If it wasn’t for the Irish and the Jews

Thanks Amy!

St. Patricks Day and Women’s History Month

And the story goes: “Eventually, Patrick became a spiritual leader in Ireland, converting thousands of pagans to Christianity.”

There are no snakes in Ireland and when St. Patrick got there  the Goddess was worshiped. Women were the Spiritual leaders of Ireland and the leaders had snakes tattooed on there arms.

Women were in charge of everything.  Women were the Church, they were in charge of fire!

They kept the fire going for over 1000 years here!

The Irish word Teas prounounced JAZZ means heat and connected to St. Brigit’s Fire.

BRID means Goddess.

Names for the goddess – Brid, Bride, Bridget, Bridgete, Bridgett, Bridgette, Bridgid, Bridgot, Bridie. Bridin, Brie, Brigette, Brigh, Brighde, Brighid, Brighide, Brigid, Brigit, Brigitta, Brigitte, Brigyta

After learning that the Lord Mayor of Dublin was Jewish, Yogi Berra allegedly said, “Only in America!”

The Secret Jewish History of St. Patricks Day

The Jews are a quarrelsome people

Irish music is really just klezmer with an Irish accent.
Irish vocalist Susan McKeown has recorded and performed with the Grammy Award-winning klezmer outfit The Klezmatics. Before joining the group, Lisa Gutkin was best known as a leading fiddler on the Irish music scene, having performed or recorded with the likes of Tommy Sands, John Whelan, Steve Cooney, and Cathie Ryan.

Irish-Jewish Tin Pan Alley songwriting duo, William Jerome and Jean Schwartz, who celebrated Irish-Jewish kinship in their 1912 song, “If It Wasn’t for the Irish and the Jews”:

What would this great Yankee nation really really ever do

If it wasn’t for a Levy, a Monahan or Donohue

Where would we get our policemen

Why Uncle Sam would have the blues

Without the Pats and Isadores

There’d be no big department stores

If it wasn’t for the Irish and the Jews

Talk about a combination, heed my words and make a note

On St. Patrick’s Day Rosinsky pins a shamrock on his coat

There’s a sympathetic feeling between the Blooms and McAdoos

Why Tammany would surely fall, there’d really be no Hall at all

If it wasn’t for the Irish and the Jews.