Four bands, seven countries, and a couple of sponsors: that’s what it took to stage the festival of spotlights known as “A Crazy Worldwide Hanukkah Party.” Taking place simultaneously in 12 cities (among them New York, Buenos Aires, and Moscow), the event resembled a Jewish Hands Across America — though minus the feel-good messages, and without much Jewish content.
Co-sponsored by JDub Records (home to Balkan Beatbox) and Taglit-Birthright Israel (provider of all-expenses-paid trips to you-know-where), the Boston portion at T.T. the Bear’s Place last Saturday was certainly a good time. Wailing Wall, the Brakes, Mocean Worker, and Simple People took the crowd from brass-and-string rave-ups and solid rock beats to funky horn explosions and atmospheric dance electronics before casting everybody into a frigid night’s cold sweat.
Yet aside from plastic dreydls and pieces of gelt (coin-shaped chocolates), there was nothing especially Jewish about the evening. Okay, there was a band called Wailing Wall, and the Israeli-based Simple People evinced a cool Middle Eastern vibe. But . . . no latkes! No sour cream! Not even any applesauce!! What the farkakt!
As for Taglit — call me a killjoy, but I couldn’t help mentioning to the guy proffering the brochures that I prefer the alternative program Birthright Unplugged, which sends Jewish kids to the Occupied Territories and Palestinian kids to Israel in an effort to educate and unite. He took that in stride. And as nobody else seemed bothered by the lack of Jewish content, it hit me that maybe this was the point. As 23-year-old Sophie Dabuzhshy told me, “We’re celebrating the Festival of Lights by lighting up and dancing.” Given Hanukkah’s origins in a Jewish/Greek battle, the Crazy Hanukkah Party might not be so crazy after all.
Related:
A taste of Tapeo, Mardi Gras: Made in China, February 14, 2008, More
- A taste of Tapeo
Think you can’t squeeze in another bite after Thanksgiving?
- Mardi Gras: Made in China
David Redman’s film takes a tiny aspect of globalization and makes a case about the new class warfare between corporations and individuals.
- February 14, 2008
Thursday
- Bubbe’s Hanukkah dinner
Don’t tell Grandma, but UpStairs on the Square says its Hanukkah dinner, held on December 19 and 20, will rival your bubbe’s.
- Unaccompanied Minors
Five children — mostly products of broken families en route from one parent to the other — get snowed in at a fictitious Midwest airport on Christmas Eve. Watch the trailer for Unaccompanied Minors (QuickTime)
- Providence: safer than you think?
Every year, as summer approaches in US cities, violent crime spikes as predictably as the arrival of Memorial Day cookouts.
- Unwelcome in Kennebunkport: Bush and Putin
Just days before the Fourth of July, disgruntled citizens will have the opportunity to practice their own kind of patriotism.
- Holiday hangover
USM artist-in-residence Debbie Reichard spent the holiday season with university art students in a collaborative effort to speak about the belief systems that keep on getting Americans into their post-Christmas mess.
- Enrich thy neighbor
'Buy local' and take care of business
- Music Seen: Man-Witch CD-release at Geno's
Anyone who doesn't like Man-Witch either didn't watch enough Saturday-morning TV as a kid, or is an incurable sourpuss.
- Where was everybody on St. Patrick's Day?
We piled into a car, we three intrepid journalists, and set out from the Back Bay Sunday morning to find our way to Royal Bolling’s party. “Roxbury’s Salute to St. Patrick’s Day,” as Bolling called it, should be easy to find, we reasoned. After all, the Prince Hall Grand Lodge. A.F. & M., was located at 18 Washington Street. All we had to do was follow Washington Street, right?
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Topics:
Live Reviews
, Culture and Lifestyle, Holidays, Mocean Worker