Gulf News

Why Gibraltar is Europe’s pandemic wedding hotspot

TINY TERRITORY WELCOMES COUPLES OF ALL NATIONALIT­IES WITH EASY RULES

- BY CEYLAN YEGINSU The History of British Rock ‘n’ Roll. - New York Times News Service

When Je’nell Griffin’s husband proposed to her in November, she dreamed of having a big church ceremony in her hometown, Los Angeles, where she imagined gliding down the aisle in an ethereal gown flanked by scores of friends and family.

But eight months later, after her plans were upended by the coronaviru­s pandemic, the 36-year-old talent recruiter found herself exchanging vows in a small conference room on a yacht hotel in Gibraltar, a tiny British territory nestled under a towering rock on the southern tip of the Iberian Peninsula.

Like many of the couples who married there this summer, Griffin had never heard of Gibraltar until it appeared at the top of a Google search for “the easiest place to get married in Europe.”

All are welcome

At a time when countries around the world are curtailing wedding ceremonies and imposing strict travel restrictio­ns to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s, Gibraltar has welcomed couples of all nationalit­ies, including Americans, who are determined to perform their nuptials despite the obstacles posed by the pandemic.

“It was vastly different from the dream,” said Griffin, who flew to Gibraltar from Los Angeles via London’s Heathrow Airport. “But in the end, the reality of being married to my person far outweighed any vision.”

Many of the marriages being celebrated in Gibraltar, like Griffin’s, involve a US citizen marrying a partner from another country, because of the numerous hurdles the Trump administra­tion has placed on immigratio­n and travel. “We were just tired of constantly being disappoint­ed by all the immigratio­n restrictio­ns that worked against us,” Griffin said, referring to the sweeping travel ban that prevented her British fiancé from visiting her in the US. Now that they are married, he is exempt from the ban because he is a spouse. “Living in different countries, this was the only way we could guarantee seeing each other.”

Other couples who have faced wedding restrictio­ns in their own countries have also seized the opportunit­y to marry in Gibraltar this summer, ahead of a potential second wave of the virus. Ireland currently has a 50-person limit on gatherings, so Craig Byrne, 25, and Orla Moore, 22, both Irish, got married in Gibraltar in front of the registrar and two local witnesses to avoid disappoint­ing family members and friends who would not have made the cut to attend.

Keeping a family secret

“As you’ll know, Irish families are big - you have your brothers and sisters and their children and then the aunts and uncles and cousins and all their children. There’s just no easy way to really choose who you are going to invite without causing a big commotion,” said Byrne, a trainee lawyer. “In the end we just told everyone we were postponing and taking a holiday in Spain and Gibraltar. We didn’t tell our families we got married until we were back because we didn’t want any fuss leading up to it,” Byrne said with a mischievou­s laugh. “You can imagine how that went down with the parents.”

Even before the pandemic, Gibraltar was a popular wedding destinatio­n because of the minimal bureaucrac­y involved in tying the knot there. Couples are required to present their passports and birth certificat­es, and stay in the territory overnight either before or after their wedding. They receive their wedding certificat­e by mail within three weeks.

There is a history to Gibraltar weddings: John Lennon of the Beatles married Yoko Ono there, in 1969, after facing a series of setbacks in other countries. “We chose Gibraltar because it is quiet, British and friendly,” Lennon is quoted as saying in the book

Flights and hotels are full

Few of the couples getting married in Gibraltar on a recent weekend had concerns about the risks of travelling there during the pandemic. So far, the territory has managed to contain the spread of the virus, reporting fewer than 350 total cases and no deaths. However, cases have spiked in recent weeks and the territory’s open border with Spain, where the health ministry reported nearly 9,000 new cases last Friday, prompted Wales to remove Gibraltar from its list of countries exempt from quarantine requiremen­ts.

Still, wedding planners are reporting huge demand; the flights on British Airways and easyJet were full throughout August, and slots at the registry office – the British equivalent of an American city hall marriage bureau – are booked up until November.

“We were just expecting people to cancel or postpone, but as soon as the travel restrictio­ns were lifted in July, the phones wouldn’t stop ringing,” said Chamaine Cruz, the founder of wedding events company Sweet Gibraltar Weddings. “It makes sense as it’s easy to get married here. It’s cheap, there are many direct flights, and the marriage certificat­e provided is recognised worldwide.”

Getting on with life

Rock Occasions, another wedding planning service, reported a 20 per cent increase in bookings through August. “The couples coming here are determined that the pandemic does not ruin their lives. They just want to get on with it,” said Resham Mahtanim, a wedding coordinato­r at Rock Occasions.

Olivia Windham Stewart echoed that determinat­ion. The 34-year-old British human rights specialist married her US partner in Gibraltar’s botanical gardens last week. “It’s been such a frustratin­g and disappoint­ing year, having to slow down all our life plans, so it was such a big relief when we found Gibraltar and realised that there was a place where we could actually get married,” she said.

Celebratio­ns to end it all

Throughout the day, couples line up outside Gibraltar’s Civil Status and Registrati­on Office, waiting for their ceremony, which takes place in a drab room brightened by a youthful portrait of Queen Elizabeth II and typically lasts around 15 minutes. Afterward, couples stand in front of the building’s blue shutters and pose for photos, some wearing full wedding attire, complete with bridal veil and pocket square, others in summer dresses and slacks. One item of clothing is mandatory for the ceremony: a face covering (even during the first kiss).The bizarre circumstan­ces bring couples from all over the world together, and on a recent weekend, after their ceremonies, many of them joined tourists at a popular spot on the harbour to celebrate.

It’s easy to get married here. It’s cheap, there are many direct flights, and the marriage certificat­e provided is recognised worldwide.”

Chamaine Cruz | Sweet Gibraltar

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 ?? New York Times ?? ■
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Tamryn-Lee Shuttlewor­th from South Africa, and Harry Whittingto­n from Britain, get married in a ceremony overlookin­g the Strait of Gibraltar.
Above:
Jordan Lee from Britain, and Roberta Pabline from Brazil, pose for photos at the Marina in Gibraltar on September 5.
Left and far left:
Olivia Windham Stewart, who is British, and her new husband, Michael, who is American, enjoy their post-marriage photo sessions in Gibraltar. The tiny British territory at the tip of Spain has become the go-to place for global couples looking to wed.
New York Times ■ ■ Tamryn-Lee Shuttlewor­th from South Africa, and Harry Whittingto­n from Britain, get married in a ceremony overlookin­g the Strait of Gibraltar. Above: Jordan Lee from Britain, and Roberta Pabline from Brazil, pose for photos at the Marina in Gibraltar on September 5. Left and far left: Olivia Windham Stewart, who is British, and her new husband, Michael, who is American, enjoy their post-marriage photo sessions in Gibraltar. The tiny British territory at the tip of Spain has become the go-to place for global couples looking to wed.
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CORONAVIRU­S PANDEMIC

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