Lamb and Lynx Gaede, the dimpled tween rockers whose Nazi-themed pop  band, Prussian Blue, sparked an exuberant media firestorm several years  back have grown up — and had a change of heart.
“I’m not a white  nationalist anymore,” Lamb told The Daily in an exclusive interview, the  twins’ first in five years. “My sister and I are pretty liberal now.”
“Personally,  I love diversity,” Lynx seconded. “I’m stoked that we have so many  different cultures. I think it’s amazing and it makes me proud of  humanity every day that we have so many different places and people.”
Now  19, they both still speak in a disarmingly girlish singsong. Their  message, however, was not always so sweet. In 2006, the sisters, who  formed the band at the suggestion of White Nationalist leader William  Pierce, drew international notoriety with songs like “Hate for Hate: Lamb Near the Lane,” a dreamy folksong  cowritten by Lamb and the late David Lane, a member of the violent  terrorist splinter cell The Order, who was then serving 190 years in  prison for his involvement in the murder of Jewish talk show host Alan  Berg in 1984 (he and Lamb were pen pals).
Prussian Blue was never  a presence on the pop charts and only played small venues. But for a  brief time in the mid-2000s, Lamb and Lynx were seemingly everywhere —  “the new face of hate,” as one news program put it. They appeared on  “Primetime Live” and in a number of other media oulets, including GQ  (where I profiled them in 2006).
Their story even inspired a  stage musical, White Noise, which began as a low-budget,  off-off-Broadway production before finding a major backer in Whoopi  Goldberg and earning some decent reviews in Chicago earlier this year. A  Broadway production is reportedly in the planning stages.
The  twisted appeal, of course, was the incongruity of seeing a racist,  anti-Semitic polemic — complete with smiley-face Hitler T-shirts and  onstage Sieg Heil-ing — articulated by these cherubic little girls.
Now,  the Gaede twins say they have changed their views and attribute their  earlier political pronouncements to youthful naivete. “My sister and I  were home-schooled,” Lynx pointed out. “We were these country bumpkins.  We spent most of our days up on the hill playing with our goats.”
Lamb agreed. “I was just spouting a lot of knowledge that I had no idea what I was saying,” she said.
The  twins’ mother, April Gaede, who has been a prominent member of racist  fringe groups like the National Alliance and the National Vanguard,  brought up her daughters with the ethos of white nationalism — a mix of  racial pride, anti-immigrant hostility, Holocaust denial and resistance  to the encroachment of “muds,” i.e., Jews and nonwhites.
But  after enrolling in public school and moving to Montana — a predominantly  white state, albeit one with a decidedly hippie-ish vibe — Lamb and  Lynx decided they simply no longer believed what they’d been taught.
Their  transformation first became evident to Prussian Blue’s fans during the  band’s 2006 European tour, a double bill with the Swedish white-power  warbler Saga. Along with their familiar repertoire of Skrewdriver  covers, racist folktunes glorifying Rudolf Hess and other Aryan  “heroes,” and perky bubble-gum ballads about boys and middle school, the  girls threw the audience a curve ball — a rendition of Bob Dylan’s  “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door.”
“Mama, put my guns in the ground,”  they sang to a smattering of boos from the crowd of Scandinavian  skinheads and other far-right music aficionados. “I can’t use them  anymore.”
They knew it was an unorthodox choice. “Oh, our mom  warned us,” Lamb recalled. “She said, ‘You know, some people aren’t  going to like this — Bob Dylan was a Jew.’”
But the girls, who  were then 13 going on 14, were in a rebellious frame of mind. “We just  decided to go for it,” Lamb continued. “I mean, if people don’t like the  song, don’t f**king go to the show. Don’t listen to my music. Don’t buy  my CDs.” As they toured Germany, Denmark and Czechoslovakia, they  played the tune at every stop. Then they came home and had a  heart-to-heart talk about the band’s future.
“‘Are you done, Lynx?’” Lamb asked her twin.
“Yeah, I’m done,” came the reply.
Lamb  and Lynx have spent most of the past five years “lying low and trying  to live a normal life,” as Lamb put it, turning aside numerous media  requests. Besides which, they know that their change of heart will not  not please some members of the movement that once anointed them its  standard bearers. “I’ve had people call me a race traitor before,” Lynx  said. “It’s definitely something they’re going to have to get over,” she  added defiantly.
“There are dangerous people in White  Nationalism that don’t give a f***,” Lamb added, “and they would do  awful things to people who they think betrayed the movement. We’re  stepping on eggshells.”
The girls are still on good terms with  their mother, who they say has been surprisingly supportive of their  philosophical evolution. “She said she taught us to question things and  that she’s glad we don’t just accept everything she says,” Lynx said.
Suffering  from a number of medical issues, Lynx lives at home in northwest  Montana with her mother, her stepfather and her half-sister, Dresden.  Lamb, who works as a hotel chambermaid, lives a short drive away, but  she often stops by with a bag of dirty laundry.
Nevertheless,  both daughters openly question April’s “fixation,” as Lynx called it, on  the fate of the white race, as well as her encouragement of their  bizarre musical career. “I’m glad we were in the band,” Lynx said, “but I  think we should have been pushed toward something a little more  mainstream and easier for us to handle than being front-men for a belief  system that we didn’t even completely understand at that time. We were  little kids.”
Asked whether she wished she’d done anything  differently, April Gaede told The Daily, “I thought it would just be a  little fun thing to do. I didn’t expect it to get as big as it did. If  the girls feel regretful about it, I guess I would have to as well.”
But  April, who is working to create an “intentional” white community in  their area, called Pioneer Little Europe, also suspects her daughters’  liberal turn may be a passing phase. “They’re 19,” she said. “I think  when they have children of their own, they’ll come to the same  conclusions I have.”
Perhaps they will, but for now the girls are  eager to put the entire experience behind them. Serving as  internationally vilified poster children for the Aryan race was a lot of  responsibility, especially for two pimply adolescents with mouths full  of braces. “When you’re a preteen, you’re already insecure,” Lynx  pointed out, “and we were subjected to more of that because of the  situation we were put in. It’s scary when you’re young and you have a  bunch of people hating you.”
The media barrage took the family by  surprise. They were deluged with hate mail — some of it, ironically,  from people professing equality and brotherhood. But the fan mail could  be just as disconcerting. “There was a lot of predatory energy from  those guys that was really hard for my sister and me to take,” Lynx  recalled, “and as we got older, developing and becoming women, we  realized this might get a little more intense.”
But both girls  say the hardest part of the whole experience was dealing with the media,  which they believe routinely misrepresented them and sensationalized  their beliefs. Their time in the limelight subjected them to  extraordinary stress, and appears to have contributed to severe health  problems for both sisters. Lynx was diagnosed with cancer during her  freshman year of high school and doctors removed a large tumor from her  shoulder. Then she developed a rare condition called CVS, cyclic  vomiting syndrome.
Lamb has struggled as well. She suffers from  scoliosis and chronic back pain, as well as lack of appetite and intense  emotional stress. During several of our conversations, she burst into  tears as she agonized about how to balance her love for her mother with  her desire to let the world know that the girls have moved on.
Approximately a year ago, Lamb and Lynx stumbled on a new treatment that they say has done wonders for many of these ailments.
“I  have to say, marijuana saved my life,” Lynx told me. “I would probably  be dead if I didn’t have it.” She discovered pot while recovering from  her cancer treatments. She’d been prescribed morphine and OxyContin,  which she quit cold turkey. One day when she was having a bout of  nausea, a friend offered her a toke. She was reluctant at first. The  girls’ biological father had been “a druggie” when they were young, Lynx  said.
But the drug worked wonders, and soon Lynx became one of  the first five minors to get a medical marijuana card in Montana. Now  Lamb has one, too.
Pot has also helped the twins rekindle the  creative impulses they once channeled into their music. They’ve both  taken up painting — astrological themes, mostly — and Lynx restores  furniture. They hope to enroll in college, and intend to dedicate  themselves to making medical marijuana legal in all 50 states.
Meanwhile,  they’ll keep growing up. Impressive as their transformation has been,  for instance, their views on World War II still bear traces of the  Holocaust denial ideology they were taught as children. For instance,  asked whether the Holocaust happened, Lynx replied, “I think certain  things happened. I think a lot of the stories got misconstrued. I mean,  yeah, Hitler wasn’t the best, but Stalin wasn’t, Churchill wasn’t. I  disagree with everybody at that time.”
Lamb concurred. “I just think everyone needs to frickin’ get over it,” she said. “That’s what I think.”
Indeed,  they’d both rather talk about ways to help the world in the present  than rehash what seems to both of them like ancient history. They’ve  been exposed to enough negative energy to last a lifetime, and they’ve  had enough.
“We just want to come from a place of love and  light,” Lamb said. “I think we’re meant to do something more — we’re  healers. We just want to exert the most love and positivity we can.”
By Aaron Gell taken from http://www.thedaily.com/page/2011/07/17/071711-news-nazi-twins-1-6/
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