PEORIA MAGAZINE August 2023

L inda Leeser did not know what to do with her father’s violin. The instrument was shrouded in unspoken mystery. He had played the violin, but not since her birth, perhaps longer, perhaps not after he joined many Jews in fleeing Germany ahead of the Holocaust.

This undated photo shows Paul Leeser during his service with the U.S. Army (Photo provided by Violins of Hope)

Avshalom Weinstein repairs violins with his father, Amnon Weinstein. The two men founded Violins of Hope, a touring exhibit of instruments connected to the Holocaust (Photo provided by Violins of Hope)

Paul Leeser came to America and served overseas with the U.S. Army in World War II. Afterward, he never spoke of his service or the violin. It sat untouched, even after he died at age 60 in 1981. As almost four decades passed, Linda Reeser remained unsure what to do with the violin. “I couldn’t sell it. I couldn’t just give it away,” said Reeser, 75, of Louisville, Kentucky. “I was just hoping its day would come.” That happened in 2019, when she heard about Violins of Hope, a touring exhibit of restored instruments connected to the Holocaust. She contacted the organization, and in doing so, finally found its proper place. “I appreciate that these violins are given a home and honor,” she said. “I feel like I’m doing something in honor of my father.” COMING TO AMERICA’S HEARTLAND Paul Leeser’s violin is one of 10 instru ments coming to the Peoria Riverfront Museum with Violins of Hope, started by Israeli violinmakers Amnon Wein stein of Israel and his son, Avshalom Weinstein of Istanbul. Over 20 years, they have rehabbed 70 violins, violas and cellos donated from around the

world. Each instrument tells a story tied to the atrocities committed by the Nazis. Just as important, each quivers with the themes of resistance and resiliency. “We have to try and keep the stories alive,” Avashalom Weinstein said. “We’re trying to bring these stories of regular people who had to try and survive. Some did. Some didn’t. “Doing it with their own instruments and stories helps, we think and hope, for people to understand that these were people like us.” AN INCREDIBLE JOURNEY Some of the violins were played inside concentration camps where prisoners were often forced to entertain the Germans stationed there. One of the violins – which will appear in Peoria — escaped that destination, but perhaps its owner did not. In 1942, thousands of Jews were arrested in Paris and sent by cattle rail car to concentration camps, most of them to Auschwitz. On one of the packed trains, a man clutched a violin. At a brief stop along the French countryside, he heard rail workers outside, so he cried out, “In the place where I now go, don’t need a violin. Here, take my violin so it may live!”

He did not know that the instrument could very well have boosted his chances for survival, as musicians were often spared at the camps. Through a narrow train window, he flung his violin, which was retrieved by a rail worker. For many years, the violin sat ignored in an attic. When the rail worker died, his offspring sold the instrument to a French violin maker, sharing its backstory in the process. When the violin maker heard about Violins of Hope, he donated the instrument. Though its 1942 owner — along with his fate — remains a mystery, his violin once again lives. “We have to make sure that the stories and memories are known, so we can try and not make the same mistakes as were done before,” Avshalom Weinstein said. The story of Paul Reeser’s violin remains unclear. Born in Hanborn, Germany in 1921, he came with his family to the United States in 1937 as conditions for Jews in Germany were deteriorating. He graduated with a degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Cincinnati before taking a job with a tool company in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. He enlisted in the Army and headed overseas, where he likely served as an

JULY 2023 PEORIA MAGAZINE 63

Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online