Liberation Concert
Liberation Concert
O
n May 27, 1945, U.S. Army Private Robert Hilliard set off from
his base near Munich into the Bavarian countryside. Nearly
one month had passed since Allied Forces liberated Nazi
Germany and the 19-year-old soldier was heading to a concert organized
by and for Holocaust survivors. Billed as a “liberation concert,” such an
event so soon after the war’s end seemed almost frivolous to him. But
he thought it would make a fine feature story for the Army newspaper
he edited. And, he would quickly learn it was anything but frivolous.
The walled monastic complex rose from rolling green farmland. Hilliard
drove through a stone-walled entrance and parked on the edge of a wide
green lawn. A stage of mismatched wooden boards was covered in a
patchwork quilt of bedsheets and parachute cloth. The survivors in the
audience resembled stick figures—emaciated, pale, expressionless.
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/liberation-concert-at-st-ottilien-archabbey?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=atlas-page&fbclid=Iw… 1/8
5/16/2019 The 1945 'Liberation Concert' Played by an Orchestra of Holocaust Survivors - Atlas Obscura
Some were so weak they had to be carried from their hospital beds. Off
to the side, Hilliard observed a mix of civilians and soldiers—most
likely, Germans and Americans—casually talking and smoking
cigarettes.
chief doctor of the DP hospital. But I didn’t know any of this family
trivia until the fall of last year, when I decided to start searching for the
grandparents I never knew. In my first visit to the monastery, I felt an
instant connection to the place that offered my family refuge after a
harrowing period in their lives. I could imagine them walking the same
cobblestone paths, minding the ever-present church bells—or possibly
cursing them just as I did in the early morning.
“We are free now, but we do not know how, or with what to begin our
free yet unfortunate lives,” he said in German, a language he picked up
from his captors. “It seems to us that for the present mankind does not
understand what we have gone through and experienced during this
period. And it seems to us that we shall neither be understood in the
future.”
The grassy site of the liberation concert has been carved into a thin
sliver to accommodate new paths. But the two-story building next to it
that was a hospital for Jewish patients, with a kosher kitchen in the
basement, still stands. Today, it’s a middle school with a sign in front
explaining its history—one of several on the grounds marking points of
significance from the DP camp era.
From 1945 to 1948, some 5,000 survivors passed through St. Ottilien
and more than 400 children were born there as families reunited and
new ones began. My grandfather was among the first group to arrive. In
late April, with the help of an American soldier, he and fellow survivors
obtained permission to turn several buildings in the Benedictine
monastery into a temporary hospital.
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/liberation-concert-at-st-ottilien-archabbey?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=atlas-page&fbclid=Iw… 4/8
5/16/2019 The 1945 'Liberation Concert' Played by an Orchestra of Holocaust Survivors - Atlas Obscura
they lived before the war. But many refugees refused or felt unable to
return to the places where they had lost everything. And so the camps
evolved as Jews began to rebuild their lives within their confines.
Few of the DP camps were like St. Ottilien, however. Most were housed
in former military installations, labor camps, and even repurposed
concentration camps. Situated in the lush Bavarian countryside, with
modern amenities including a hospital, a gymnasium, and a printing
press, St. Ottilien offered a comparatively comfortable setting.
After surviving several massacres that wiped out most of Kovno’s Jews
within six months of the German occupation, Hofmekler obtained
permission from the ghetto’s Jewish council to start an orchestra. When
the Nazis evacuated the ghetto in 1944, he and others were sent to a
forced labor camps across Bavaria, where they built bunkers and
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/liberation-concert-at-st-ottilien-archabbey?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=atlas-page&fbclid=Iw… 5/8
5/16/2019 The 1945 'Liberation Concert' Played by an Orchestra of Holocaust Survivors - Atlas Obscura
supplies for Hitler’s army. After liberation, he made his way to St.
Ottilien and helped form the orchestra that performed at the liberation
concert.
D
aniel Hofmekler was another brother who left Lithuania before
the war. He carried on the family’s musical legacy as a music
teacher in Palestine’s growing Jewish community and later, a
cellist in the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. His son, Eyal Hofmekler,
was born in Israel and he, too, inherited the family passion for music.
Today, he restores musical instruments and accessories. When concert
organizers asked him to build an instrument for the program, he was
honored, even though he knew little about St. Ottilien’s significance at
the time.
“We come to the place where everything happened and it’s real, we feel
it, we stand on the land,” she says. “It’s not just a regular stage at school
or a concert hall.”
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/liberation-concert-at-st-ottilien-archabbey?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=atlas-page&fbclid=Iw… 6/8
5/16/2019 The 1945 'Liberation Concert' Played by an Orchestra of Holocaust Survivors - Atlas Obscura
T
he 2018 memorial concert took place inside the monastery’s
Gothic church instead of on the grassy plot. On the afternoon of
concert, sun streamed through the church’s stained glass
windows, brightening its vaulted stone interiors. Purple stage lights
transformed the altar into a dramatic backdrop for the makeshift
orchestra near the pulpit crammed with music stands and chairs.
German classical music fans filed into the pews, taking seats alongside
descendants of survivors. Eli Ipp was an infant when his parents
brought him to St. Ottilien. His father was a doctor in the monastery’s
hospital. As the young musicians dressed in black took their seats to
thundering applause, “my heart burst with pride and tears flowed, to
feel and see how history had reversed itself,” says Ipp.
The program began with the same bellow of horns that opened the 1945
concert in Edvard Grieg’s “Triumphal March.” It was the only song
from the original program. The orchestra manager Bilha Rubenstein
says she and others worked hard to find pieces that brought a modern
feel to the hopeful, yet elegiac tone of the 1945 program. Instead of
performing popular Jewish folk songs, the orchestra performed
arrangements of poems by Aharan Harlap and Yaakov Barzilai, two
Holocaust survivors. Singing in Hebrew, the soloist Hila Baggio brought
some in the audience to tears as she conveyed the poets’ haunting
depictions of the camps.
For many in the church, the real draw was the legendary violinist Anne-
Sophie Mutter. She proposed playing Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5 in
A-Major as an expression of “beauty that nearly hurts,” Doris Popischil,
the concert organizer, says. At Mutter’s request, the program was not
broadcast, in order to preserve its intimacy. Just as in 1945, this year’s
concert represented a collective pledge for a better future—“a promise
that this will, under our watch, never happen again,” Mutter said after
the concert.
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/liberation-concert-at-st-ottilien-archabbey?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=atlas-page&fbclid=Iw… 7/8
5/16/2019 The 1945 'Liberation Concert' Played by an Orchestra of Holocaust Survivors - Atlas Obscura
For the encore, monks joined the orchestra onstage. Their voices united
with Baggio’s in Avinu malkeinu, the Hebrew prayer of repentance that
Jews in the audience had likely heard days earlier during Yom Kippur.
Church bells sounded as the song drew to a close. The audience sat in
silence, contemplating how horrendous acts of inhumanity had created
such beauty. Again, I thought of my grandfather’s 1945 speech.
REFUGEES J U DA I S M M U S I C H I STO RY WO R L D WA R I I
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/liberation-concert-at-st-ottilien-archabbey?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=atlas-page&fbclid=Iw… 8/8