Ordinary people -- many young people, children, young people with children.
What was the concert program?
It was influenced solely by practical considerations. A smallish orchestra -- 26 musicians. Not a huge place -- the Archeological Museum. And a small stage. So we played two works by Mozart.
How did the musicians react when you invited them?
With the utmost enthusiasm. Not one of them said, “Oh I don't know, I have to think of it.” All said they were ready to come, obviously without being paid -- and these are top musicians, members of Berlin Staatskapelle, Berlin Philharmonic, the Vienna Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris and La Scala. Five top European orchestras. Mine was a message of solidarity with the civil society, not a political gesture. And it was not only mine. It was an all-European message, which was a part of a UN mission. I was a messenger of peace of the secretary-general of the UN.
What expectations do you have of the outcome of this concert?
I hope that music activity will grow in Gaza. I hope that I will be able to go there again and give more concerts. I hope there will be a revival of interest in classical European music in Gaza. For now I see that the civil society in Gaza understood that there are many people in the world who care about them and think about them.
And from Israel?
I don't know how well informed they are. I, for example, was not aware of the 12 universities. I did not know that there is such a thirst for knowledge. So maybe this will bring some people in Israel to think that this is a people worth having a dialogue with. Again, I'm speaking on the civil level and not the political level. I was not on a political mission and therefore I do not expect any political results…
The Palestinians have a right to a state of their own and to self-determination. We have to
them to understand that we realize that our conflict is not a political conflict between two nations, which fight about borders or water, but it is a conflict between two peoples, which are convinced that they have a right to live in the same small piece of earth. Our destinies are inextricably linked.
I told the Palestinians in Gaza that I believe that the ambition of the Palestinian people to have the right to self-determination and an independent state is a very just cause. But in order for the just cause to be realized, it must avoid any kind of violence. Because the use of violence for the just cause only weakens it.
Can musical education change the social situation in this region? In Gaza and Israel?
Yes, I hope so. Look at Venezuela, where music education changed the lives of hundreds of thousands of young people, who are now having a normal life. Music also enriches lives. The reason that music is not widespread anymore is not because it is made for the few. It is made for everybody. But we simply do not take enough care of music education for children and young people. If we did, many more people would be active in music and there would be more listeners too.
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