topics
tools
Expatica countries
Index Last Var.(%)
BEL 20 2117.66 -0.08
DAX 6323.19 -0.26
IBEX 30 6401.2 -2.17
CAC 40 3042.97 -0.16
FTSE 100 5356.34 0.09
AEX 292.76 0.00
DJIA 12454.83 -0.60
Nasdaq 2837.53 -0.07
FTSE MIB 13057.26 -0.74
TSX Composite 11566.15 -0.09
ASX 4155.9 0.87
Hang seng 18957.56 0.83
Straits Times 2800.81 0.49
ISEQ 20 501.76 0.16
You are here: Home News European News 100 Jewish cantors to sing in historic concert in Poland
Enlarge font Decrease font Text size


27/06/2009100 Jewish cantors to sing in historic concert in Poland

Cantors from around the globe including the US, Canada, various European countries and Israel are to take part in the June 30th performance.

Warsaw -- One hundred Jewish cantors from around the globe will sing in an unprecedented concert in Warsaw next week, reviving the art of Jewish liturgical song virtually wiped out in Poland by the Holocaust, organisers said Thursday.

"Prior to the Second World War, this (Warsaw) was the capital of the cantorial world... a few hundred metres from this place was the Tlomackie synagogue and that was the 'cantorial Vatican', if you will," said cantor Nathan Lam, 62, from Los Angeles, California, speaking in the concert venue, Poland's National Opera in Warsaw.

Poland was home to Europe's largest Jewish population prior to World War II -- some 3.5 million people, with a rich history of nearly a thousand years of Jewish life and culture in the country.

Historians agree that some six million Polish citizens perished under Nazi German occupation during WWII, half of them Jewish. Six million European Jews fell victim to Nazi German genocide in the Holocaust.

"To come back to this place ... almost 60 years later, with the largest number of cantors since the Shoah -- it's returning home and saying this music is still alive and well," said Lam, whose grandparents were Polish Jews from the Warsaw area.

Cantors from around the globe including the US, Canada, various European countries and Israel are to take part in the June 30th performance.

"We're here to honour this tradition and to perpetuate this tradition in the place where it was born -- we're very excited about that," Lam told AFP.

"We know that almost 1,400 cantors perished in the Holocaust, today some 60 years later we are not even near getting to those numbers -- so our numbers have fallen tremendously," David Propis, a cantor from Houston, Texas, told AFP Thursday.

"Doing this kind of outreach will hopefully energise the love of cantorial music and bring it back to its roots and I hope those numbers will grow," Propis said.

"We're also thanking all of those who helped in one of our darkest periods (the Holocaust)," he said.

AFP/Expatica


0 reactions to this article

0 reactions to this article

Discussion Forums

Americans in the Netherlands

reporting birth abroad

Relocating to the Netherlands

Taxation on Rental Apartments!

Housing in the Netherlands

Taxation on Rental Appartments?

Discuss Dutch Culture

High-quality fake passports, driver's licenses, ID

English in the Netherlands

Moved to Hengelo

participate in the forums

Inside Expatica
Setting up home in the Netherlands

Setting up home in the Netherlands

A guide to telephone, internet and television along with utility services water, electricity and gas in the Netherlands.

Dutch immigration and residency regulations

Dutch immigration and residency regulations

Lost in the Dutch immigration system? Look no further than this guide compiled for our Survival Guide 2012.

A brief introduction to the Netherlands

A brief introduction to the Netherlands

Expatica offers a whistle-stop tour of life in the modern Netherlands.

Giving birth in the Netherlands

Giving birth in the Netherlands

The challenges and benefits of the maternity system in the Netherlands and how it differs to other countries.