Topic: Hokey Pokey Offense | |
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Okay this comes under the "you learn something every day" heading as well as the "more people being offended" heading.
Enjoy! Canada’s Hokey Pokey cause of England dust up Randy Boswell, Canwest News Service Published: Wednesday, January 21, 2009 It's a musical staple of nursery schools and seniors' fitness classes throughout the English-speaking world. But The Hokey Pokey - the right-hand-in, right-hand-out ditty that sparked a 1950s dance craze - has become the focus of a bizarre controversy in Britain that has drawn in politicians, the Catholic Church in Scotland and soccer fans accused of exploiting the song's alleged anti-Catholic roots to taunt opposing teams. Now, the son of the famed Irish songwriter Jimmy Kennedy - the man credited with penning the lyrics to one of the world's most familiar melodies - has weighed in to the furor by revealing what he calls the true inspiration for his father's hit: a traditional Canadian folk tune sung by miners in the early 20th century as a drug anthem celebrating the therapeutic powers of cocaine. Ottawa schoolchildren do The Hokey Pokey on the lawn of Parliament Hill last May as part of Physical Education Day. The song has caused a ruckus in Britain that has drawn in politicians, the Catholic Church in Scotland and soccer fans. Ottawa schoolchildren do The Hokey Pokey on the lawn of Parliament Hill last May as part of Physical Education Day. The song has caused a ruckus in Britain that has drawn in politicians, the Catholic Church in Scotland and soccer fans. Julie Oliver The song is known in Britain as The Hokey Cokey, and was originally published by Kennedy during the Second World War as The Cokey Cokey before various U.S. recordings of The Hokey Pokey gave the song and its accompanying movements global popularity. In December, the song sparked an uproar in Scotland when fans of the Glasgow Rangers soccer team were accused of planning to sing it to insult rival Glasgow Celtic, a club with Catholic roots. A Catholic Church spokesman warned that The Hokey Cokey had centuries-old origins as a Protestant song meant to mock the words and actions of Catholic clergy presiding over the Latin mass. "This song does have quite disturbing origins. Although apparently innocuous, it was devised as an attack on and a parody of the Catholic mass," Peter Kearney, a spokesman for Scottish Catholic Cardinal Keith O'Brien, said at the time. He added that soccer authorities should monitor the situation to assess "if there are moves to restore its more malevolent meaning." Michael Matheson, a Nationalist member of the Scottish Parliament, also issued a warning about The Hokey Cokey in December: "It is important that the police and football clubs are aware of the sinister background to this song, and take the appropriate action against individuals and groups who use it at matches or in other situations to taunt Catholics." But that suggestion was quickly panned by Murdo Fraser, deputy leader of the Scottish Tories: "I can't believe Scottish children performing the Hokey Cokey are doing so in pursuit of any sort of anti-Catholic agenda," he told reporters. For weeks, allegations of historical bigotry behind The Hokey Pokey have been the focus of a lively debate in the letters pages and websites of British newspapers. Now, in a letter published Tuesday in the Financial Times newspaper, Jimmy Kennedy Jr. has written that the version created by his late father - the renowned Teddy Bears' Picnic lyricist, who died in 1984 - "was founded on a traditional Canadian song and is the one copyrighted and played and danced to all over the world - and still earns royalties." Kennedy Jr. then quoted his father's own recollections about how the future children's classic emerged from a 1942 gathering at a London nightclub where Canadian soldiers stationed in Britain were enjoying a riotous party. "They were having a hilarious time, singing and playing games, one of which they said was a Canadian children's game called The Cokey Cokey. I thought to myself, wouldn't that be fun as a dance to cheer people up! So when I got back to my hotel, I wrote a chorus based on the feet and hand movements the Canadians had used, with a few adaptations. A few days later, I wrote additional lyrics to it but kept the title, Cokey Cokey, and, as everybody knows, it became a big hit." Kennedy Jr. said his father told him "the unusual title was to do with drugs taken by the miners in Canada to cheer themselves up in the harsh environment where they were prospecting." And Kennedy Jr. said his father even wrote a message about the song's unsavoury Canadian genesis on the back of the sheet music: "The word ‘cokey' means a dope-fiend." |
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So, that's what it's all about.
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HA HA HA
aLittleBird Grats You! Excellent reply! |
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lol...Couldn't help it!!
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