When the TJT was beginning my father and I were strong supporters. I believe my father was influenced in becoming a rabbi because he played a lead role in the Dybbuk when he was a student at UC Berkeley. I loved the Dybbuk. He loved Jewish and YIddush theater.
We saw, in the first few plays of the TJT, the elements of mystical Jewish theater that makes the Dybukk such a powerful play.
By the third or fourth play the TJT was performing plays that were based on self-hating Jewish views of the world. Their audiences were the people in the United States and Europe who believe that the problem with Palestinians is that Jews are not accommodating enough. Like blacks were never accomodating enough to the KKK.
The good news about the failure of the TJT to survive is that, hopefully, the community of self-hating Jews is getting smaller. It may be getting smaller as more people understand the inherent, but tragic, unwavering Jew hatred by Jews.