Moshiach Oi! Merges Orthodox Judaism and Punk Rock
By JOHN LELAND
Published: March 9, 2013
At age 6, he was a budding yeshiva student, in white shirt and black hat, with little contact outside the Orthodox Jewish world. At 16, he discovered some things he liked better, punk rock and drugs: marijuana, LSD, eventually crack and heroin. At 26, on the Thursday before the holiday of Purim last month, he was back among the faithful, sort of: side curls flailing, knees jackknifing up around his torso, leaping, crouching, shouting a Scriptural message from the Book of Ramones: Avraham was a punk rocker ...
The band and the weekly Thursday night gathering, known as Chulent, both appear in a new documentary film called Punk Jews, about fringe strands that have emerged within New Yorks Orthodox community. The movie, which is scheduled for release on DVD this summer, examines loose bits of subculture inside what is often seen as an insular, rule-oriented cloister. To be a hard-core punk band chanting, Na Nach Nachma Nachman Meuman, the song of global healing for an obscure branch of Hasidism, is to be something beyond a square peg in a round hole. It is to give up the idea of fitting in altogether. Even at Chulent their din divides ...
Yet he saw no contradiction between his music and his submission to his faith. To me, Judaism is like punk rock, he said. Real Judaism is very in your face. The world is chasing after desires for money and sex and drugs and materialism, and Judaism is the opposite. Judaism is like, this world is nothing. This world is only to serve God and bring light and redemption. To me, thats very punk rock ...
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/nyregion/moshiach-oi-merges-orthodox-judaism-and-punk-rock.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0