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Can you handle NYC's Hebrew hip-hop poet?

Vanessa Hidary uses rap-style verse to take on Jewish stereotypes.

July 16, 2009 10:51
Vanessa Hidary: “I don’t pretend I’m from the ghetto. When you’re honest and real, that is the best street cred”

By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

3 min read

Offend Vanessa Hidary on a date and you run the risk of a scathing verbal attack — in the form of a witty, fast-paced poem.

In her 2003 poem, Hebrew Mamita, Hidary describes how a hapless suitor remarked that she did not “look Jewish”. At the time she said nothing, but later she realised the remark was supposed to be a compliment.
“What does ‘Jewish’ look like to you?” asks Hidary in characteristic strident style. “Should I fiddle on a f***ing roof for you?/Should I humour you with ‘oy veys’ and refuse to pay/ ’coz you know how we like to ‘Jew you down’. /‘Jew you down’? I’d like to throw you down...”
The hard-hitting verse has been viewed more than half a million times on YouTube and has become Hidary’s defining work. Since she wrote it, the theatre graduate from New York has carved out a career performing at poetry readings or “slams”, sharing the stage with black hip-hop poets.

She is committed to exploring Jewish issues in her verse. At the end of August, she is appearing at adult camp Limmudfest in the Derbyshire countryside. Right now, she is speaking to the JC from Israel, where she is one of the staff on a birthright tour, guiding twentysomething Jews around Israel.

“I want to teach young Jews about Jewish pride,” she says.
“Other than that, I think it’s really important for non-Jews to hear my voice and hear a different kind of Jewish woman rather than the stereotype they have been shown. I really try to keep my message universal, otherwise you’re just preaching to the choir.”

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