Weekend Herald

Violinist a musical inspiratio­n for fellow protesters

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Protesters shout as they crowd the chaotic streets of Caracas, Venezuela, shielding themselves from the billowing smoke and the tear gas canisters catapultin­g toward them.

But as the turmoil unfolds demonstrat­ors can hear the eerie sound of violin music.

It comes from a young man, standing stoically and confidentl­y in the street, a violin in his hand. The lone violinist wears no gas mask, only a bandanna covering his face and a helmet with a spay- painted flag of Venezuela.

Nearby protesters protect him as he plays the country’s national anthem, a song that translates as Glory to the Brave People.

Wuilly Moises Arteaga, the violin- playing dissident, this week became a viral sensation when he was filmed on Tuesday playing strains of the national anthem as rocks and tear gas canisters fell around him. He has since repeated the act. One journalist, Ivan Ernesto Reyes, who captured video of Arteaga, described the moment as a “true example of magical realism”. Others compared it to the “dramatic scene in the Titanic”, in which a string orchestra on board the ship plays music as passengers descend to their deaths.

A Colombian radio host said it reminded her of a scene in the movie The Pianist, in which the main character plays the piano amid the fighting of World War II.

Arteaga frequently takes to the streets to play music during the protests.

“I went out to protest with my only weapon,” Arteaga said, adding that he was motivated by injustices he said are being committed in the country.

He told Colombian radio station BLU that he decided to perform in homage to his friend and fellow violinist, Armando Canizales, who was killed during a demonstrat­ion last week after being struck in the neck at a protest in a city east of Caracas. The 17- year- old musician had been a member El Sistema, a publicly funded youth music education programme that has gained internatio­nal recognitio­n for raising Venezuelan youth out of poverty.

Arteaga used to play in the same orchestra as Canizales, and still takes classes from instructor­s in the programme.

“Armando lost his life for his country, giving it on the streets,” Arteaga told the radio station. “He paid a very high price. We as artists have to see this as an example and act.”

Arteaga said he went an entire year without playing the violin, because it had been stolen, he said. The violin he played this week was a gift from a group of friends, who gathered money to purchase it for him.

He said he had not prepared for Tuesday’s demonstrat­ion — he simply felt “moved in the moment”. “I went out, I started playing, and I saw that people there at the march started becoming more motivated as they heard the music,” he said. “That was the objective, to motivate the people who were demonstrat­ing.” At one point he screamed, “Venezuela!” and was struck with tear gas, suffocatin­g him and forcing him to stop playing the violin.

Although his primary incentive was not to generate attention in the news, he said, “a part of me wanted the world to know that Venezuelan­s are here, fighting”. “I know that it’s reached a lot of people,” he said. “I want the world to know that there are other many artists, musicians who are fighting as well.

“We are giving it all to fight for our country,” he added.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Wuilly Moises Arteaga says he “wanted the world to know that Venezuelan­s are here, fighting”.
Picture / AP Wuilly Moises Arteaga says he “wanted the world to know that Venezuelan­s are here, fighting”.

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