JUST IN CASE YOU DIDN'T  KNOW  (I DIDN'T)

 
 
 


 
At the 2014  Oscars, they celebrated the 75th anniversary of the  release

 
of the "Wizard of Oz" by having  Pink sing "Somewhere Over the Rainbow",  
with

 
highlights from the film in the  background. But what few people  realized,

 
while listening to that  incredible performer singing that  unforgettable

 
song, is that the music is deeply  embedded in the Jewish  experience.

 


 
It is no accident, for example, that  the greatest Christmas songs of  all

 
time were written by Jews. For  example, "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed  Reindeer"

 
was written by Johnny Marks and  "White Christmas" was penned by a  Jewish

 
liturgical singer's (cantor) son,  Irving Berlin.

 


 
But perhaps the  most poignant song emerging out of the mass exodus  from

 
Europe was "Somewhere Over the  Rainbow". The lyrics were written by  Yip

 
Harburg. He was the youngest of four  children born to Russian Jewish

 
immigrants. His real name was Isidore  Hochberg and he grew up in a  Yiddish

 
speaking, Orthodox Jewish home in New  York. The music was written by  
Harold

 
Arlen, a cantor's son. His real name  was Hyman Arluck and his parents  were

 
from  Lithuania.

 


 
Together, Hochberg  and Arluck wrote "Somewhere Over the Rainbow",  which

 
was voted the 20th century's number  one song by the Recording  Industry

 
Association of America (RIAA) and the  National Endowment for the Arts  
(NEA).

 


 
In writing it, the  two men reached deep into their immigrant  Jewish

 
consciousness - framed by the pogroms  of the past and the Holocaust about  
to

 
happen - and wrote an unforgettable  melody set to near prophetic  words.

 


 
Read the lyrics in  their Jewish context and suddenly the words are  no

 
longer about wizards and Oz, but  about Jewish survival:

 


 


 


 
Somewhere over the  rainbow

 


 
Way up  high,

 


 
There's a land that I heard  of

 


 
Once in a  lullaby.

 


 
Somewhere over the  rainbow

 


 
Skies are  blue,

 


 
And the dreams that you dare to  dream

 


 
Really do come  true.

 


 
Someday I'll wish upon a  star

 


 
And wake up where the clouds are far  behind me.

 


 
Where troubles melt like lemon  drops

 


 
Away above the chimney  tops

 


 
That's where you'll find  me.

 


 
Somewhere over the  rainbow

 


 
Bluebirds  fly.

 


 
Birds fly over the  rainbow.

 


 
Why then, oh why can't  I?

 


 
If happy little bluebirds  fly

 


 
Beyond the  rainbow

 


 
Why, oh why can't  I?

 


 


 


 
The Jews of Europe  could not fly. They could not escape beyond  the

 
rainbow. Harburg was almost prescient  when he talked about wanting to  fly

 
like a bluebird away from the  "chimney tops". In the post-Auschwitz  era,

 
chimney tops have taken on a whole  different meaning than the one they  had

 
at the beginning of  1939.

 


 
Pink's mom is  Judith Kugel. She's Jewish of Lithuanian background.  As

 
Pink was belting the Harburg/Arlen  song from the stage at the  Academy

 
Awards, I wasn't thinking about the  movie. I was thinking about  Europe's

 
lost Jews and the immigrants to  America.

 


 
I was then struck by the irony that  for two thousand years the land that  
the

 
Jews heard of "once in a lullaby" was  not America, but Israel. The

 
remarkable thing would be that less  than ten years after "Somewhere Over  
the

 
Rainbow" was first published, the  exile was over and the State of Israel  
was

 
reborn. Perhaps the "dreams that you  dare to dream really do come  true".

 


 


 

























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