The violins pop up on eBay from time to time, described as “very rare” or “priceless.” One recent listing states that the violin for sale was “played by prisoners in the Nazi death camps of WWII” and was acquired from a man who himself had bought it “from a Jewish violinist [who] was among those arrested in the Holocaust in 1942s [sic].” A seller from Florida described the violin he was marketing as “Good for Klezmer band, Warsaw, Eastern Europe, Yiddish, Israel, historic violin, Judaica [sic]. Great piece of musical history.”
The listings don’t back up these claims with traditional provenance information, such as the names of the previous owners or the history of the instrument. Instead, what the sellers point to as evidence of the violins’ connection to the Holocaust or previous Jewish ownership is a mother-of-pearl star shape inlaid on the body of the instruments. In many cases, sellers simply label these “Stars of David” or “Jewish stars” and use them to claim there is a Jewish connection.
Violin curators, provenance specialists and historians disagree. “I’ve never seen evidence that associates violins decorated with mother-of-pearl six-pointed stars with Jewish musicians, either historically or in the Nazi ghettos and camps,” says Bret Werb, musicologist and recorded sound curator at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) in Washington, DC. For the past eight years, the museum has been approached by multiple members of the public offering to sell these types of violins or soliciting advice on appraising their historical or monetary value. The museum has rejected all offers to add these violins to the institution’s significant music collection.
Over the last 20 years, there has been a growing desire to rediscover, study and play music once banned by the Nazis as well as music written and performed, or sung, in the camps and ghettos during the Holocaust. That commemoration, in turn, has increased interest in these star-decorated violins. As a result, prices sellers are demanding have been markedly inflated. In the past year alone, one such violin was offered for sale at a starting price of $1,850 and another at $5,000. These are extraordinary valuations for instruments originally produced for the lower end of the violin market, typically selling for $100 to $300. But then, of course, such descriptions inevitably tug on the heartstrings of those searching for and wishing to rescue part of Europe’s lost Jewish heritage.
The problem is that while the six-pointed star has come to be intimately linked in people’s minds to Jews, research shows that these designs on violins were never considered “Stars of David” by the craftsmen who made them, nor by the wholesalers and retailers marketing them from the late 1800s to 1920s.
8 thoughts on “The Stars of David that Aren’t”
A lot of Protestant churches in Ontario, Canada had one window that contained a Jewish star. I thought it was meant for Jesus to recognize his family crest of the House of David on the building when he returns.
A truly eye-opening, carefully researched article by Dina Gold, which reads like a detective story. “Buyer beware” when it comes to violins with inlaid stars! The most astonishing image, aside from the musical instrument catalogs, is the decoration of a six-pointed star (like a real “star of David,” formed of two intersecting triangles) on the door of a Lutheran church in Germany. Now we need a follow-up piece: how exactly did the Star of David become the foremost Jewish emblem? Gold tells us when, but not why .
What does this say about the currently travelling ‘Violins of Hope’ exhibition? I was surprised not to see this mentioned in the article.
I am very grateful for this well-documented/researched article to exist for reading of the many details about the Violins of Hope and other related research and how it is sometimes thought that the public is being sold a story that doesn’t really exist. The Violins of Hope is currently in CT and I have inserted myself into the program because I am currently performing and recording on a flute that was found in Riga, Latvia, a c.1917 flute made by a Jewish establishment, that was found hidden under the floorboards of the house that was destroyed along with the Jews trying to escape the Nazis, but ultimately survived. I am personally calling it my Flute of Hope as it has more connection to the Holocaust than many of the violins, however all important to recognize. If anyone reading this wishes to respond with wanting to know more or providing more information (currently looking for who played this flute, and other related information), I would welcome such a connection (!)
I paid to see the Violins of Hope exhibition in Phoenix with my mother, and was very moved. After reading this extensively researched essay, I now wonder if I was manipulated and fed a false story. I appreciate the beauty of these violins and the emotional strings they tug, but if they aren’t what Violins of Hope says they are, do they have any place in this kind of tribute? Does the presence of such violins “water down” the significance of the instruments and musicians who can legitimately be connected to the Holocaust? What is the point of including these violins with inlaid stars if they are not authentic?
Those violins can be traced right into the death camps. They had been played there. They had been restored and given their voice back. I have a six pointed violin and I had sent Mr. Weinstein pictures of it. He stated it came from the area of what is now the Chezh Rep. Made about mid 1800s.
What the article failed to mention and do not know if was intentional or not is the fact the production was mostly done on the Chezh side of the border where there was a heavy Jewish community. The marketing on the German side. Mr. Weinstein explained to me in his response, that my violin was made by a Jewish violin maker. Take this article with a grain of salt. The catalogs were all put out by the marketing side and not the side that really made them.
I think it’s also worth mentioning that the 6 pointed star is also the sign of Brewers Guilds in Germany.
Thank you for a well written article about … buyer beware of violins of hope …