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German Chancellor Scholz Speaks at New Weill Synagogue Dedication

Nov. 29, 2023

On October 22, the Weill family name was drawn again into dramatic events in a dangerous world. For almost a decade, the city of Dessau-Roßlau has been the locus of a collaboration to build one of the first new synagogues in Germany since reunification. In that Dessau was Kurt Weill’s hometown, the local Kurt Weill Gesellschaft has been at the forefront of this effort, inspiring the naming of the new house of worship for Weill’s father Albert in recognition of his service as cantor of the city’s Jewish community for more than two decades at the beginning of the twentieth century.

The long-planned dedication, occurring at a moment of terror in the Middle East and rising antisemitic actions and rhetoric more broadly, served as a platform for German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and other politicians to reaffirm their commitment to “fight for a better, more humane, and more enlightened society.” Speaking in the spare, intimate setting of the newly completed sanctuary, Scholz declared: “It deeply appalls me to see how antisemitic hatred and inhuman agitation are taking root, in the very country where the crime against humanity of the Shoah began…. Silence is inappropriate, if Jewish people are not safe on our streets. Now it must become clear what ‘Never again’ means!”

Kurt Weill’s Jewish-Themed Works 

Although Kurt moved away from observant Jewish practice early in his life, he expressed some connection to Judaic culture through a number of his works. It was his role as composer for Max Reinhardt’s operatic pageant spectacle The Eternal Road that brought him to the United States in 1935. Originally titled Der Weg der Verheißung, the work served also as the source for musical excerpts in two subsequent pageants organized by Ben Hecht, We Will Never Die and A Flag is Born. (Performable versions of music from Der Weg now exist in oratorio form as The Road of Promise and Propheten). Kurt Weill dedicated to Albert his 1946 setting of the Kiddush, a ceremonial prayer for the blessing of wine. He created an orchestral arrangement of the Israeli national anthem, Hatikvah, commissioned by the American Committee for the Weitzmann Institute of Science and premiered by the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Serge Koussevitzky in 1947.


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