I don’t need music to enhance my feelings
about holocaust related pictures.
My feelings are fully engaged watching.
No place for additional emotions.
My excuses to our music fans,
Hardy
-----הודעה מקורית-----
מאת: bounce-118808210-3499476_at_list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-118808210-3499476_at_list.cornell.edu] בשם Edgar Hauster
נשלח: Wednesday, February 11, 2015 10:56 AM
אל: Czernowitz Discussion Group
עותק: Berti Glaubach
נושא: [Cz-L] Book of the Month, February 2015: "From the Deeps..."
Czernowitzers, dear friends...
"From the Deeps... - Folk Songs from Camps and Ghettos in Poland" is a
musical-historical gem, which comes from the deeps of the archives of the
Peer family through our fellow member Berti Glaubach's son in law, straight
to our Czernowitz Book Corner at:
http://czernowitzbook.blogspot.de/2015/02/from-deeps-folk-songs-from-camps-and.html
Just imagine, 20 Yiddish folk songs including notes and lyrics, published by
Hehalutz, Bucharest/Romania as early as 1945, i. e. at the time when the
camps and ghettos in Poland were still there, most of them already liberated
but still in the extremely painful awareness of the Holocaust survivors.
Some of the songs, such as those composed by Mordechai Gebirtig or Hirsh
Glick, later became famous worldwide, others passed into silence and all
credit belongs to Berti, that we were able to recover this treasures and to
share them with all of you. Moreover, Berti effected the transcription and
translation of the introduction and the lyrics from Yiddish into German.
A picture - nowadays a YouTube Video - is worth a thousand words. Please
visit the Czernowitz Book Corner and listen to Bente Kahan, the Norwegian
Jewish artist, presently living in Wroclaw/Poland, expressively performing
the Yiddish tango "Friling" [Spring], at the same time the very first song
in our Book of the Month, composed by the famous Shmerke Kaczerginski.
Is all that relevant for Czernowitz and/or Bukovina? Decide by yourselves,
but I believe it is, since most of our ancestors came from Galicia/Poland to
Bukovina at the end of 19th / beginning of 20th century. Most of them, who
didn't emigrate in due time, perished in the camps and ghettos in Nazi
occupied Poland. Never forget!
Edgar Hauster
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Received on 2015-02-11 09:16:35