While I heard that haircutting indeed was customary among Orthodox Jewish women in Czarist Russia, it is important to notice this is costume is not shared by all Orthodox Jews, quite the opposite, at least in Israel it is only customary in quite a limited number of orthodox communities. What is customary and the religion demand is hair covering. Many use wigs in day-to-day life and not only on special occasions, while many others boycott any use of wigs; it is a very complicated matter which depends on the different tradition and spiritual leaders of each and any orthodox community.
I also have to mention that just like the fact that someone is catholic doesn't make him more or less religious than someone who is protestant, in a similar way a lot of secular Jews have only ties to orthodox Judaism; as goes the saying, 'The synagogue I don't attend is an Orthodox one''.In Israel most of the Jewish people are secular and don't have any ties to the conservative or the reform, and they make their ceremonies in the orthodox way and with the help of the orthodox authorities.
Anyway, marrying a non Jewish husband, sharing his unkosher kitchen, having a wedding in a church, and even entering a church, are all more severe sins than not cutting your hair after you get married.
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