In applying our principles let attention be paid to the character of the people in whose country you live and act; a general, identical application of them, until such time as the people shall have been re-educated to our pattern, cannot have success. But by approaching their application cautiously you will see that not a decade will pass before the most stubborn character will change and we shall add a new people to the ranks of those already subdued by us. No. 9 |
A Chicago Rabbi recently said
"We have been told, long enough : 'You cannot change Human Nature; but, I say to you : Human Nature can be changed ; and, what is more : Human Nature must be changed ."Brainwashing

No, they weren't managers, producers or label honchos; Erdelyi and Blum are living legends of the mid-1970s punk rock scene, widely celebrated for their bands? revolutionary three-chord masterpieces.
Both men are also better known by their stage names, Tommy Ramone and Handsome Dick Manitoba.
Ramone, the sole surviving member of the Ramones, and Manitoba, frontman for the Dictators, were hardly the only Jews to shape the movement, as a capacity crowd learned in a program at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, located in Manhattan?s Chelsea area. Lenny Kaye, who's a guitarist for the Patti Smith Group, and Blondie co-founder Chris Stein joined Manitoba and Ramone in a panel discussion on ?Loud, Fast Jews? of New York punk rock.

As the musicians acknowledged, it seems counterintuitive to draw parallels between Judaism and punk: The stereotypes attached to each culture seem mutually exclusive. "You don?t expect Jews to be good in the scuffle of anti-establishment movements," Kaye said. "Jews were groomed for white-collar jobs.? His parents did not consider making music a "real job,? he recalled. ?Jews aren't supposed to be tough guys,? Manitoba added. "They?re supposed to go to school and be nebbishy."
Although Jews have made countless contributions to American popular music, Harold Steinblatt, YIVO?s director of cultural affairs and the June 11 event's organizer, noted that punk was unusual because so many of its progenitors were Jewish.
World-Wide Wars

"There is a sense of being an outsider in music," Kaye said, just as growing up in a religious minority may have isolated some Jews who became punks. In a later phone interview, he also cited the cultural influences he had derived from Judaism ? "a love of the minor key, a sense of community and clan." The setting for the music was important, too, he said, because ?CBGB?s was a kind of strange ghetto with its own vocabulary and customs.?

But Stein - and all the panelists, to varying degrees ? worried about overstating the connection between punk and Jewish religion and identity. "My Jewishness has always been there, but it's not an integral part of me," he said. Raised in Brooklyn's Flatbush area by secular parents, Stein dismissed punk's ties to Judaism as "just another facet for people to analyze."
Perhaps because so many punks assumed stage names in the '70s, most were unaware of how many other Jews participated in the scene until 2006, when Steven Lee Beeber published "The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB's: A Secret History of Jewish Punk" (Chicago Review Press). As Kaye explained, musicians were so wrapped up in absorbing and creating various religious modes of rock 'n' roll that individuals' cultural and spiritual backgrounds seemed beside the point.
Instilling Obedience


http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1101800.html
Possibly Related: Jewish Art and Craft
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