To
answer the headline's question, today I'd say this was a fad, though fascinating
nonetheless...
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| Jews with Tattoos and Other Hebraic Aberrations

In Your Faith: Many Jewish Gen Xers are
Embracing Their Religion and Cultural Icons with Defiance and
Bold Irony. But are the piercings and tattoos a fad or spiritual
expression?
Los
Angeles Times. May 13, 1996, pg. 1
By Jordan Elgrably
With
her purple mohawk and pierced eyebrows, nose and lip, Marina Vainshtein
is not, at first glance, your average young Jewish woman. But
look further and you'll find evidence of Marina's obsession with
the history of her people: a star of David tattooed on her inner
left arm, a tattooed armband in Hebrew on her right wrist that
reads, "And now we are the last of many." And these
are only the first signs that Marina, a 22-year-old Los Angeles
photographer, is defining her Judaism in unconventional ways.
Much of Marina's body is tattooed with vivid scenes of the Holocaust:
a hovering angel of death in a gas mask; a row of naked bodies
hanging from the gallows; and, on her left arm and shoulder, gruesome
images of the Nazi medical experiments performed on children.
Jewish law, or halachah, bans tattoos as a desecration of the
body; only Holocaust survivors are the exception to the rule that
you cannot be buried in a Jewish cemetery if tattooed. But now
there are members of a generation of young Jews in their 20s and
30s who, like Vainshtein, are observing their Judaism in unorthodoxnot
to say radicalways.
Even as the Jewish community has seen a renewed interest in the
exploration of Jewish spirituality, there is a discernible movement
among some younger Jews to explore their Jewish identity with
in-your-face defiance and bold irony. This smaller movement is
claiming Jewish ethnicity and cultural icons much the way blacks,
Latinos and Asians did before them.
Ironically,
Art Spiegelman, considered by some the godfather of this movement
for his unusual exploration of Jewish identity in the satirical
comic book series Maus, expresses dismay at the idea that
Jews are jumping on the multicultural bandwagon.
"This is the problem with an America that has gone crazy,
that's just gone into ethnic madness," Spiegelman says. "I
think what you're seeing is a response to the Balkanization of
America, where Jews who felt themselves too embraced in America's
assimilationist arms have now started to desperately backpedal.
It seems to me that America has entered into an age of competing
victimhoods, and that the left has become sapped by the rise of
multiculturalism. The energy that used to go into trying to create
a generally more just society has been rerouted into competing
claims of ethnic rights."
Still, young Jews like Vainshtein remain unapologetic. "I
love tattoos," she says. "I think they're beautiful.
If they're done right they can be art." Yet Vainshtein hasn't
unveiled her tattoos to her parents. She's afraid they'll have
a conniption.
When Vainshtein was in high school, a woman who had survived seven
concentration camps gave a lecture to her history class. The seeds
of Marina's Jewish identity were already planted, she recalls,
"but her talk was the nourishment. She taught me that I could
be a survivor too, no matter if it's one day or 80 years."
A new alternative Jewish quarterly called Davka (Hebrew slang
for "in your face") hopes to appeal to just such a generation
of unaffiliated young Jews, many of whom remain alienated by traditional
forms of observance. Launched in February in San Francisco, Davka
expects a national readership of 40,000 for its second issue.
The magazine's intended audience, says Editor in Chief Alan Kaufman,
may not go to synagogue or keep all Jewish holidays, "but
we are seeing a Jewish cultural revolution, which is the activity
of Jews facing a new millennium."
(While Kaufman explains that part of Davka's raison d'etre is
to be a response to the anti-Semitism of the militia movement,
the Anti-Defamation League has recorded a sharp overall decline
in anti-Semitic attitudes over the last 20 years, says David Lehrer,
Pacific-Southwest regional director. And the most recent ADL audit
of anti-Semitic incidents in the U.S. reported a decrease of 11%
in 1995 from the previous year.)
Kaufman*
points to an explosion of Yiddishkeit (Yiddish culture) in the
arts, to "a kind of new postmodern iconography" of Jewish
painters, performance artists, writers and musicians who are celebrating
Jewish culture with unprecedented enthusiasm and pride. A key
show at the Jewish Museum in New York, "Too Jewish?"
which opened in March, has sparked considerable interest and debate.
Representing the work of 23 artists in a variety of media, "Too
Jewish?" is a clear expression of those who have rejected
the role of assimilated Jew and are claiming a place for themselves
in America's multicultural crucible. The show travels to the Armand
Hammer Museum in January.
Says Irene Segalove, an L.A.-based artist included in the show,
"Suddenly, the last few years, being Jewish has become this
exotic quality, and my friends are wishing they were Jewish. That's
been intriguing to me, a shock really, that these WASPs are coveting
my ethnicity."
Norman L. Kleeblatt, the show's curator, says that for the first
time Jewish artists are neither nostalgic about the past nor do
they view themselves as victims. Instead, "Their use of overt
Jewish imagery and themes is calculated, confrontational, highly
politicized and, not least, humorous."
Central
to both the work shown in "Too Jewish?" and in Davka
is an inquiry into modern attitudes about the Jewish body. Several
of the artists, for instance, celebrate the "Jewish nose"
in ironic ways. No plastic surgery here: These self-references
are not about dissimulation and disguise, but acceptance and affirmation,
as in Dennis Kardon's "Jewish Noses," a sculptural piece,
or Deborah Kass' "Jewish Jackies," an ironic take on
Andy Warhol's silk-screens of Jackie Onassis with Barbra Streisand
representing a positive idealization of Jewish female beauty.
In her videos recently screened at Jewish film festivals and at
the L.A. gallery Strange Fruits, Cal Arts graduate Rachel Schreiber
examines the Jewish bodyher ownin an effort to understand
"how the genealogy and cultural memory {of the Holocaust}
make itself part of your body, and how to look at it not in terms
of victimhood." Schreiber, 30, the daughter of a rabbi, has
provoked hostile responses from Jewish audiences for a scene in
which she shaves her pubic hair and writes the German word for
Jew, "Jude," on herself. "A lot of what I do,"
Schreiber says, "is perceived by the Jewish community to
be very shocking."
Another radical image of the sea change in Jewish self-reference
can be found on Davka's first cover: a young woman with short,
fuchsia-dyed hair and tattoos is wrapped in a tallis (prayer shawl);
with her body piercings and defiant stare, the image challenges
the Jewish mainstream to sit up and take notice.
The reason for the tattooed woman on the cover, Kaufman explains,
is that "a majority of young Jews have tattoos, ear-rings,
nose-rings--this is a fact of life today. Ask any parent. So it
hit me suddenly, of what use is this halachic law if it's going
to exclude an entire generation from Jewish ceremony and tradition?"
Davka's subtitle is "Jewish Cultural Revolution." Says
the 44-year-old Kaufman: "A revolution seeks to overthrow
an old order. And I really think that what we want to do is overthrow
old perceptions."
The impetus for Davka came about a year ago when Kaufman, active
in the beat-poetry revival and spoken word scene in L.A. and New
York, and editor Danny Shot put together an anthology titled It's
the Jews (Long Shot Productions, 1995)a not-so-veiled
reference to the historical scapegoating of Jews.
A compendium of underground Jewish writing, the anthology was
launched in April '95 at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe in New York
and at Place Pigalle in San Francisco. Kaufman and Shot, both
children of Holocaust survivors, were stunned when both events
attracted sellout crowds. These weren't your strait-laced Jewish
yuppies homesick for a little Gemutlichkeit, recalls Joe Berkofsky,
a reporter from Northern California's Jewish Bulletin, but "hundreds
of hipsters in their 20s and 30s, a whole different milieu."
Aimed at the cutting edge of Jewish culture, Davka's first issue
includes a photo essay of eccentric rabbis, an essay about the
Jewish bachelor on the prowl, a profile of a mandolinist who plays
Jewish bluegrass and klezmer music, and new poetry from Alan Ginsberg
and Marge Piercy.
Among the eclectic mix in the second issue, due in June, is an
article by Doug Century of New York's Jewish Weekly Forward about
Jews and hip-hop. Given the number of Jews entrenched in the music
business, it's no shocker to find them involved in the black music
scene, but how do you figure rappers like M.C. Serch and the Beastie
Boys? "That's quite a different story," Century writes,
"a saga of misfits and miscreants and the just plain meshuggah."
An L.A. launch, Challahpalooza (get it?), is planned for late
June.
Reform Rabbi Steve Robbins of Congregation N'Vay Shalom in Los
Angeles views Davka with seeming bemusement, yet wonders, "What
kind of depth will the magazine have on an ongoing basis? It's
one thing to be Jewish, defy halachah and have tattoos, but what
does it really mean on a spiritual level?"
Martin Peretz, the influential editor of the New Republic, bought
three subscriptions to Davkaone for himself and one for
each of his kids, who are in their 20s. Describing himself as
a "freethinking traditionalist," Peretz says he has
been unable to pass on a strong sense of Jewish tradition to his
children. "It seemed to me that Davka was one of a range
of Jewish phenomena which shows that Jewishness and {mainstream}
culture need not be segregated in one's life. Any creative Jewish
effort engages my interest."
Berkofsky suggests that Davka is reaching out to unaffiliated
young Jews who may be unclear about their religious beliefs but
who nevertheless share cultural interests of the ballyhooed Generation
X.
Berkofsky coined the phrase "Generation J" in an article
for the Jewish Bulletin. It's a moniker that seems to fit, for
example, performance artist Josh Kornbluth, whose "Haiku
Tunnel," a satirical, autobiographical look at the life of
a Jewish male secretary slaving away in a big corporation, is
in pre-production at Miramax Films.
A former TV critic and reporter, Kornbluth, 30, turned to live
performances with a one-man off-Broadway show called "Red
Diaper Baby," a hilarious monologue about growing up in New
York as the son of a devout Marxist-Leninist who "believed
there was going to be a violent Communist revolution in this countryand
that I was going to lead it. Just so you can get a sense of the
pressure."
*Alan Kaufman later published the memoir Jew
Boy,
a few years after interviewed for this story.
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