Dov Shurin

Dov Shurin
Dov Shurin
Genres Jewish
Instruments Guitar
Website http://www.dovshurin.com/

Dov Shurin is a Jewish singer-songwriter.

Contents

Background

Born in 1949, Shurin moved from Brooklyn, New York to Israel in 1984.[1] He is an Orthodox Jew and a grandson of Rabbi Yaakov Kamenetsky.[2]

He currently lives in the Sansur building in downtown Jerusalem.[3]

Musical style

Shurins music ranges from soft folk ballads to electric guitar, fast-paced, dance-able music. His lyrics range from original to biblically sources or a mashup of the two. A major hit of his was "Zochreini Na".[4] The lyrics of the song are the prayer of Samson asking God to restore his strength so he can exact his revenge upon Philistines who had captured and blinded him.

Controversy

Shurin is noted for his Kahanist political views.[5] He was featured on the cover of The Economist with a Bible in one hand and an Uzi in the other.[6]

Mr. Shurin has been featured in documentaries and briefly became a pop star within the settler movement with songs calling for violence against the Palestinians and resistance to Israel's 2005 withdrawal from the Gaza Strip.[3]

Shurin was in a documetary by Sean McAllister.[7] In the documentary, Shurin stated that although he believes that the Land of Israel belongs solely to the Jewish people, he has no problem being friendly with individual Arabs. Shuring has been video recorded interfering on behalf of an elderly Arab man who was stopped at the Western Wall Plaza by Israeli security by assisting the man in making his way across the plaza; Shurin has stated that he is proud of what he did and that this deed was a Mitzvah.

Discography

  • Kol Dodi: Voice of my Love (1980)
  • Chakal Tapuchim: The field of Sacred Apples (1984), with Dovid Lybush
  • Madly In Love With The One Above (1999)
  • Biblical Revenge (2002), Aderet Music Corp.

See also

  • The Ultra Zionists – 2011 documentary by Louis Theroux featuring Shurin's music

References

  1. ^ http://www.bhol.co.il/forum/topic.asp?topic_id=206862&forum_id=771
  2. ^ Bio of R' Yisroel Shurin, Reprinted from Ya'ated Neeman, 2007
  3. ^ a b Three storeys - and a nation - built by tragedy, Mark MacKinnon. Mar. 28, 2009, Globe and Mail
  4. ^ The Jewish Insights
  5. ^ Kahane followers: radical Jews in garb of American counterculture Charles Levinson and Michael Blum, Sawf News
  6. ^ Doc visits West Bank mess. Nov 24, 2000, Toronto Star
  7. ^ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named PQASB; see Help:Cite errors/Cite error references no text



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