Violins of Hope come to Minnesota



A violin with a Star of David design sits behind a glass case.

On a May evening in St. Paul, Israeli violinmaker Avshi Weinstein poses a question to the Jewish Community Center Symphony Orchestra before they begin rehearsal.

“Do you have any idea how many labor camps, ghettos, concentration camps were in Europe during the war?” Weinstein asked.

Some musicians respond — a thousand one says, several thousand, says another.

“Close to 40,000,” Weinstein said. “Almost every single camp had an orchestra. Auschwitz actually had seven orchestras. There was a lot of music in the ghettos. “

He explained: “The Nazis wanted to have music.”

Musicians perform at a rehearsal.
Avshi Weinstein speaks at a rehearsal for the JCC Symphony Orchestra, led by conductor Mark Elliot Bergman, at the Capp Center in St. Paul on May 6.
Alex V Cipolle | MPR News

Weinstein is in Minnesota for Violins of Hope, an internationally touring collection of 70 violins that survived the Holocaust. Weinstein also calls it a residency because, for two months, there will also be more than 50 events featuring the violins — exhibitions, lectures, special Shabbat services and concerts spanning the state and even reaching to Sioux Falls, S.D.

The JCC Symphony Orchestra will perform May 20 with violin soloist Marc Levine playing the “Shlomo in Auschwitz” violin.

Katie Kline, senior director of Jewish arts and culture for the Minnesota JCC, says the programming is so expansive because they wanted to reach as many people as possible.

“Survivor stories are becoming increasingly rare,” Kline said. “These instruments are an accessible way for people to hear these stories, to remember them and to continue to share these stories and carry them forward.”

Two people stand in a hallway with violins on display on the wall.
Violins of Hope luthier Avshi Weinstein and Katie Kline, senior director of Jewish arts and culture for the Minnesota JCC, at one of the Violins of Hope exhibitions at the Capp Center in St. Paul on May 6.
Alex V Cipolle | MPR News

Decades ago, Weinstein co-founded Violins of Hope in Tel Aviv with his father and fellow violinmaker Amnon Weinstein, who died in 2024.

In the 1990s, they put out a request on an Israeli radio station.

“We asked on a radio show if people have instruments which belonged to Jewish people during the war,” Weinstein said. “We started getting more and more instruments.”

In the years since, they recovered and restored dozens of stringed instruments from around the world. Many have written biographies, which are on view at exhibitions at the art galleries of the JCC’s Capp Center in St. Paul and Sabes Center in St. Louis Park, as well as at The Museum of Russian Art and Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis.

A man works inside a workshop with a collection of violins.
Luthier Amnon Weinstein, who died in 2024, in his Tel Aviv workshop.
Courtesy of Violins of Hope

The “POW Violin,” for example, was made by an unknown prisoner during World War II, who engraved a scene of a walled town on its backplate with the inscription “Souvenir de Capitivite” (French for, souvenir of captivity). “For the unknown prisoner who made it, this violin was more than an instrument; it was an act of resistance and means of survival,” the biography states.

The “Vanderveen Violin,” belonged to Dutch prima ballerina and violinist Joyce Vanderveen, who was a teen when the Nazis invaded Holland.

“Joyce escaped Amsterdam with her mother and sister on a bicycle, carrying this violin as her one precious possession,” the biography states. Vanderveen survived the war in hiding, and went on to become a famous dancer. She died in 2008.

“In 1997, Joyce discovered that a childhood magazine photo of her had been cut out and pinned above Anne Frank’s bed in the Secret Annex,” the biography reads.

A musician stands in front of a symphony.
At a JCC Symphony Orchestra rehearsal May 6 at the Capp Center, violin soloist Marc Levine played the "Shlomo in Auschwitz" violin. The symphony orchestra will perform a concert May 20 at the Capp Center.
Alex V Cipolle | MPR News

The history of the “Shlomo in Auschwitz” violin, which will be played by Levine on May 20, is unknown, but after it was recovered and repaired, Israeli violinist Shlomo Mintz played it at the gates of Auschwitz, which was captured in the 2018 documentary, "Violins of Hope: Amnon’s Journey."

These stories, Weinstein said, help humanize the millions of people the Nazis killed during the war.

“When I grew up, I could hear survivors. We cannot hear so many survivors today,” Weinstein said. The violins give ”the understanding that it could have happened to your next door neighbor, your cousin, your uncle. It gives it much more personal touch, and we have to make sure that people don’t forget, because if you look around, people do forget.”



Source link

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get our latest articles delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, we promise.

Recent Reviews



Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., takes questions at a news conference at the U.S. Capitol on April 21, 2026.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., takes questions at a news conference at the U.S. Capitol on April 21, 2026.
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., takes questions at a news conference at the U.S. Capitol on April 21.
J. Scott Applewhite | AP

The House of Representatives voted Thursday to reopen most of the Department of Homeland Security, ending the longest agency shutdown in U.S. history.

The House passed a bill funding DHS, minus dollars for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. The measure passed by voice vote on what was the 76th day of the shutdown.

Democrats refused to back funding for many of the agency's immigration functions in an unsuccessful effort to secure reforms including body-worn cameras and broad restrictions on face coverings after federal law enforcement killed two American citizens in Minnesota earlier this year.

The Senate, led by Republican Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., unanimously advanced this funding legislation in March. At the time, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., referred to the proposal as "a joke" and refused to bring it up for a vote. Many members of the House Republican conference refused to fund the agency in a piecemeal fashion and did not want to negotiate over reforms to immigration enforcement operations.

On April 1, Johnson reversed course. He announced the funding bill would be voted on "in the coming days." More than four weeks later, he finally made good on that commitment.

In an effort to appease his hardline members, Johnson waited to bring the Senate's proposal to a vote until that chamber's Republicans started the arcane procedural process, known as reconciliation, to fund all of DHS — including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) — for the remainder of Trump's term without any backing from Democrats.

The funding bill comes as Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin warned the agency was close to running out of funds to pay staff.

"We have reached all the emergency funds we can reach into," Mullin told Fox News on Friday. "I am completely out of the slush fund, I have no place to move at the end of the month."

Mullin said the agency was relying on appropriated funds from last year's One Big Beautiful Bill, which allocated more than $150 billion to DHS on top of its regular annual appropriations funding.

President Donald Trump signed a memo this month authorizing DHS to use some of the money from that legislation to fund the department's operations — potentially infringing on the powers granted to Congress by the Constitution to direct how taxpayer money is spent.

Copyright 2026, NPR



Source link