Pho to By Charles Rafshoon ENTERTAINMENT Teach your children well: Rabbi Steven Lebow, wearing kippah, instructs teens about Jewish themes in rock and roll. "It's only rock and roll, but I like it." DAVID HOLZEL Special to The Jewish News ob Dylan's 1965 retell- ing of Akedat Yitzhak — the binding of Isaac — is not the cynical view of the Bible it first appears to be. Rabbi Steven Lebow of Atlanta believes the song is a rock and roll version of the traditional process of inter- preting the Torah. "This is Midrash," the rabbi recently told members of the youth group at Re- form Temple Kol Emeth in surburban Atlanta. "You take a biblical story and in- terpret it in the light of your own life." Rabbi Lebow told the teen-agers he has found 40 to 60 biblical citations, ref- erences to Jewish sources and discourses on God in rock and roll music. Songs range from the Byrds' 1960s hit "Turn, Turn, Turn," whose lyrics were taken from the book of Kohelet, or Ecclesiastes, to Tracy Chapman's "If Not Now, When?" a reference to a say- ing by the sage Hillel. As the group pored over album covers and lyric David Holzel is a staff writer for The Atlanta Jewish Times. sheets, Rabbi Lebow played a medley of songs to illus- trate how writers have drawn on the Bible to ex- plain their own lives. By us- ing the medium of youth — rock and roll — the 36-year- old-rabbi was attempting to draw a new young genera- tion to the Torah. "People are enlightened all the time by the Torah," he said. "After love, God is second on the list of topics in rock and roll." In the 1960s, music was the religion of youth, Rabbi Lebow explained. "We waited for the latest album by Bob Dylan or the Beatles to hear what they would have to say to us," the rabbi said. So even a song as ap- parently flippant as Mr. Dylan's "Highway 61 Re- visited" was probed for lessons it could reveal. And like any Torah text, the song's meaning is more easi- ly understood with the help of a teacher. The real Highway 61 runs north into Canada from Mr. Dylan's birthplace, Duluth, Minn. And, Rabbi Lebow pointed out, the name of Mr. Dylan's father was Abraham. With these keys, the song is revealed as an angry personal account of the struggle between the young singer and his father. If Mr. Dylan is Isaac, the child sacrifice, Bruce Spr- ingsteen is Cain, the son driven from home. Mr. Spr- ingsteen, who is not Jewish, left home at 17 after a per- petual battle with his father. Mr. Springstein recounted his experience in the song "Adam Raised A Cain." "My daddy worked his whole life for nothing but the pain/ Now he walks these empty rooms looking for someone to blame..." More recently, composer- pianist Bruce Hornsby wrote a song called "Jacob's Ladder," a reference to the patriarch's dream in which angels climbed and de- scended a ladder spanning heaven and earth. Mr. Horn- sby used the image of a lad- der to symbolize a step-by- step climb to a better life. "You get all of Judaism's main men in rock and roll," Rabbi Lebow said, counting on his fingers, Adam, Cain, Noah, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The prayer book is an- other source of inspiration, the rabbi explained. "Teach Your Children" a song by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, echoes the commandment in the God said fa Abitakaut, Kitt toe a au Abe mid, you mutat be ',Wife pa OR Ga. mitt, Kt Abe said, Wkat? Gott mid, Yea caa da witat you Luau/ Abe but The ;text time you see Nte Midi gaul beitet kuu Abe said, Mete you tout We lab(' clue? Gad said, Out au fligleag 61. "Ve'ahavta" prayer, Veshinantam livanecha- "You shall teach your chil- dren diligently." The priestly blessing, Yevarechecha HaShem veyishmarecha — "May God bless and keep you al- ways," was recast by Bob Dylan in "Forever Young." Rabbi Lebow called Mr. Dylan rock's most spiritual songwriter. The singer's close reading of the Torah is evident in the numerous bib- lical references in his work. "All Along the Watch- tower," a song of Mr. Dylan's popularized by Jimi Hendrix, is based on verses 11 and 12 in the 21st chapter of the book of Isaiah. Mr. Dylan also wrote an ironic defense of Israel called "Neighborhood Bully" in which the Jewish state, sur- rounded by bloodthirsty enemies, is hypocritically vilified as the local thug. Judaism turned up in some bizarre places during the 1960s. Dipping briefly into his moldy oldie archive, Rabbi Lebow told the teens about the band Spirit, whose leader, Randy California, changed his name from Schwartz. On one album, Mr. California sings "Hinei Mah Tov." Even stranger is the psychedelic group the Electric Prunes' version of the Yom Kippur prayer Kol Nidre. Becca Greenhill, a member of the synagogue youth group, said Rabbi Lebow's presentation was more stimulating than conven- tional teaching approaches. Jeff Pearlman, a 17-year- old dressed in a tie-dyed Jerry Garcia T-shirt, agreed. "It's more subliminal," he said. ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 59