YouTube
Interview with Ron Jones
Ron Jones is often
asked to explain The Wave! How did it happen? Is it like the
movie? Can you teach me how to do it? He has turned down inquiry from
Jim Jones of Peoples Temple to magazine editors, scholars, students,
skinheads and evangelists. He is constantly asked to advise on plays
about The Wave being produced around the world and respond
to a website that claims The Wave never took place.
To depict what
really happened – to describe his personal feelings and the role of
racism/violence in The Wave – Ron chose to perform The
Wave only once before a San Francisco audience of students and
Holocaust survivors! He recorded this event as a DVD and hoped it would
answer all questions. And only once did he respond to a late night phone
call to meet Eva Moses, a child at Auschwitz, and join her in the examination
of horror. And once, only once did he take Eva Moses story to Hitler’s
private chambers in Nuremberg’s God Room to perform a requested exorcism.
“I’m not proud of The Wave but I can’t escape it! It is like a calling
that just gets louder! For me The Wave is a story of ghosts. What we
can be. The allure of good and evil. Choices. I’m sorry but in the end
I can’t answer your questions about The Wave. I am a gym teacher and
grandparent. Confused by today’s events. Worried. Feeling unable to
affect change. Content to play basketball with a grandchild, listen
to the songs in my head. Spitting the poetry of everyday life in quiet
reverence.
I suspect the
answers you seek are closer than some distant drum beat. It is the choices
you make. The decision to include or exclude people from your life.
To walk across the room to meet a stranger. The stranger in you and
all of us. To trust yourself and others. To fight for justice and equality
in the pulse of your life. To love your children. To be silly. Playful.
Organize for a sense of community and better life for all. A life that
can’t be given away to any fear or tyrant. A life that can’t be planned
or explained, only appreciated.
Yes, there
is good and evil in what we do. The good in me yearns for freedom. The
evil exists at the edge of road rage or a racial slur waiting to explode
into a world of perfection, answers and order. I am capable of either.”
Ron Jones
The documentary
Lesson Plan contains an extensive interview with Ron Jones
and twelve students that participated in The Wave experiment. Told through
the eyes of the students this documentary helps explain “who you might
have been” and “what you are capable of doing” during the rise of fascism
and the holocaust. Perhaps most frightening of all, Lesson Plan
exposes the use of blind obedience to keep people fearful and intolerant
of others. Sound familiar?
See this
website for additional information about the Wave Musical and the
various books, TV, and feature film adaptations of this story.
See the
Lesson Plan Movie website for information about the documentary
Lesson Plan by students in the original classroom.



You will find more
information about the history of The Wave here.