For your inspiration:
A story about one person helping to heal the "big disconnect" between
two fine peoples.
Daniel Barenboim is a world renowned pianist and
conductor.
He is Jewish. And he wants to do everything he
can to heal the Israeli-Palestinian relationship.
Three weeks ago Mr. Barenboim ignored warnings and
restrictions. He found a way to Ramallah, to the "enemy."
He described and modeled well the public peace
process.
"Each one of us has a responsibility to do what
is right, and not to wait for others to do it," he said. "My way is
music. What I can do is play music, play music for you, and maybe this way, in
a very small way for these few moments, we are able to build down the hatred
that is so much in the region."
"I'm not a politician," he said. "I
don't have a plan to end the conflict. But I think the lesson we have to learn
from the 20th century is that every human being -- small, young as you or older
like I -- has to think of his responsibility as a human being and not always
depend on the politicians and the governments."
Anyway, he said, he was happy to be able to speak
Hebrew in Ramallah without feeling uncomfortable, and to demonstrate that there
are different kinds of Israelis. "The worst that could happen today is
that they didn't like the way I played," he said.
===================
Published in The New York Times -- Wednesday, September 11, 2002
And on the Web at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/11/international/middleeast/11RAMA.html?ex=1032760187&ei=1&en=0406b1218eb179da
'Moonlight' and Mendelssohn in the West Bank
By SERGE SCHMEMANN
RAMALLAH, West Bank, Sept. 10 The old Steinway grand
had seen better days, but when Daniel Barenboim drew the first nostalgic notes
of Beethoven's "Moonlight" Sonata from it today, 200 neatly uniformed
Palestinian students froze in delight.
Music, and especially music of this caliber from a
live Israeli master, is not something that has often graced young lives more
wrapped up in the daily misery of curfews, roadblocks, dangers and hatreds.
Mr. Barenboim, the famed conductor and pianist, seemed
forgiving of the hoarse old instrument and the many television cameras with him
on the stage. The music was a message, which he spelled out after an ecstatic
ovation from the pupils.
"Each one of us has a responsibility to do what
is right, and not to wait for others to do it," he said. "My way is
music. What I can do is play music, play music for you, and maybe this way, in
a very small way for these few moments, we are able to build down the hatred
that is so much in the region."
His words sounded incontrovertible. But Mr.
Barenboim's music has stirred some sharp debate in Israel, most memorably when
he led a German orchestra in a piece by Wagner, Hitler's favorite composer, at
an Israeli arts festival in July 2001. Many in the audience walked out, and Mr.
Barenboim was accused of everything from insensitivity to "cultural
rape."
Mr. Barenboim, who was born in Argentina, raised in
Israel, and now divides most of his time between Berlin and Chicago, has also
been vocal in his criticism of Israel's military crackdown on the Palestinians,
often posting his views on his Web site, daniel-barenboim.com. In March, while
Israeli troops were cracking down on Palestinian towns, Mr. Barenboim announced
that he would give a concert in Ramallah, the Palestinian headquarters in the
West Bank. The Israeli Army barred him from going, saying it could not
guarantee his security, and the concert was canceled.
Three weeks ago, on his last visit to Israel, Mr.
Barenboim, 59, gave a concert at Bir Zeit University, a Palestinian university
near Ramallah.
This time, there was little advance notice, and Mr.
Barenboim simply ignored whatever restrictions were in force. He declined to
discuss how he got in, but a German diplomatic car was waiting for him outside.
After a few weeks of relative quiet, the visit seemed
not to generate the same resistance that arose in March. There was no immediate
comment from Israel, and the event was given scant notice on Israeli television
news.
But for the students who came to the Friends School, a
respected private school, it was a day to remember. Mr. Barenboim performed
only the one sonata, and then invited the Palestinians to play for him.
Three girls rose to the challenge. Sileen Khoury, 15,
gamely worked her way through a Chopin waltz, followed by 15-year-old Nadia
Arouri with Mendelssohn's barcarole, and Zeina Amr, 14, who was so nervous she
forgot the name of her piece. Mr. Barenboim told them all they were great, and
urged them to keep studying.
"It was very nice of him, because he took all the
trouble to come here through checkpoints and everything," said Ms. Amr.
Ms. Khoury, who said she wanted to continue with
music, added that she was "a bit nervous, but with Mr. Barenboim beside me
I felt safe."
"Actually it was an honor for us, she said.
"The Israelis try to stop us from learning, working, but they can never
stop us from playing music."
She said she had been studying piano for six years, but
her seventh year at the conservatory was delayed because curfews had prevented
her from taking her exams.
After the students went back to class, Mr. Barenboim,
dressed in a casual white jacket over a black polo shirt, sat down with
reporters to pursue his message, alternating comfortably between English,
Hebrew, French and Italian.
As director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and
artistic director of the Staatsoper Berlin, he is something of a citizen of the
world, and it has been largely his visits to Israel that have brought him
criticism. Mr. Barenboim came this time for the International Chamber Music
Festival in Jerusalem, and the police were in evidence there on Sunday after he
received death threats.
Mr. Barenboim first performed in the West Bank in
1999, when he appeared with Edward Said, the Columbia University professor and
outspoken Palestinian, with whom the musician became friends in the early
1990's. For the past three years, Mr. Barenboim has run summer workshops in
Germany and the United States for young musicians from Israel and Arab
countries.
To people who ask why he made the special effort to
come to Ramallah, he said his answer was simple.
"I'm not a politician," he said. "I
don't have a plan to end the conflict. But I think the lesson we have to learn
from the 20th century is that every human being -- small, young as you or older
like I -- has to think of his responsibility as a human being and not always
depend on the politicians and the governments."
Anyway, he said, he was happy to be able to speak
Hebrew in Ramallah without feeling uncomfortable, and to demonstrate that there
are different kinds of Israelis. "The worst that could happen today is
that they didn't like the way I played," he said.
As for those who might find fault with the visit, he
said, "Anyone who criticizes my being here today, I only have pity for
him."
In Ramallah, at least, there was no one to pity, and
nobody complained about the music. "It's extremely important to have him
here," said Colin South, the director of the Friends School. "Anybody
of this caliber who can come to the West Bank and play for us right now is just
incredibly encouraging. We're very grateful for him being here."