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Match Made on Sinai
SawYouAtSinai.com gives Orthodox
singles a piece of the online dating pie
By Pat Launer
Looking for your bashert (soul-mate)? You’ve probably already seen
him/her – at Sinai. When the Torah was delivered, every Jewish soul
stood at Mt. Sinai with his or her soul-mate, according to the Midrash
(Jewish commentaries). Now all you need is someone to reunite you.
Introducing: SawYouAtSinai.com.
An online site just for Orthodox Jewish singles, it has been in business
for two years, and boasts 13,000 members worldwide. 194 “matches”
have been made, thanks to, in the site’s words, “more than
300 reputable matchmakers.”
SawYouAtSinai claims that it “combines the power of technology,
the accessibility of the internet and the personal touch of a matchmaker.”
Their shadchans work with Modern Orthodox to ‘Yeshivish’ to
‘Black Hat’ Jews from around the world.
Founder/CEO Marc Goldmann reportedly had “a midlife crisis at age
34,” when he was still single and working in the corporate world.
He decided that he had to dedicate himself to a project that had impact
on the Jewish singles community. So, after he found a wife in 2004, he
left Wall Street behind to create “the ultimate online matchmaking
network.”
There are other sites that cater to Jewish singles (JDate.com
is the granddaddy, begun in 1997, with 600,000 members around the globe),
and others that address themselves to the orthodox community (frumster.com,
frumdate.com, orthodate.com,
dosidate.com). But though the costs
are comparable (from free listings to $40/month), they don’t have
the two distinctive qualities of SawYouAtSinai (SYAS): matchmakers and
privacy.
Unlike most dating sites, there is no ‘browsing’ of other
members’ profiles and photos. Each member gets to choose up to three
personal matchmakers, who hand-pick potential matches. The matchmaker
only shows a profile and picture to potential matches. That makes the
site more confidential and discreet than most others. It’s geared
for people who are interested in marriage (JDate also accommodates those
who are looking for ‘just a date’ or an ‘activity partner’).
Like some other sites, there is a charity section; SYAS supports Simchat
Tzion, an organization that covers the wedding costs of needy Israeli
orphans. There are also listings of restaurant discounts and singles events
(lectures, parties, cruises), and lists of rabbis and community leaders
who affirm that SYAS conforms to halacha (Jewish law), including the President
of the Rabbinical Council of America and the National Director of the
National Conference of Synagogue Youth (NCSY).
When you become a member of SawYouAtSinai, you fill out a comprehensive
questionnaire about your religious background, lifestyle, interests, references,
self-description and criteria for a mate. You then select your matchmaker(s),
based on their background, interests and focus; some specialize in particular
ages, religious orientations, locations or personalities.
Matchmakers get to know you through email or phonecalls. They may verify
your information through your references or an interview. Once the matchmaker
offers a matching profile, you have ten days to “accept” or
“decline.” The system blocks the same match from being suggested
twice, and all responses are kept in strict confidence. When two members
agree to a match, SYAS sends contact information so you can arrange a
chat or date. Men are expected to contact women within three days. The
matchmaker may assist the couple through the dating process, if they desire.
A year ago, Ron Caplan was a 24 year-old student at the Ohr Somayach Yeshiva/Educational
Center in Monsey (Rockland County) New York. He had signed up on several
Jewish singles sites, but found that they just amounted to “looking
at pretty girls.”
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For months, he didn’t go on one date. When he found SawYouAtSinai.com,
he realized that everyone there was “serious about getting married.”
His matchmaker lived in Chicago, but she seemed right for him. She sent
him four matches at a time. “They send them to the guy first,”
says the affable Caplan, who’s currently a graduate student in computational
science at San Diego State University. “That way, the girls don’t
feel bad if you ‘decline’ their profile.”
Caplan reviewed about 40-50 profiles, and ‘accepted’ about
15. “I was rejected by most of those,” he admits.
“It just came back ‘Female Declined.’”
Ultimately, he only dated two women through SYAS, one of whom he married.
He liked the idea of having a matchmaker as intermediary.
“Most of the time,” he says, “people don’t know
what they want. There’s often a big difference between what people
say they want and what they really need. It’s good to have an independent
party to match you up.”
Only after they were married did the couple share their original, online
ideal-mate lists: “I don’t fit any of hers,” Caplan
chuckles. “And she doesn’t fit at least half of mine!”
SYAS encourages members to be open-minded, to take as long as they need
to get acquainted before they get engaged, but then they should schedule
the wedding as soon as possible. Caplan was committed to the ‘no-touch’
pre-marital rules of Jewish law. He and Molly Cherniak, age 23, who lived
in Baltimore, dated for two months (about ten dates), then they were engaged
for four months (“too long,” Ron says). They were married
on December 28, 2005. Both would definitely recommend SawYouAtSinai.
“It’s a larger, nationwide dating pool, for one thing,”
says Ron. “It’s a different style from those geared to people
who are not religious,” adds Molly. Both agree: “Bashert is
a concept we believe in.”
In the middle of the SYAS dating game is the matchmaker. San Diegans Karen
Bloch and Raquel Schraub have both served as SYAS matchmaking volunteers.
Karen, born in South Africa, is a marriage and family therapist in La
Jolla. She and Raquel co-wrote a singles/dating advice column for the
site called “Kol Chatan V’kol Kallah” (voice of the
groom and the bride).
“It’s a great site,” says Karen. “The potential
for people to be matched is very good. I had never done matchmaking before.
I realized I’m better at analyzing or deconstructing marriages than
constructing them,” she says with a laugh. She’s backed off
on the matches, but still continues the column.
Raquel, a former actor with a Ph.D. in history, has left SYAS. “I’ve
always been a great networker,” she says. “I see lost souls,
people who are lonely, and it’s easy for me to see who might go
together. I made about 20 shidduchim for them, about 40 total over the
past 15 years. But I felt that my philosophy of matchmaking was vastly
different from all these sites.”
So what’s a shatchan to do? Schraub just launched her own site,
called odyeshama.com, taken from the title of a joyous Jewish wedding
song. Jewish converts (ger tzedek, converts for righteous reasons) are
her specialty, but she accepts all orthodox comers.
“I’m trying to take the best of all sites, and add my sensitive,
caring approach.
I don’t think you can be trained how to make matches. I believe
it’s a gift from God.”
Meanwhile, SawYouAtSinai is also branching out, with a new site called
jretromatch.com. Currently centered in the Tri-State area (New York/New
Jersey/Connecticut), it’s organized just like SYAS, but caters to
Conservadox, Conservative, Reform, Secular and Unaffiliated Jewish Singles.
The ‘Retro’ name refers to the traditional means of getting
together -- matchmaking.
Many of these sites attract primarily younger singles, age 20-40. But
there’s probably someone out there – from Sinai to cyberspace
– for everyone.
For feedback, contact editor@sdjewishjournal.com.
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