies over the last few years. Usually I meet with the couple a number of times, script the service, counsel and work with the respective families. It has become more and more popular to have two officiants at the service. The bride and groom each seem to want a member of their religious background present to represent them.

This has been wonderful and life affirming for me. As an independent rabbi in NYC, I welcome the opportunity to co-officiate and have become a bit of an “expert” in this field. I usually contact the other officiant first via phone or email and discuss our backgrounds and ideas for the service. Then I try and schedule a meeting of the four of us after preparing an outline. I try and be proactive and prepared before meeting so that the couple and officiants have a guide to work from. If the other officiant is in the area I host the meeting in my NYC apartment. If not, we have connected by conference calls, set up in advance.

Then, I will email a script based on the meeting to all and ask for comments. We can meet again in person or email to firm up the service. I will usually call the other officiant to make sure we are on the same page.

Chemistry between officiants is of utmost importance, as the couple and audience are looking for signs of respect and communality. So, the the two of us usually get to the wedding early and spend time one-on-one . I might take his or her arm when we walk down the aisle and try to incorporate the minister or priest in some of my rituals.

If a couple does not have an officiant of the Christian faith, I often help them find one; I have worked with many wonderful clergy over the last number of years. Most people, following such a wedding, remark to me, “The service was so warm! Did you know the other officiant for many years?” Some actually tell me that we should “Take our show on the road.” Or start a television show!

If you need a co-officiant for your interfaith wedding ceremony, it would be my pleasure to help you.

 

Filed Under: Ceremonies, Planning, Uncategorized Tagged With: Gloria Milner, independent rabbi in NYC, interfaith ceremony, interfaith ceremony in New York, interfaith marriage, interfaith marriage in New York, interfaith officiant, interfaith rabbi, interfaith rabbi in New York, interfaith service, interfaith service in New York, interfaith wedding, interfaith wedding ceremony, interfaith wedding ceremony in New York, interfaith wedding in New York, interfaith wedding officiant, interfaith wedding officiant in New York, interfaith wedding rabbi, interfaith wedding rabbi in New York, Jewish Ceremony, Jewish Ceremony in New York, Jewish wedding, Jewish wedding ceremony, Jewish wedding in New York, marriage ceremony, marriage ceremony in New York, nontraditional rabbi, nontraditional wedding, NYC interfaith rabbi, Parkinson's, planning an interfaith wedding, planning an interfaith wedding in New York, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner

An Intimate and loving June Wedding

June 9, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

June 21A lovely couple contacted me many months ago to officiate their wedding.  These two people were very interesting: she a lawyer with poise and creativity, he a college teacher who was originally a psychology major but now was completing his PhD in mathematics.  They had known each other for 17 years and seemed already married; they were extremely easy with one another.

We first met at my apartment in NYC and then it was my turn to visit them at their house in Long Island . I love these visits because it tells me so much of what the couple is about: the treadmill machine in the den confirmed they are both runners; and all the art work on the walls – she actually sketched the drawing for her chuppah. He had traveled through 42 states in the U.S, and she had toured around Europe.

Over wine and cheese we spoke about their life together.  She said her high school teacher advised her to “marry someone smarter than you and you’ll live a happy life and never be bored.”  She thinks over the years they have discovered that each of them is smart in different ways and their differences make them a stronger couple.  How wise.  The groom wrote that his bride to be is a woman who cares for him fiercely and gives him a sense of security the like of which he has never known.

The actual wedding took place on a picture-perfect day in June at a beach club on Long Island.  Seventy friends and family watched as I officiated the service that the couple and I had written together. A low-key, warm and welcoming ceremony, it was a true reflection of this wonderful couple.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: finding a rabbi in nyc, getting married in nyc, Gloria Milner, independent rabbi in NYC, Long Island ceremony, Long Island wedding, NYC wedding, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner

A Greek Orthodox – Jewish Wedding Ceremony

May 20, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner


The mother of a groom contacted me over a year ago from outside of Baltimore.  She was Greek Orthodox, and was experiencing considerable trouble
 finding a Greek Orthodox officiant to work with a Rabbi.  The bride’s family was Jewish and open to having both faiths represented.  The groom’s mother, having read my blog from a few years back about combining these two faiths into one ceremony, believed I would be the right officiant for the couple.

So, we started the “get-to-know-you” process.  The bride and her sister took a bus into NY in the dead of winter and we began to draft the service. Then, this spring, I traveled down by train to Baltimore to sit down with the families. We had many telephone conversations, all the while developing a warm and close relationship. 

Mothers of the bride and the groom

The Greek woman, a religious person, sent me links to Greek Orthodox wedding customs;  I read 50 pages of texts and, thanks to her, learned a great deal about their customs.  I was amazed to see the similarities to Judaism: in circling, wine drinking and treating the bride and groom as king and queen for the day.

I drove down to the wedding this Memorial Day weekend and felt like I had known these people for a long time.  The best man, or “kumbaro”  in Greek, did the exchange of crowns for the couple.  The crowns are joined by a ribbon which symbolizes the unity of the couple as royalty for the day.

I recited the Kiddish Scheckyanu and Seven Wedding Blessings and we said the benediction in both Hebrew and Greek.  It felt like a seamless ceremony and as the groom broke the glass the audience yelled Mazel Tov and Syncharintiria,  the Greek equivalent.  How wonderful to be able to be present in this moment in time for two special families who will be my friends going forward!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Ceremonies, interfaith wedding, Uncategorized Tagged With: co-officiation, finding a rabbi in nyc, Gloria Milner, Greek Orthodox wedding, interfaith ceremony, interfaith marriage in New York, interfaith rabbi, interfaith wedding, interfaith wedding ceremony, interfaith wedding officiant, interfaith wedding rabbi in New York, Kiddish Scheckyanu, planning an interfaith wedding in New York, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner, Scheckyanu, Seven Wedding Blessings

Fabulous wedding locations and venues!

May 12, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

I have been very fortunate in the last few years to marry couples in wonderful venues! What a delight it is to experience the wedding venues people choose, the imagination that goes into some of their selections, and the fun that we all have!

Since your wedding day is a day you will remember for the rest of your life, choosing a place that is near and dear to your heart is vitally important. Whether it be a church, a synagogue, a garden, the beach, or a mountain top, it should reflect your personalities, your comfort level, and your dreams!

Here are just a few of the spots I have officiated or co-officiated recent weddings:

lond island jan 2014

The North Shore of Long Island.

I recently co-officiated a lovely interfaith wedding, with a minister, at a beautiful golf club, The Creek in Locust Valley on the North Shore of Long Island. Check out this hundred year old venue; it is not only gorgeous, it is very well run. We had an incredible day and the couple were thrilled!

Read the blog

 

plaza hotel

 What can say? It is The Plaza Hotel in New York City! I co-officiated an incredible wedding last year at this wondrous hotel – a true landmark in New York City. I was unprepared for just how intimidating the Plaza Hotel ballroom can be. A product of the early 1900s, it boasts soaring ceilings, beautiful woodwork, detailing and amazing balconies. The decorations for the wedding were incredible: candles everywhere, flowers overflowing and lights illuminating the gold fixtures. The chupah was located on the stage, and we rehearsed as if it were a Broadway production. Lights, audio, video. And with 275 people in attendance, I truly felt like I was beginning my theatrical career.

But I concentrated on the spiritual service at hand and felt gratitude that I had been selected to lead this service in such a historic, elegant and magnificent setting.

Read the blog

  

 

Rooftop of the Brooklyn Sheraton, New York City

 After proposing during the 6th inning of a Yankee game, a couple I recently married chose the roof of the Brooklyn Sheraton for their big event. What fun! Although the day was overcast, by evening when the ceremony took place the sun shone and we were treated to a phenomenal sunset.

Blog: Click here

           

Image result for pinterest images new york botanical garden

October in one of the most beautiful and famous gardens in the northeast… Yes, you can get married there! This past fall I had the pleasure of marrying a wonderful young couple, amidst the gorgeous setting of the New York Botanical Gardens in the Bronx. The colors were at peak in the area and the couple was lucky that they missed the beginning of Hurricane Sandy by one day. They had lovely weather with temperatures in the 60′s for their early evening ceremony.

   Blog: Click here

 

  

Block Island, off the coast of Rhode Island

 Beautiful Block Island.jpgBlock Island is a charmer off the coast of Rhode Island. Last summer I co-officiated a wedding ceremony for a lovely couple from Manhattan who loved the island and felt it was the only place on earth they wanted to get married. The island is family-friendly, and small enough to be negotiated with moped or bicycle. Ferries are the only means of transportation there which discourages people from bringing cars.

The old Victorian Bed and Breakfasts and grand hotels dot the bluffs and town streets and the Spring House Hotel, where we were, was wonderful. The beaches are pristine and beautiful and the weather hot and perfect for swimming.

How lucky I was to have been to officiate in paradise and meet some wonderful new friends . After the service one man came up to me and the minister with whom I was co-officiating and said “you should be on television, the two of you together are magical.” How much better could the praise be?

Read the blog

 

FountainBleu Inn

 

The wedding was on the grass overlooking a lake at the FountainBleu Inn, in the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York. It is a lovingly restored, 1815 country inn with authentic antiques and beautiful grounds.

The FountainBleu Inn really is a wonderful venue, with a Tudor banquet room which seats up to 150 guests and opens on to a spacious stone patio overlooking the lake.  It was a wonderful late spring day, and joy was in the air!

Blog Click here

   

Theatrical Synagogue Wedding in New York


 Angel Orensanz is an 1850′s German synagogue on the Lower East Side of NYC, where many celebrities such as Sarah Jessica Parker have held their weddings.

I recently officiated a dramatic and gorgeous wedding there. This soaring space had room for three balconies and a capacity of 800 people. When the lighting was on it transported those there into another realm.

Check out my blog for all the details of this incredible day.

Filed Under: Ceremonies, Destinations, Planning Tagged With: ceremony locations, Gloria Milner, interfaith ceremony in New York, interfaith Jewish officiant, interfaith rabbi, interfaith rabbi in New York, interfaith wedding officiant in New York, marriage locations, marriage venues, planning an interfaith wedding in New York, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner, wedding ceremony, wedding locations, wedding venues

A Hip Brooklyn Baby Naming

April 26, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

June  25 blog + gallery
A couple called me to officiate the baby naming of their daughter who was celebrating her first birthday as well.  They lived in Brooklyn and selected a Russian bar named Karloff in Cobble Hill for an afternoon ceremony.   I met with them at their apartment and stayed to see them feed Eve, the baby.   She was an adorable little girl who loved the healthy vegetable puree her mother had prepared.

I learned some of the people for whom she was named were great grandmothers who had suffered many hardships and for whom family closeness was paramount.  One was the family matriarch who worked in a sweatshop on the Lower east side and was a player in the Yiddish theater.   They chose the name Eve for its simplicity and power.  The first woman on the earth and the one who gives life to all.  Her middle name was chosen in honor of her grandfather Howard who was a man with a ready smile and sense of adventure.  They already see evidence of these traits in Eve.

It was a warm and loving ceremony with all family members participating.  Rob, the father of the baby, used the tallit from his bar mitzvah.  A kiddish cup was used from a family wedding as well.  And they used an old Hasidic tradition at the end of the ceremony.  Family and friends were supposed to shower the child with candy and other sweets to symbolize their wishes that both the child and parents have a sweet life.   So, all who attended received a little bag of candy to take home.

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The Brooklyn bar setting at Karloff’s was intimate and contemporary at the same time.  The bar was beautiful and the waiters and waitresses accommodating.  Lunch was served with drinks, of course, and everyone was so relaxed and welcoming.  This may be setting a great trend as Brooklyn is now doing in food and community.

 

Thanks to Michelle Murray, photograher.  

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Baby Naming, Ceremonies, Uncategorized Tagged With: baby naming, baby naming ceremony, baby naming in NYC, Brooklyn baby naming, finding a rabbi in nyc, Gloria Milner, karloff, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner

A Salsa/Jewish Interfaith wedding in New York

March 17, 2016 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

 

gloria march 5 2014 ninth

A good friend of mine, Harvey Averne, enjoyed a wonderful career as a multi-talented vibraphonist, band leader, producer and record label owner.  His best friend was Larry Harlow, who is a renowned salsa-music performing composer and producer. His mother was an opera singer and father a band leader at the Latin Quarter nightclub in NYC. Falling in love with the Spanish sound, Larry left to attend school in Cuba. He went on to produce over 260 albums for Fania Records.
latin grammy

Among his contributions to music was his insistence on creation of a Latin Grammy award.  In 2008 he was presented with a Latin Grammy Lifetime Award.

gloria march 5 fourth

Larry planned to marry a lovely woman who had first started coming to his concerts in Cuba when she was just 15.  She had been a runner there and has a striking face and athletic dancer’s body.  I was delighted to officiate the interfaith wedding for them.

We held the wedding ceremony in his apartment in New York City with a few close friends. I lent them my husband’s tallit to use as the chuppah. The bride was not Jewish (as Larry is) but wanted a Jewish wedding ceremony. They did the circling to all of us singing a Yiddish wedding song, recited the Kiddish Prayer and Shehechyanu and I did the benediction at the end. It was a very emotional experience for the people present; tears of happiness streamed down the couple and friends’ cheeks. We broke out a bottle of champagne and toasted l’chaim.

The moral of the story: It is never too late to find love in your older years.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Ceremonies, Uncategorized Tagged With: chuppah, finding a rabbi in nyc, getting married in nyc, Gloria Milner, Harvey Averne, interfaith ceremony, interfaith marriage, interfaith officiant, interfaith rabbi, interfaith service, interfaith wedding, interfaith wedding ceremony, interfaith wedding officiant, interfaith wedding rabbi, interfaith weddings, Jewish Ceremony, Jewish wedding, Jewish wedding ceremony, Larry Harlow, Latin Grammy, marriage ceremony, New York rabbi, NY, NYC, planning an interfaith wedding, Rabbi Gloria, tallit

An Intimate and Spectacular NYC Wedding Ceremony

December 9, 2015 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

dec 9 2014  FIVE

I recently had the good fortune to officiate an intimate, but spectacular interfaith wedding ceremony at one of the premier event spaces in New York City: Gotham at Broadway and 36th st.  It was, in its former life, Greenwich Savings Bank, built in 1922. It occupies an entire city block, boasting a spectacular domed stain glass window and dozens of Star of Davids on the ceiling, added by the Jewish builder.  It is the kind of place you see in the movies; set up with flowers, candles and decorated tables, it looked amazing.

The couple getting married came from different worlds.  The bride was a Jewish NYC woman brought up by sophisticated parents. She attended private school and grew up in an urban lifestyle.  The groom, on the other hand, hailed from a small town of 15,000 people, in Northern England,  where sheep were as common as the pigeons are in NYC.  They met in the airport on the way to an event in Cabo, in Mexico.  Working in Public Relations, she was covering the event for a magazine, and he was playing in a rock band at the same venue.  Their friendship began and seven years later they decided to make it official.

dec 9 2014I enjoyed getting to know them.  They invited me to their apartment and we had an easy time over wine and cheese as I got to know their cat.  Then, we went on to my apartment for more drinks and cheese, and wrote the service. The bride’s parents happened to live a few blocks from my apartment and invited me to dinner with them.  We fell into conversation as though we had known each other many years.  His parents came to NY a few days prior to the wedding and I met with them as well.  His stepfather was a Vicar in England and they had asked him to read from Corinthians during the service.  He had never met a woman rabbi just as I had never met a vicar.  All these meetings brought a personal feeling and intimacy to the service,  even though it was a large space with 250 people attending.

dec 9 2014  TWO

 The capper was a Yiddish wedding song, “Tumbalalaika,” which the groom’s best friend (a  band member)  sang while they circled each other during the service.  I worked with his friend who was singing with the string trio.  Even though he was an accomplished singer, he welcomed my input. The result was moving and beautiful.

They invited me to stay for the star-studded reception and while I danced the night away, I thought how lucky I was to have such a personal glimpse into their lives and to welcome them into my life as well.

 

dec 9 2014  THREE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Ceremonies, Uncategorized Tagged With: finding a Rabbi in NY, Gloria Milner, interfaith ceremony, interfaith marriage, interfaith officiant, interfaith rabbi, interfaith service, interfaith wedding, intimate NYC wedding, intimate wedding, intimate wedding ceremony, NY wedding ceremony, NYC interfaith wedding ceremony, planning an interfaith wedding, planning wedding ceremonies, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner, rabbi milner

A Country Club Co-Officiation; a Warm and Loving Interfaith Wedding!

November 21, 2015 by Rabbi Gloria Milner

     I was asked almost a year ago to co-officiate and interfaith wedding with a minister on the North Shore of Long Island.  A beautiful golf club, The Creek in Locust Valley, was the venue which had been founded over a hundred years ago.   The bride’s parents and grandparents were members and it was a place that had many wonderful memories for the family.  The minister was a family friend of the bride’s parents and was most anxious to work with me to create a loving seamless service.

     We met at the club, the groom’s parents apartment in the city and again the night before the wedding .   We were determined that all present (many of whom had never been to a Jewish service) would feel comfortable.  The minister suggested  reading from the Book of Ruth which had as its theme loyalty and inclusivity between Jewish and non-Jewish people.

     When it came time for the Hebrew Kiddish prayer over wine the minister handed the couple the wine goblet, read the English prayer and I did the Hebrew.  We complete the service with a benediction called Aaron’s Prayer- our hands were over the bride and groom crisscrossed so that we were a tight group.  It was truly inspiring.

     As I took the arm of the officiant for the recessional I felt the commonality of religions and people.  We truly had worked hard to make the service warm and respectful to both faiths.  The response from both Jewish and Christian people afterwards confirmed my feelings.  Nothing but smiling faces and loving wishes.

Filed Under: Ceremonies, Destinations, Uncategorized Tagged With: co-officiation, country club wedding, Destination wedding, finding a rabbi in nyc, Gloria Milner, interfaith ceremony, interfaith ceremony in New York, interfaith marriage, interfaith marriage in New York, interfaith officiant, interfaith rabbi, interfaith rabbi in New York, interfaith service, interfaith service in New York, interfaith wedding, interfaith wedding ceremony, interfaith wedding ceremony in New York, interfaith wedding in New York, interfaith wedding officiant, interfaith wedding officiant in New York, interfaith wedding rabbi, interfaith wedding rabbi in New York, Jewish Ceremony, Jewish Ceremony in New York, Jewish wedding, Jewish wedding ceremony, Jewish wedding in New York, Long Island, Long Island weddiing, marriage ceremony, marriage ceremony in New York, nontraditional rabbi, nontraditional wedding, nontraditional wedding officiant, North Shore, planning an interfaith wedding, planning an interfaith wedding in New York, Rabbi Gloria, Rabbi Gloria Milner, The Creek Locust Valley

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Contact Rabbi Gloria

Rabbi Gloria

Rabbi Gloria Milner

Mobile: 1-646-327-6307
Email: gloriamilner@gmail.com

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A loving and vibrant person, Rabbi Gloria creates positive energy for everyone she encounters. Whether creating Jewish or interfaith weddings, or conducting baby-naming ceremonies, she takes the extra time to consider the thoughts and dreams of the participants. Her clients feel she is part of their family!

Recent Blog Posts

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