Sinead’s Secret Rabbi

Sinead O’connor has a secret imaginary Rabbi

wonder who he is. or if he exists at all

let’s take a look at secret jewish history of Sinead O’connor

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14 thoughts on “Sinead’s Secret Rabbi

  1. there was a bright kid from enriched english class that had crush on sinead

    kyle smart

    anglo saxon blood, enemy of the irish….or so they portray

    when emperor’s new clothes would come on muchmusic he would dance with bald army head in his bath robe

    i owe kyle
    for bringing all the girls to his party house

  2. I WANT CLONED UTERUS

    NOT BUNK DONATION UTERUS

    these rockefeller’s better start sharting me cloned body parts

    especially ariana rockefeller

    or no absolution on your reincarnation as liquid hot magma

  3. In Revelation 20 the resurrection of the wicked is detailed. They are then judged and thrown in the lake of fire.

    yes God’s plan is detailed

    all i takes is a vote/poll

  4. In the wake of the recent publication of Sinéad O’Connor’s memoir, “Rememberings,” most headlines and reviews have focused on her horror story of the time Prince abused her. The real revelation of the book, however, may be how one of the world’s most famous Catholic converts to Islam has had a lifelong, abiding appreciation for Judaism and Jewish people. Specifically, three Jewish people: Bob Dylan and Barbra Streisand, both of whom she seems to idolize and after whom she models herself, plus her imaginary, romantic ideal, a “much-fantasized-about” handsome rabbi who would steer her toward Judaism.

    It all began — as so many things do — with Elvis Presley. A few months after “the King” died in 1977, 11-year-old O’Connor came downstairs one day and heard “a kind man’s voice singing to a girl that she needn’t cry anymore” (presumably a reference to Dylan’s 1978 single, “Baby, Stop Crying”). O’Connor recounts what happened next: “I go to the record player. I make my brother Joe play it again. I say, ‘Who’s he?’ ‘Bob Dylan.’ I see from the album cover he’s as beautiful as if God blew a breath from Lebanon and it became a man… In my head I call him Lebanon Man. His voice is like a blanket. He’s really tender and he loves girls.”

    Dylan eventually became an inspiration for O’Connor, who especially appreciated his straightforwardness and his willingness to express anger in song. “In real life you aren’t allowed to say you’re angry but in music you can say anything,” she writes. “My brother played me a Bob Dylan song called ‘Idiot Wind.’ It’s really angry and he says loads of mean things to someone. It’s really brave. He isn’t pretending to be nice all the time.” In this way, Dylan may have served as much as a role model for O’Connor as an inspiration, and at the height of O’Connor’s career (which was also the nadir of her career), Dylan would indeed play a role.

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