Tonight we went to a violin concert hosted at Hathern Baptist Church. Violinist Elaine Patience, accompanied by Gill Townsend on piano, played a selection of pieces including several pieces from the music composed for the film Schindler’s List. That is poignant music at any time but more so at this concert because the instrument Elaine played once belonged to another violinist, called Rosa Levinsky. Rosa’s family had escaped the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and settled in Leeds, England. However, in the mid-1930s she accepted a role with the Berlin Philharmonic and was captured by the Nazis in 1938.
During following seven years she passed through three concentration camps, including an extended stint at the infamous Auschwitz and a final period at Bergen-Belsen. She survived, in part, due to her musical skills. She played on her precious violin, which her father had once used to teach the Tsar’s daughters (the royal connection being the primary reason for the family fleeing Russia). Although she survived the war, her health had been compromised and Rosa passed away not long after her chance to testify at the Nuremberg trials. The violin went to her brother, himself a musician, and then to his daughter, who wasn’t. Just under a decade ago, it featured on the BBC’s Repair Shop programme and more recently Elaine has had the opportunity to play it in a variety of places.
This is fulfilling the desire of its owner, the daughter, and the express wishes of her father and her Aunt Rosa. The beauty of the music reminds us of stories that should not be forgotten lest they be repeated. This was my sketch from tonight as I listened to those pieces. Lots of motion so I went for the energy and the vision of light triumphing over darkness.
