A Jew IN THE ]though he was a practicing Bud- inated for an Academy dhist at the time of his death Award for his 1978 doc- from liver cancer on April 5, umentary, The Divided Allen Ginsberg — one of the Trail: A Native Ameri- best-known poets of the Beat can Odyssey, lives in generation and an ongoing Boulder, Colo., and spokesman for the coun- teaches at the Univer- terculture of the 1960s sity of Colorado. and beyond — never turned his back "Making the film [on on his Jewish roots. Ginsberg] was a pro- In a February 1985 interview for found learning and spir- The Jewish News, Ginsberg said, "I itual experience for me," identify as a Jew — with the old Hein- said Aronson. 'Through rich Heine/Jewish delicatessen/intel- my research, I saw lectual/radical/revolutionary. I identify [Ginsberg] in many sit- with the socialism of the Jews and with uations that could have the anarchism of the Jews. With the been dangerous and poetry and the music, and with the in- confrontational. How- ternationalism of the Jews, which I ever, [his] ability to pro- think is one of the major glories of the ject calm and peace Jewish tradition." always ruled the day." He stressed that he still Joseph Swolsky, maintained active contact owner of Park West, a with Judaism. That May, realty and manage- he went to the Recon- ment company in Tole- structionist Rabbinical Col- do, Ohio, is an avid lege in Wyncote, Penn., collector of first editions where he participated in a of Ginsberg's work. He program with Rabbi Nan- remembers him as "a cy Fuchs-Kriemer, director kind, generous man, of the Kaplan Institute for who would always in- Adult Jewish Studies. scribe books for his Ginsberg- was a frequent fans." visitor to Ann Arbor and Swolsky, a self-de- had many friends and ad- scribed "child of the mirers among Jews from '60s," has many trea- the Detroit area. sures in his vast collec- The only documentary tion, including a CD of The Ballad of film of his career, The Life the Skeletons bearing an inscription and Times ofAllen Gins- reading "Allen Ginsberg, 117/97, Jew- berg, was produced, di- el Heart, A2 , For Joe Swolsky." Gins- rected and filmed by berg's appearance at the Jewel Heart former Detroiter Jerry Tibetan Cultural and Buddhist Cen- Aronson, a Mumford High ter in Ann Arbor earlier this year was School and Wayne State his last public book signing. University graduate. Also in Swoisky's collection is a first The 82-minute award- edition of Mr. Ginsberg's Empty Mir- winning film has been ror, which once belonged to Detroit so- shown theatrically and on c ial activist John Sinclair. television worldwide, and Swolsky also corresponded with is currently available on Ginsberg. Last July, he wrote Gins- videocassette. berg about his wish to reprint as a col- Aronson, who was nom- 1 ectors item a 1959 Life magazine , :,,C7-4711 1.73E-Niabitrw„ WELL WHILE I'M HERE I'LL DO THE WORK — AND WHAT'S THE WORK? TO EASE THE PAIN OF LIVING EVERYTHING ELSE, DRUNKEN DUMBSHOW Allen Ginsberg: "I identify as a 8 Jew—with the old Heinrich • Heine/Jewish delicatessen/ intellectuaVradicaVrevolutionary." • In later years, Allen Ginsberg § often appeared as "the spiritual • godfather of the counterculture." article on the Beats, to be autographed by Ginsberg, as well as fellow Beats William Burroughs, Lawrence Fer- linghetti, Gregory Corso and Peter Orlovsky. It would have been dedicated to Alan Weiner, the recently deceased owner of New York's Academy Book Store, who was a friend of both Gins- berg and Swolsky. Ginsberg declined, saying he was "getting too old to take on the work he used to, and was cutting down on a lot of activities." While some considered Ginsberg to be the premier poet of the Beat gen- eration, he also had his detractors. Cary Loren, owner of the Book Beat in Oak Park, calls himself "more of an observer of Ginsberg than an admir- er." He met the poet a few times but was also a severe critic of his work. "I think he is kind of a lit- tle bit overrated as a poet," said Loren, who believes Ginsberg's reputation should be based more upon his role in facilitating the publication of major works by Beat writ- ers such as William S. Bur- roughs. "I don't think the entire body of his work will hold up," said Loren of Ginsberg's pro- lific output of poetry. But he does make exceptions for "Howl," the epic "Plutonian Ode," and "Kaddish." "Otherwise, there's a lot of real drivel, as there is in [Jack] Kerouac and others of the Beats," maintains Loren. "It is just not good quality. "If you compare [Ginsberg's] work to that of a poet like Delmore Schwartz, it pales by comparison. As Truman Capote said, It becomes typ- ing. , Ginsberg was only 70 when he died of liver cancer, and in some sense, he will return to Ann Arbor, a city he con- sidered his second home. After cremation, the ashes of the poet were distributed among three sites. One is the Jewel Heart Tibetan Cultural and Buddhist Oenter, where Ginsberg had studied for seven years under the tutelage of G-elek Rinpoche, an Ypsilanti teacher. Ginsberg made