Thursday, March 04, 2004
Younger Euro-Ethnic Generation Adrift---Searching for Roots/Identity???
The ANNOTICO Report

From it's previous stance of 150 years of "Assimilation", American society was prodded to a 180 degree turn in the 1970s, to that of "Diversity".

In so doing, Society provided Minority cultural groups, for at least the last 30 years, with a profusity of preteen, K-12, University, and Grad School "Cultural" Studies, to further that communities, and it's individuals self respect, and encourage it's cohesiveness.

European "cultures" during that same time, having been labeled the "Oppressors" of those same Minorities, had NO support in the Public sector, and "wilted on the vine"  in the Private sector, and therefore had only a "paucity" of cultural studies.

There was so few "vehicles" or "avenues" available to satisfy the natural "appetite"
of the Euro-Ethnic younger generation to "connect" with their cultural roots.

That craving was "compounded" by a "jealousy" of the Minorities being so well informed about, and having such pride in their culture, and the Euro-Ethnics on the other hand being "adrift" without a cultural anchor.

I have long disputed those who preach that Euro-Ethnics (especially Italian Americans) are hopelessly headed to the "Twilight Of Ethnicity" and even "The Dustbin of Obscurity".

Me thinks the news of their demise is premature, as may be indicated by this excerpt from a Los Angeles Times article today, that illustrates that even the young secular Jewish community with it's numerous support groups, felt "isolated".

It reads: (The young [18-30] Jewish [among others] Generation  have watched with fascination, and not a little envy, as one ethnic group after another has rediscovered its particularity now that Americans have come to embrace multiculturalism.

Many are impatient with their grandparents' view... and seek "new" connections to Jewish culture in the music scene,... others pass around books by a new generation of self-consciously Jewish writers,... some assert newfound ethnic pride by wearing edgy and sometimes explicit slogans such as "Yo Semite",... chortle over Heeb's homage to the big-hipped, big-nosed appeal of "the Jewess",...  reclaiming the old slurs with a chutzpah that would surely make their grandparents cringe

"You could call it post-denominational Judaism. Our staff includes Jews from every denomination … all of whom think of ourselves as trapped, for better and for worse, in the same historical narrative. And we want to have a dynamic, interrogating, nuanced, at times critical and at times irreverent relationship with all things Jewish."

I find it rather interesting that the young Jewish generation is looking forward for connection, while all other ethnicities have been looking back for their "identity".

Is this a portend of what other ethnicities may do, or a "particular" situation??
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STYLE & CULTURE
FOR A GENERATION OF JEWS, IT'S KOSHER TO BE COOL

Call it Hebrew chic -- multiculturalism has sparked a movement
bent on celebrating a culture that's newly hip.

Los Angeles Times
From Newsday
By Carol Eisenberg
March 3 2004

Jason Saft once believed Jewish cool was as incongruous an idea as, well, a Jewish James Bond.

Growing up in Levittown, N.Y., Saft, 26, admits he felt "ashamed and embarrassed about being Jewish." He wanted to be like all the other kids at Division Avenue High School, which is to say, Irish or Italian.

That was before he got in touch with his "kosher fabulosity," as he likes to say, and helped stoke a worldwide pop-cultural movement. A year and a half ago, after brainstorming with friends about cutting-edge Jewish humor for a new theater, Saft printed out their logo, ironed it onto a T-shirt, and went walking around Manhattan with it plastered across his chest.

The message was simple, racy and undeniably proud: "JEWCY," it said.

"I was mobbed," Saft says. "People were coming up to me on the street, Jews and non-Jews, saying 'I have to have that shirt.' "

Suddenly, as Saft discovered, it had become hip to be Hebrew in America. From the website JewLo.com, which proclaims that "Jew and cool are not incompatible, but go together like peanut butter and Kosher-for-Passover chocolate," to the arrival in downtown movie houses of the Hebrew Hammer, the first Jewish action hero in the guise of a Yiddishkeit Shaft, a younger generation is creating new narratives of what it means to be Jewish in America.

And JEWCY has become one of its emblems, capturing the flip attitude of a largely secular group weaned on rap, hip-hop and the new American love affair with multiculturalism.

With no advertising save Web logs and word of mouth, the T-shirt has become the accouterment of choice for a new breed of Jewish hipsters from Manhattan to Los Angeles. They listen to bands like the Hasidic New Wave and Hip Hop Hoodios, delight in the Yiddish-inflected humor of the magazine Heeb: The New Jew Review, and read a new raft of young, transgressive Jewish writers.

"I think it's too soon and too inchoate to call it a movement yet, but I really do believe there is something profound and exciting going on right now with young Jews who are trying to connect with Judaism in thoroughly untraditional and in thoroughly new ways," said Joshua Neuman, 31, publisher and editor of the 2-year-old Heeb.

"These are people who are really comfortable in their identities and so they can be playful about boundaries and make fun of themselves," says Alicia Svigals, a Jewish music pioneer whose work with the Klezmatics starting in the mid-'80s set the stage for the hipsters.

To be sure, there are plenty of young Jewish people who never bought into the caricature of Jews as meek, or had the self-doubt that JEWCY's Saft did, but for whom the revival of all things self-consciously Jewish is still meaningful.

Theirs is a generation, after all, reared largely in the American suburbs without firsthand knowledge of privation or persecution — and for whom hip-hop is often more familiar than Hebrew. They have watched with fascination, and not a little envy, as one ethnic group after another has rediscovered its particularity now that Americans have come to embrace multiculturalism. Many are impatient with their grandparents' preoccupation with Jews as victims or "the chosen people," even as they experience the Holocaust as a Steven Spielberg film.

Many seek "new" connections to Jewish culture in the burgeoning music scene — exploring jazz by John Zorn's Masada and Hasidic New Wave; klezmer by bands like Mikveh, Golem and Pharaoh's Daughter; and even novelty hip-hop by 50 Shekel.

Others pass around books by a new generation of self-consciously Jewish writers.

Some assert newfound ethnic pride by wearing edgy and sometimes explicit slogans such as "Yo Semite" and chortling over Heeb's homage to the big-hipped, big-nosed appeal of "the Jewess."

And a few have dedicated themselves to reclaiming the old slurs with a chutzpah that would surely make their grandparents cringe — turning "hebe," for instance, from ugly epithet into an everyman greeting, spoofing Jewish cabals on InternationalJewishConspiracy.com, and drinking He'brew, "the chosen beer" from the Northern California-based Schmaltz Brewing Co.

"I think this time is going to be seen, in hindsight, as the beginning of a golden age," says Heeb's Neuman. "You could call it post-denominational Judaism. Our staff includes Jews from every denomination … all of whom think of ourselves as trapped, for better and for worse, in the same historical narrative. And we want to have a dynamic, interrogating, nuanced, at times critical and at times irreverent relationship with all things Jewish."

Some acknowledge, though, that that posture might change if resurgent anti-Semitism abroad takes hold in the U.S.

"This is happening at a time when Jews in other parts of the world are facing risks," says Paul Zakrzew'ski, editor of "Lost Tribe: Jewish Fiction From the Edge." "Here in New York, you're surrounded by other Jews and so you have a sense of safety … and you can afford to poke fun at yourself. I probably would feel very differently if I lived in England or Turkey."

Beyond that, some are frankly skeptical that the hipster scene will warrant more than a footnote in Jewish history.

"If there's something that distinguishes this generation from the past, it's that it is much more removed from a substantive Jewish upbringing and substantive Jewish education," says Rabbi Andy Bachman, 40, executive director of New York University's Bronfman Center for Jewish Life.

Bachman says he supports any new opportunities for young Jews to connect with Jewish identity. "But I think people often go way overboard when they speak about how they're going to create their own personal Judaism or how they're going to reshape the tradition. How often does a truly great mind arise? How often is there a Maimonides or a Rashi?"

Many suggest that lurking beneath the flip veneer of the hipster scene is a deep craving for identity that is unlikely to be satisfied with pop culture expressions of Jewishness alone.

Ahandful of relevant bands in the '80s has metamorphosed into hundreds, and the music has become almost mainstream. But the question remains whether it will inspire some to explore questions in their lives from a religious as well as a cultural perspective.

Saft, of JEWCY fame, has returned to synagogue after 13 years, though he is making no long-term commitments.

calendarlive.com: For a generation of Jews, it's kosher to be cool
http://www.calendarlive.com/printedition/calendar/
cl-et-eisenberg3mar03,2,6475740.story?coll=cl-calendar