Once Again, the President Proves His Deafness to Israeli Concerns
His assurances on Israeli TV weren't convincing.
June 4, 2015
Ernest Drucker was forced to halt a Brahms concerto. His son picked it back up.
In the summer of 1933, the violinist Ernest Drucker, a student at a conservatory in Cologne, was selected to play a Brahms concerto at his graduation ceremony. At the demand of the Nazis, he was forced to halt after the first movement. His son Eugene recently performed the work at a special concert in Israel in honor of Nazi Germany’s Jewish musicians, as Aron Heller writes:
His assurances on Israeli TV weren't convincing.
Over the past eighteen months, it has increased its nuclear supply by 20 percent.
BDS is mushrooming, as is anti-Semitic sentiment.
Oren Ben-Dor writes of “pathologies pertaining to Jewish being and thinking.”
Ernest Drucker was forced to halt a Brahms concerto. His son picked it back up.
In the summer of 1933, the violinist Ernest Drucker, a student at a conservatory in Cologne, was selected to play a Brahms concerto at his graduation ceremony. At the demand of the Nazis, he was forced to halt after the first movement. His son Eugene recently performed the work at a special concert in Israel in honor of Nazi Germany’s Jewish musicians, as Aron Heller writes:
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