Arts & Life Music Of Remembrance Holocaust Memorial Center and Congregation Beth Ahm host two performances of "Holocaust Cantata." tion camps. Although many of the songs were written by Christian prisoners, some ay Litt of West Bloomfield, presi- have become folk-style songs in today's dent of the Rackham Symphony Israel. Kazimierz Wojtowicz, a prisoner Choir, is one of the only Jewish at Buchenwald, wrote 35 song texts and singers in the 55-year-old musical organiza- 52 poems at the camp. Jewish composer tion. Gideon Klein was one of the few trained "What I've always believed is that music musicians whose works are in the canta- transcends all cultural differences," he says. ta. Klein was among those prisoners at Over the years, Litt has performed with the camp at Terezin, McCullough said, the group in such diverse works as an used by the Nazis to show the world African Sanctus, a Creole Mass, a Requiem Jews "were not mistreated." Mass combining Jewish and Catholic tradi- The cello is the only instrument other Conductor Suzanne Mallare Acton, Cantor Daniel Gale, Soprano tions and Carl Orff's aggressively pagan than the piano in the cantata. Its use Elizabeth Parcells Carmina Burana. Each year, the Rackham was suggested by the lyrics "the cello presents Too Hot Too Handel, a jazz version plays a sad song," which open the poem done from many mediums," Silverman said. "Song of the Days." of the classical composer's Christmas oratorio "Music is a universal language. I'm certain it will Messiah. "Everything that's unspoken in the cantata is spo- attract church groups and musicians as well as ken by the cello," McCullough said. On Sunday, March 13, the choir presents the members of the Jewish community. I've heard from Michigan premiere of Holocaust Cantata: Songs Suzanne Mallare Acton, Rackham Choir conduc- school music directors as well, people who are tor, described the music of the Holocaust Cantata as from the Camps, by Donald McCullough. Concert- familiar with the choir and composer." " very approachable." goers can attend two performances at two different Composer Donald McCullough, music director "Most of the songs are in minor keys," she said. venues: 2 p.m. at the Holocaust Memorial Center of the Master Chorale of Washington D.C., is a in Farmington Hills and 7 p.m. at Congregation "Many are mournful, but beautiful." widely performed composer who is very active with Beth Ahm in West Bloomfield. The cantata has no plot, she said, but the com- educational programs for youth in the greater poser did try to convey what life was like in the The work is being presented in honor of the Washington area. camps. "Each of the songs and readings is a 60th anniversary of the liberation of the German With bachelor's degrees in both organ and vocal moment in time," she said. concentration camps at Auschwitz. performance from Stetson University and master's The cantata's Beth Ahm performance is under- Arranged from songs found by McCullough at degrees in both sacred music and vocal perform- written by the Walter and Regina Litt Family the United States Holocaust Museum in ance from Southern Methodist University, his Washington, D.C., the 45-minute cantata is scored Jewish Music Fund, founded by Walter Litt's par- background is firmly linked with church music. ents. for mixed choir with soloists and readers. "I'm not Jewish, but I'm not black either, and "This concert is not going to be a 'downer,"' Litt Joining the Rackham Symphony Choir will be I've also written a dramatic work about the said. "The message is that the human spirit can be vocal soloists soprano Elizabeth Parcells, mezzo- Underground Railroad," the composer said. kept alive by artistic expression. Music can make a soprano Rosalin Guastella and baritone Cantor The Holocaust Cantata, like his 2003 cantata Let living hell at least bearable." Daniel Gale, of Temple Israel in Bay City. Cello My People Go, is intended to reach larger audiences In addition to performing with the choir, Litt soloist will be Miriam Bolkosky, who performed at through its musical integrity as well as its historical will be one of the readers. "One of the narrations the work's 1998 premiere at the John F. Kennedy authenticity, he said. I'm doing is about a group in the camp that smug- Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, "It bothers me that arts organizations, in the gles wine off a train," he said. "They labeled it D.C., and is featured on the work's CD. Jean name of multiculturalism, hire a gospel choir and vinegar, linked it up with pipes and rubber hoses, Schneider is the program's pianist. bring in inner-city kids, and then they say they've and proceeded to get drunk." The Detroit-area concerts will open with related done their bit," the composer said. "There's no The poem that goes with this story is titled solo works performed by Cantor Gale and chance that memory of the Holocaust will go away Bolkosky. "There's No Life Like Life in Auschwitz." in the Jewish community. My intention is to tell "For me, as one of the few Jews in the choir, one "We're delighted and excited to be hosting this the story in another way, for the entire community. of [the cantata's] most uplifting values is to see concert," said Selma Silverman, HMC administra- "Most choral organizations are made up of peo- folks who had little or no relationship with the tor. ple who come to choral singing from the church. goings-on during the Holocaust gaining insights," It will be the first concert for the center, which So it's been a great way to bridge the communi- Litt said. opened on June 27, 2004. The hall seats about ties." All songs are in English, he said, except for one 350, although risers for the choir may reduce the McCullough found the poems that form the that quotes the Polish national anthem, and the number of seats in the audience. basis for the cantata in the Aleksander Kulisiewicz song Ani IVIdAmin (I Believe), which is sung in . The center will be open only until 1 p.m. the day collection in the Washington Holocaust Museum Yiddish. of the concert, Silverman said. Audience members archives. Kulisiewicz, himself a survivor, had trav- "It's really good music," he said, "and we are are welcome to tour the exhibits after the concert, eled about Europe during the postwar period col- going to make sure every word will be in the pro- at no extra charge. lecting and preserving what he could of the music gram, in English." "Our mission is education, and education may be that had emerged from the Holocaust concentra- DIANA LIEBERMAN Special to the Jewish News R 3/10 2005 88