
 Bureau of Lost Culture
 Bureau of Lost Culture This is Penny Rimbaud - Part One
 Oct 29, 2025 
 Penny Rimbaud, co-founder of the influential punk-anarchist band Crass and a lifelong activist, shares his journey from wartime childhood to radical living at Dial House. He discusses his disdain for authority, the impact of Zen Buddhism on his art, and the importance of poetry as a heart-centered practice. Reflecting on the cynicism of the 60s counterculture, he emphasizes authenticity in artistry over commercial success. With stories of defiance, creativity, and spiritual exploration, Penny remains a powerful voice for personal autonomy and societal critique. 
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Early Trauma Shaped Lifelong Rejection
- Seeing pictures of concentration camps as a child made Penny reject the 'real world' and its values permanently.
- That trauma anchored his lifelong refusal to participate in systems that enable mass violence or commodify suffering.
Zen Then Tao: Evolving Spiritual Lens
- Paul Reps' Zen writing gave Penny a framework that confirmed his sense that bourgeois life was nonsensical.
- He later moved from Zen to Tao as he saw Zen adopting formulaic traps similar to other philosophies.
Total Commitment Over Performative Protest
- Penny criticises half-hearted counterculture: true commitment must be total and uncompromised.
- He insists culture requires absolute dedication to beauty, purity and freedom rather than performative protest.




