Dr. Benny Peiser 10.01.2012 14:32 +Feedback
Alexis Weissenberg: Pianist’s music saved him from death camps
Bulgarian-born French pianist Alexis Weissenberg, whose love of music from the age of 3 saved him and his mother from a World War II concentration camp and carried him to the heights of performances with Herbert von Karajan and Leonard Bernstein, has died. He was 82. Weissenberg died Sunday in Lugano, Switzerland, according to Bulgarian and Swiss news reports. He had Parkinson’s disease.
An only child, Weissenberg was born into a Jewish family in Sofia in 1929. He recalled sharing “musical joys” learning piano and listening to recordings and concerts with his mother, before studying piano with a famous Bulgarian composer, Pancho Vladigerov.
When he and his mother tried to flee German-occupied Bulgaria for Turkey with faked identification and visa papers in 1941, he recalled in an essay on his website, they landed in “an improvised concentration camp” in Bulgaria for people crossing the border illegally. He said the German-guarded camp was probably intended to send people to Poland — and extermination.
They arrived with few belongings other than a small bag, a large cardboard box, a few sandwiches and an old accordion given him as a birthday gift by a wealthy aunt. And they were lucky: After three months in the unspecified camp, a German guard who enjoyed listening to Weissenberg play Schubert on the accordion helped them escape by train.
“It was the same officer who decided one chaotic day to come and fetch us hurriedly, bring us to the station, push our belongings (still the cardboard box) through the door, literally throw the accordion through the window of the compartment,” he recalled.
The guard told his mother “Good luck” in German, then vanished. Half an hour later, they were over the border and no one asked for passports. The next day they arrived in Istanbul.
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Kategorie(n): Kultur


