skip to main  |
      skip to sidebar
          
        
          
        

 
A 90-year-old Holocaust survivor made his orchestral debut with renowned
 cellist Yo-Yo Ma last week to benefit a foundation dedicated to 
preserving the work of artists and musicians killed by the Nazis.
As reported by the Associated Press, Ma
 and George Horner received floral bouquets and a standing ovation from 
their audience of about 1,000 people in Boston's Symphony Hall. They 
appeared to enjoy their evening, chatting briefly between numbers and 
walking off the stage hand-in-hand after taking a bow together.
Before
 the performance, Ma and Horner met and embraced ahead of a brief 
rehearsal. Ma thanked Horner for helping the Terezin Music Foundation, 
named for the town of Terezin, site of an unusual Jewish ghetto in what 
was then German-occupied Czechoslovakia. Even amid death and hard labor,
 Nazi soldiers there allowed prisoners to stage performances.
They played music composed 70 years ago when Horner was incarcerated.
"It's an extraordinary link to the past," said concert organizer Mark Ludwig, who leads the foundation.
Horner
 played piano and accordion in the Terezin cabarets, including tunes 
written by fellow inmate Karel Svenk. On Tuesday, Horner played two of 
Svenk's works solo — a march and a lullaby — and then teamed up with Ma 
for a third piece called "How Come the Black Man Sits in the Back of the
 Bus?"
Svenk did not survive the genocide. But his musical legacy
 has, due in part to a chance meeting of Ludwig, a scholar of Terezin 
composers, and Horner, who never forgot the songs that were written and 
played in captivity.
Still, Ludwig found it hard to ask Horner to perform pieces laden with such difficult memories.
"To ask somebody who ... played this in the camps, that's asking a lot," said Ludwig.
Yet
 Horner, a retired doctor who lives near Philadelphia, readily agreed to
 what he described as a "noble" mission. It didn't hurt that he would be
 sharing the stage with Ma — even if he thought Ludwig was joking at 
first.
"I told him, 'Do you want me to swallow that one?'" Horner
 recalled with a laugh. "I couldn't believe it because it's a fantastic 
thing for me."
Ma said before the performance that he hoped it will inspire people to a better future.
In this video, NBC's Brian Williams introduces a short summary of the event. 
(A SPECIAL NOTE FOR NEW EMAIL SUBSCRIBERS:  THE VIDEO IS
NOT VIEWABLE DIRECTLY FROM THE EMAIL THAT YOU GET EACH DAY.  YOU MUST
CLICK ON THE TITLE AT THE TOP OF THE EMAIL TO REACH THE JEWISH HUMOR CENTRAL
WEBSITE, FROM WHICH YOU CLICK ON THE PLAY BUTTON IN THE VIDEO
IMAGE TO START THE VIDEO.)
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
I wish we could have heard more of the music.
ReplyDeleteI wish we could have heard more of the music.
ReplyDeleteMe too, but through my tears, I am smiling at the triumph of the human spirit!
DeleteJUST GRAND----on all fronts......BRAVO! Thanks,Al. M.A.
ReplyDeleteBrought tears to my eyes as well. I also would have loved to see the whole performance or at least more of this one. Is it available?
ReplyDelete