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Holocaust Violins Live To Play Another Song

Posted: Updated: 04/11/2012 11:35 am

Holocaust Violins

By Ken Garfield
Religion News Service

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (RNS) Another voice from the past is telling the stories of the Holocaust.

Violins that outlived the owners who played them in the death camps and Jewish ghettos are being brought back to life by Amnon Weinstein in his shop in Tel Aviv. As Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Remembrance) gatherings occur around the world in April, 18 violins tracked down and repaired by Weinstein will be unveiled in Charlotte, N.C.

A dozen public concerts, worship services and other programs throughout the month are expected to attract thousands who are drawn to the music, and the history behind each instrument -- the first time the violins will be shared with the public in North and South America.

Weinstein hopes he can bring the violins to other communities, in a bid to recall the 6 million Jews and 5 million others who perished at Hitler's hand.

Weinstein, 72, lost some 380 relatives in the Holocaust -- "cousins from here to eternity," he said. These violins, he said, symbolize the power of music to outlive evil. They represent the dead, and speak for the aging survivors whose voices are being silenced by time.

"Nothing is like it was in 1945," Weinstein said. "The only thing that didn't age is the violin. It's the same, the sound of the violin. It speaks by itself. It gives you another open door to try to understand."

Like a detective, Weinstein, a violin-maker, has spent more than a decade scouring the Internet, talking to survivors' relatives, literally searching attics and basements for violins presumed lost to time.

One of his many triumphs: A violin played in the men's orchestra at Auschwitz in Poland was sold by an unnamed survivor for $50 to a man named Abraham Davidovitz in 1946 near Munich, Germany. Years later, the Davidovitz family gave it to Weinstein after inscribing on the label: "The violins continue to play for all those who did not live to make music."

Several violins are believed to have belonged to some of the thousands of klezmer musicians who played traditional Jewish folk music across Eastern Europe. These violins are inscribed with the Star of David. Today, klezmer music remains popular in synagogues and at festivals across the U.S. and Europe.

One of the violins tracked down by Weinstein is beyond repair, no longer able to make music. Weinstein believes it was played in the rain at one of the camps. It, too, bears witness, he said.

Nick Strimple, a Holocaust music scholar who teaches at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, said music played in the camps and ghettos has a complicated legacy.

The Nazis ordered inmate musicians to play marches as other inmates were sent off to forced labor assignments. "It was easier for the Nazis to keep them regimented," he said. At the Dachau camp, Strimple said, inmates would put on secret concerts in the barracks and latrines, sometimes on homemade instruments.

In the ghettos, though, not everyone wanted to make music. Some Jews likened it to "dancing in a graveyard." Others, Strimple said, picked up their instruments for comfort, even adapting songs to suit the times. In the ghetto in Lodz, Poland, for example, Jewish mothers would sing a traditional Yiddish lullaby, "Raisins and Almonds," to help their children fall asleep. In the ghetto, the title of the song was changed to "No More Raisins, No More Almonds."

USC's Strimple, who is not Jewish (he directs the music at Beverly Hills Presbyterian Church), is moved by Weinstein's crusade, and what he believes it symbolizes.

"The survival of these instruments," he said, "prevents the Nazis from having any kind of victory after the fact. It's a way for the dead to communicate with us."

Dan Napolitano, director of teacher education and special programs at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, appreciates the power of artifacts to bring the story to life. The display of more than 3,000 shoes taken from people who died at the Majdanek camp in Poland, for example, is one of the most talked-about by the 33.2 million people who have visited the museum since it opened in 1993.

In synagogues and community squares this month, candles will be lit and prayers said to remember victims and survivors of the Holocaust. In that same spirit, Napolitano believes the violins can help people better understand the scope of what happened.

"They are unique touch points on the history," he said. "They capture our imagination and get us to ask hard questions: Who owned them? Why did they lose them?"

Weinstein likes to tell of the violin he was working on one day in his shop in his native Israel. He found himself scraping away black gunk until he realized what it was. The violin had been played by an inmate in the orchestra at Auschwitz, a short walk from the gas chambers and chimneys.

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By Ken Garfield Religion News Service CHARLOTTE, N.C. (RNS) Another voice from the past is telling the stories of the Holocaust. Violins that outlived the owners who played them in the death ca...
By Ken Garfield Religion News Service CHARLOTTE, N.C. (RNS) Another voice from the past is telling the stories of the Holocaust. Violins that outlived the owners who played them in the death ca...
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12:17 AM on 04/18/2012
hitler and his cohorts were murderers and killers ,thieves and robbers the same as what was done to the palistines in 1937.i have seen only one picture of this killing and the jews responsible for this laughing. so i ask my self who taught that mainic hitler to do this. well done you guess right. ask what moses robbed went he left egypt? surprised what were they doing with the calves. dont ever think i am against dues i am not ,but some one has to stand up for what is right other wise the violins will be playing forever.
tamazul
Badges? What Badges?
11:45 AM on 04/13/2012
I feel just as bad for the six million Jews, gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, and others that lost their lives at the hands of this horrendous regime, as I do for the countless millions of Native Americans that lost their lives and had their culture almost wiped out, at the hands of hordes of invading europeans throughout north and south america.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
02:24 AM on 04/13/2012
And the only song that fiddle would play
was oh the dreadful wind and rain.

Great story.
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
05:14 PM on 04/12/2012
For Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Remembrance), I will remember my great aunt who gave up her 10 year old daughter so she could live to tell the story. A mother deciding to tell her only child to run and hide as they are being led to the train for deportation to a death camp is the epitome of love and I want to remember that love and that person. Never forget.
03:51 PM on 04/12/2012
A beautiful story which makes one reflect on the horrors of the holocaust and war in general.
It seems we have learned nothing from this Nazi crime,as ethnic cleansing still goes on in this world today.A wonderful world,created by GOD,being vandalised by its inhabitants.R.I.P The Holocaust Victims.
03:12 PM on 04/12/2012
Beautiful story and beautiful work to restore violins that made music during the Holocaust, when music was so needed. I see that as freeing the music the violin was holding for all those years and with in the memories released so we don't ever forget.
02:52 PM on 04/12/2012
How did this beautiful story become a forum for Holocaust deniers to post hate for the brave people of the book? There is no reasoning with the unreasonable, so this is in way of rebuttal. Those interested in the Holocaust and the mystery of evil and good existing in the same person, people, should read "Music From A Broken Violin: A Memoir by Tikvah Feinstein. The violin and her music is representative of our highest reach in this bottomed out world we live in. And there was a Holocaust. Deal with it. We do every day.
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Alex0393
Are you people for real?
08:14 PM on 04/12/2012
What exactly do these Holocaust deniers need for proof? Not that I would waste any time trying to convince them but the evidence is everywhere. These are the same people like the Rosie Cowdonnels of the world who think 9/11 was an explosion and the planes were holograms
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celticmaiden7475
12:45 AM on 04/12/2012
It is very lovely to think of these violins being played again. Many years ago I was a nanny in France the grandmother was a holocaust survivor. She lost everyone but her parents and her aunt. She told me how she had a star of David necklace but some one stole it from her. On her birthday I went to a store the sold Jewish religious items and I got her a new star of David. I gave it to her and she started sobbing. She said I gave her her religion back no one ever told her it was ok to be Jewish or that her loss was tragic for the world. It is important to remember
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mallenrohslvr
11:32 PM on 04/11/2012
I was in 7th grade when my school took us on a field trip to the National Holocaust Museum and the memory of all those shoes has stuck w/me for all these years. . . it's a haunting image, and very poignant, you read the chapters in your history book and see the occasional documentary on tv but you really, truly do not understand the full scope of the Holocaust until you see those shoes. . . I image seeing, holding and hearing these violins probably has the same effect on someone. I've always found the violin to be a beautiful and haunting instrument and I can only imagine the history that these restored instruments will tell when played
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Cindbird
Using my head for something other than a hat rack.
01:51 PM on 04/12/2012
One of my schoolmate's mother was born in the camps. She was born 3 days before the camp was liberated. Her older brother was 4 when they were taken and he had the number tattooed on his forearm. When you learn something like it, it brings home to you that it happened to real people, not just a list of statistics in some text book.
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Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
08:06 PM on 04/11/2012
It is wonderful that these amazing musical instruments could survive the right wing Holocaust in Europe.
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This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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