Fjolla Nila | Spring/Summer 2020
One Nice Bug Per Day
Cosmic Funnies
AnasAbdin
todays bird

if i look back, i am lost
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

titsay
Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!

shark vs the universe
sheepfilms
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Janaina Medeiros
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Misplaced Lens Cap
we're not kids anymore.
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@bbyzen
Fjolla Nila | Spring/Summer 2020
Galia Lahav | Fall/Winter 2021
IM LAUGHING AT THIS HEADLINE
when christian artists change the line in hallelujah from “maybe there’s a God above” to “I know that there’s a God above” >:c
#idk why i’m so unreasonably angry#maybe cuz it’s my fav line
it’s also because Leonard COHEN (!) was Jewish and this is a quintessentially Jewish line, and changing it to that level of Annoying Certainty is stripping it of its Jewish meaning and imbuing it with that particularly American smug evangelical Christian attitude that makes me tired, so very tired
THAT IS EXACTLY WHY
I don’t think I’ve heard any cover artist sing my favorite verses You say I took the name in vain I don’t even know the name But if I did, well really, what’s it to you? There’s a blaze of light In every word It doesn’t matter which you heard The holy or the broken Hallelujah I did my best, it wasn’t much I couldn’t feel, so I tried to touch I’ve told the truth, I didn’t come to fool you And even though It all went wrong I’ll stand before the Lord of Song With nothing on my tongue but Hallelujah
um woah
I will always hit the reblog button so hard for Hallelujah but ESPECIALLY mentions of the elusive final verses which are just about my favorite lyrics ever. Why do people always omit the best part of the song??
In Yiddish
In Hebrew
In Ladino
Yeah, I wonder why the verses that reference specific Jewish mystical and chassidic concepts that aren’t readily understood by American “I love Jews, you know, Jesus was Jewish!” Christians never get any airtime. Funny that.
You say I took the name in vain I don’t even know the name But if I did, well really, what’s it to you? There’s a blaze of light In every word It doesn’t matter which you heard The holy or the broken Hallelujah
These are specifically about Chassidic Jewish theories of the holy language, how each letter and combination of letters in Hebrew contains the essence of the divine spark and if used correctly, can unlock or uncover the divine spark in the mundane material word. And of course, there are secret names of God which, when spoken by any ordinary human would kill them, but if you are worthy and holy and righteous can be used to perform miracles or even to behold the glory of God face-to-face. The words themselves have power. Orthodox Jews often won’t even pronounce the word “hallelujah” in it’s entirety in conversation, because the “yah” sound at the end is a True Name of God (there are hundreds, supposedly) and thus too holy to say outside of prayer.
None of this is to mention how David’s sin in sleeping with Batshevah (the subject of much of the song, with a brief deviation to Shimshon and Delilah) is considered the turning point in the Tanach that ultimately dooms the Davidic line at the cosmological level and thus dooms Jewish sovereignty and independence altogether. From a Christian perspective this led to Jesus, the King of Kings, and that’s all very well and good for them, but for the Jews, the Davidic line never returned and is the central tragedy of the total arc of the Torah. Like, our Bible doesn’t have a happy ending? And that’s what this song is about? There’s no Grace - you just have to sit with the sin and its consequence.
Of course, Cohen is referencing all of this ironically, and personalizing these very high-level religious concepts. Like the point of this song is that Cohen, the songwriter, is identifying with David, the psalmist, and identifying his own sins with David’s. The ache that you hear in this song is that the two thousand year exile that resulted from one wrong night of passion and Cohen feels that the pain he has caused to his lover is of equally monumental infamy. Basically, in a certain light, the whole of Psalms is a vain effort for David to atone for his sin and I think Cohen was writing this song in wonderment that David could eternally praise the God who would not forgive him and would force him and his people into exile. But he ultimately gets how you have to surrender to the inexorable force of God in the face of your own inadequacies and how to surrender is to worship and to worship is to praise - hence, Hallelujah. You can either do the right thing and worship God from the start, or you can fuck up, be punished, and thus be forced to beg for His forgiveness. It’s the terrible inevitability of praise that’s driving him mad.
Like honestly, I identify with this song so strongly as an off-the-derech Jew, I sometimes wonder what Christians can possibly hear in this song, as it speaks so specifically to the sadomasochistic relationship that a lapsed Jew has with their God. It’s such a different song from a Christian theological perspective it’s almost unrecognizable, man. This song continues to be a wonder of postmodern Jewish theology and sexuality from start to finish. Don’t let anyone give you any “Judeo-Christian” narishkeit. This is a Jewish song.
(Sorry about the wild tangent it’s just 2AM and I love this song so dang much, you guys.)
holy shit. woah.
This.
That last bit from @stoneandbloodandwater, that’s a great articulation of the well of feeling, memory, storytelling, and culture packed into one of the most Jewish songs ever to get real famous. The song is both surrender and defiance, and that those are actually a single path together, not two opposite choices.
A small addition: This song is such a deeply resonant Jewish touchstone that every synagogue I have ever attended uses its melody in services from time to time.
It is so important, so powerful, so spiritually resonant that we use it in prayer.
If memory serves me, the cover we most often hear came about specifically because Jeff Buckley was like “man, this song is badass but I don’t know that I can do its concepts justice” and Leonard Cohen was like “you need different verses? Here, I wrote over eighty of the fuckers, pick what you want to use” and so Buckley put together verses that spoke to him as a non-Jew about sexuality and this idea of a failed relationship.
Which wouldn’t be an issue if Christians didn’t then take his adaptation (done, I emphasize again, with Cohen’s blessing) and rewrite it in ways THAT DO NOT COME FROM THE ORIGINAL VERSES.
Yes, this.
This is a good time to remind people that Leonard Cohen wrote a novel titled Beautiful Losers and it is filthy, epic, brutal, experimental, fraught with problematic conceptions of sex and gender and still so amazingly tender and gorgeous. It’s written as a letter from the narrator, a very clear stand-in for Leonard, to his male lover (named only F) about their mutual lover Edith, who is also somehow an indigenous saint named Catherine Tekakwitha.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beautiful_Losers
I have to say my favourite thing about 2020 has been (and is proof of have curated a lovely group of people I follow) is that I’ve gotten a chance to learn more about Judaism.
I love learning about religions from a historic perspective and the more I’ve learned about Judaism, the more I believe Jewish people deserve a lot of credit for their devotion to their faith in the face of thousands of years of previous and ongoing oppression from multiple sources. And I really enjoy how their relationship with their God is presented in interpretation of their texts.
so for the people in the notes who are saying some version of “songs should be open for everyone to interpret how they wish/why can’t we make it mean what we want to/etc”, here’s the thing: you absolutely can do whatever you want with basically any song, as is evidenced by the fact that Baptist youth choirs fuck with the lyrics and Pentatonix covered it as a Christmas song, of all fucking things. Yes, you can do that. And far be it from me to say you can’t get different things out of this or any song, depending on your background, cultural context, etc. Hell, I think it’s pretty great that people listen to a song and get all kinds of different things out of it. that’s the nice thing about all of us being from different cultures and having different viewpoints.
However, particularly if you’re Christian or were raised in a Christian-normative society like the US, you need to understand this: taking a deeply, inherently Jewish song, written by an Orthodox Jewish man and expressing very specific Jewish theological concepts (among other things) – taking that song and twisting it to explicitly make it uphold Christian concepts or Christian holidays or Christian normativity in general… that is fucked up.
Please, please, look up the history of the Christian church and its millennia of oppressing Jews. Please look up passion plays. Please look up pogroms. Please look up the fucking Catholic Church and what it was doing around the Holocaust. This is a small thing, it’s true, but it is just one more goddamn example of how a lot of Christians feel absolutely free to swoop in and pick and choose what they like from Judaism, even though it is an entirely different religion, culture, etc., that does not belong to you.
We are not “Christianity lite”. we are not “Christianity without Jesus”. We have several thousand years of development as an entirely separate religion. We have wildly different theologies and values. when you brazenly do “seders” at your church, when you claim Judaism as somehow being “your heritage too” because you’re a Christian, when you take our stuff without so much as a “by your leave”, it’s one of a million examples of how the Christian church has been really fucking terrible to Jews over the centuries. And it sucks for us, especially since many of those same Christians and/or churches will turn a blind eye to antisemitism even while swiping our shit.
you absolutely can take this song and make it mean something Christian. You just shouldn’t. And you don’t get to do that and then get all baffled when Jews in particular get a little pissy with you about it.
brognano fashion week 2019
https://www.instagram.com/p/Blm9ri0HtA6/
found a Nice Guy? dont friendzone him. end zone him. throw him on the ground like an effing football. touchdown
nice guy finally scores
I can’t believe 2021 is in 3 months
Schitt’s Creek Wins for Outstanding Comedy Series
me, a gentile, completely engrossed in a very long thread in which several Jewish tumblr users draw on the tenets, laws, and philosophies of Judaism to support their claims in a debate about whether it would be okay for a dragon to light a candle with its own fiery breath on the sabbath
Sara Mrad | Spring/Summer 2021 Couture
Elie Saab “The Sound Of The Secret Source” fw20 couture collection p.1
Villa Ortizet - Zyva Studio and Maison de Sable KEEPING IT NEUTRAL