The violinist Ida Haendel has died.
Haendel was born in Chelm, Poland, roughly a decade before the Nazi death marches and extermination camps began depleting most of its population of 18,000 Jews. It is no exaggeration to speculate that her gifts as a musician, and where they took her, saved her life and the lives of her immediate family.
To describe Haendel as a prodigy is an understatement. She won the Warsaw Conservatory’s Gold Medal and first Huberman Prize in 1933, at the age of five, for her performance of the Beethoven Violin Concerto. At seven, she was competing against David Oistrakh and Ginette Neveu, about twenty years her senior, to become a laureate of the first Henryk Wieniawski Violin Competition. Soon, she was studying in London and Paris with legendary pedagogues Carl Flesch and George Enescu.
During WWII she employed her talent to help boost the morale of British and American troops and factory workers. In 1937, she made her first appearance at the Proms. She went on to perform at the Proms no less than 68 times.
Internationally, she played with many of the great conductors, drawing particular acclaim for a recording of the Sibelius Concerto. Sibelius personally wrote her to say, “I congratulate you on the great success, but most of all I congratulate myself, that my concerto has found an interpreter of your rare standard.” In all, her recordings span some 70 years.
In 2006, she played before Pope Benedict XVI at the former concentration camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau. The organizers suggested that she play something Jewish. Instead, she chose Handel’s prayer from the “Dettingen Te Deum.” The work was arranged by her teacher, Carl Flesch.
Haendel was extremely fortunate in that her talent allowed her to escape the fate of so many of her townspeople. Her precise age at the time of her death, yesterday, in Miami, is unclear, since she had in her possession several different birth certificates, but the consensus seems to be that she was 91.
R.I.P.
Haendel plays Sibelius
Haendel plays Allan Pettersson’s Violin Concerto No. 2, a work written for and dedicated to her:
More about Haendel:
https://interlude.hk/great-women-artists-shaped-music-vi-ida-haendel/?fbclid=IwAR38TYyNAKisPwoXbyZDycc41ir3BFpGqbHtK1yeWPTPsqE9EcmNAVumsDM

