Restored violins that survived Nazi concentration camps make Montreal debut - Action News
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Restored violins that survived Nazi concentration camps make Montreal debut

"Voices, weeping, laughter and prayers escape" from the violins that belonged to Jewish musicians before and during the Holocaust, says the Israeli master luthier who has brought them back to life.

Violins of Hope concert premieres at Place des Arts on Saturday, Nov. 2

Eight restored violins that belonged to Jewish musicians and survived concentration camps will be played in Montreal on Saturday, Nov. 2 at Place des Arts. (Colin Harris/CBC)

Master luthier Amnon Weinsteinand his sonAvshalomhave spent years restoring violins that belonged to Jewish musicians before and during the Holocaust.

"My mission is to get hold of any violin that has been rescued from the Holocaust, to repair it and to make it into a concert violin," said the elder Weinstein in a news release.

"I want these violins to be played, to have their voices heard and have their say, because these violins have a very particular sound: voices, weeping, laughter and prayers escape."

Amnon Weinstein is a luthier who worked on these string instruments to repair and restore them at his shop in Israel. (Photo by Mike Koren)

The Weinsteins have restored more than70 string instruments in their shop in Israel, as part of a project they call Violins of Hope.

Theviolins have been touringEurope and the United States, and they make their Canadian debut at Placedes Arts in Montreal on Saturday, Nov. 2.

'Emotional project'

Amnon Weinsteinhimself is a Holocaust survivor who lost many loved ones during the war

His son Avshalom told CBC that this undertaking has been "an emotional project."

For the Weinsteins, repairing string instruments is a vocation that's been passed down through the generations.

Avshalomsaid hisfather started training as a luthier in the 1960s, following in his own father's footsteps. Avshalombegan to help out with the family business at the age of 18.
Amnon Weinstein is himself a Holocaust survivor. (Photo by Mike Koren )

He described an instrument they worked on that had sustained a great deal of damage over the years.

"It was in pieces," he said. "We had to put it back together like a puzzle."

Despite the sorry state of some of the instruments,Avshalomsaid he and his father persisted.

"Almost everything is reparable.It only matters if you want to put the time, effort and the money."

The Weinsteinsspent careful hours on each instrument, bringing back not just the violin's sound, but also preserving its history.

"Repairing it and knowing the actual history of where it was and in some cases, that it was played in camps, concentration camps and death camps, this was very different," saidAvshalom.

The concert, under the director of Dutch conductor Vincent De Kort, will feature selections fromBach, Mendelssohnand Mahler, as well as the premiere of Children's War Diaries by Canadian composer Jaap Nico Hamburger.

"The Nazi officers forced prisoners in the death camps to play classical music," said Hamburger, "at the entrance of gas chambers in order to trick arriving prisoners into thinking that it's not so bad."

His composition,Children's War Diaries, was inspired by a compilation of diaries of teenagers who were killedduring the war, as well as by a visit to the Children's Memorial at Yad Vashem.

Violinist Monica Duchesnesaid it's an honour to play a violin steeped in so much history. (Sudha Krishnan/CBC)

Cantorial music will be performed by soprano Sharon Azrieli and tenor Gideon Zelermyer.

Violinist Monica Duchesnetold CBC she is honoured to play one of the eight violins brought to Montreal for the concert.

"It's very emotional for us.For us to be able to have these instruments that survived such a terrible period of history when their owners didn't," she said. "Itjust shows the resilience."

Depending on the damage each instrument sustained, some took years to restore. (Colin Harris/CBC)

The Violins of Hope will be played for the first time in Canada by musicians of the Orchestre Mtropolitain at the Maison symphonique de Montral at Place des Arts on Saturday, Nov.2 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets start at $45. The event is co-presented by theMontreal Holocaust Museum.

With files from Duke Eatmon, Sudha Krishnan