Violin and the holocaust

19

Transcript of Violin and the holocaust

Alma Rosé

Alma Rosé was born in 1906 into a very famous family at the turn of the 19th century Vienna - father Arnold was the esteemed concert-master of the Vienna Philharmonic while mother Justine Mahler was the sister of Gustav Mahler,the famous composer.

Alma subsequently became a celebrated violinist in her own right. In 1932 she founded the woman’s orchestra Die Wiener Walzermädeln (The Waltzing Girls of

Vienna). She led as conductor-soloist in concert tours throughout Europe. They disbanded when Nazi Germany annexed Austria in 1938.

At the outbreak of WWII, life gradually became difficult and dangerous for the Jews in Vienna, but Alma was fortunate to emigrate

successfully with her father to London .

Unfortunately, she needed money to support him in his forced retirement, so accepted recital work in Holland, then a seemingly safe neutral country. After two years there, the Nazis invaded and she was

forced to flee. Her luck ran out-she was captured and sent first to Drancy, then on to Auschwitz Concentration camp.

Alma Rosé was originally held in the dreaded Block 10 - the medical experiments unit - but when it was discovered that she was a famous violinist she was put in charge of the Women's Orchestra .

Photo:Stephan van der Hoorn

.The orchestra contained an odd mix of instruments . In the

concert dedicated to her by the Ra’anana Symphonette Orchestra, the first part of Beethoven’s 5th symphony was played by the orchestra and … mandolins . It is said that

this is how Alma and her orchestra used to play this piece of music.

During her 10 months as conductor none of her musicians were gassed or died from

other causes, almost a miracle in that hellish environment.

Alma died on 4.4.44 probably from food poisoning. She was 37. In a bizarre twist, one of the doctors who tried to save her was Josef Mengele, the "Angel of Death“

himself.

Author: C.Puisney

אלמה רוזה )באדיבות הוצאת הספרים כינרת זמורה ביתן דביר

The Women's Orchestra continued to receive relatively preferential

treatment until September 1944, when they were evacuated to the Bergen-Belsen camp; all but two of Rosé's players lived to see the

end of the war.

Richard Newman's biography "Alma Rosé: Vienna to Auschwitz" (2000)

My Father’s ViolinBy Helen Wininger Livnat

In remembrance of the “SHOA”, the Holocaust

To play the violin-Your eyes bursting with tearsAcross the worst of pains.

The sane world is dying in front of youBut you can’t save the doomed .

Helen

To play –with your murdered dead around you

And your baby daughter has no food left.

To play– in front of your joyous enemies.

To be rewarded by peels from the trash

And a quarter loaf of black bread.

All this will never happen to us!The Holocaust happened one too many times

ButNo one will expel usNo one will burn usIn any country in the worldBecause I have my own country now. Translated from Hebrew/Ruthie Artman-Breindler

Feivel Winingerloved his violin

passionately ,'my best friend' he

called it. Until the day of his death in 2002, he enjoyed playing the simple violin that saved his life.

My Dad's violin is still alive, playing and telling the story .

Special concerts are taking place in North Carolina U.S in these very days. Artists are playing on “ Violins of Hope “ , violins that rescued Jews during the Holocaust.Our representative there is my father, Feivel Winninger’s violin . With his violin and his musical talent, he fed 17 family members and friends for two hellish years in the camps in Transnistria. The 'old' fiddle , a simple violin, just over a hundred years old - goes on telling a huge story of love, life on the edge of death and is taking the story to the whole world.A couple of years ago “he” played at the Wailing Wall in front of 3000 people, then in Switzerland. He has been playing and telling the story that my father, Rest in Peace, can not do anymore .The sounds are crying and they are tired , but they will never stop telling the story. The violin, that my father called 'friend' –is alive and is a messenger to the world instead of the crying of all those people whose cries will never be heard.

May their memory be blessed!

http://www.violinsofhopecharlotte.com/stories.html http://nineronline.com/2012/violins-of-hope-brings-holocausts-history-to-charlotte

Music : Robert Schumann, "Träumerei“Poem : Helen Wininger Livnat, writerPhotos :PersonalFrom the net – credit to their ownersInfo : WikipediaThe presentation shown at the concert of the

Ra’anana orchestra

April 19, 2012

HolocaustThe glass museum, Arad,Israel