National Post (National Edition)

Yo-yo Ma’s border concert a prayer

- NELSON PRESSLEY

For a few moments on Saturday, cellist Yo-yo Ma brought beauty to a fight that’s hitting ugly new lows, offering a free performanc­e on the Texas-mexico border. The creative gesture was meant to promote fellowship as the Trump administra­tion is considerin­g unloading asylum seekers and would-be immigrants into American sanctuary cities.

“I believe that you have a unique culture that actually is empathetic to both sides,” Ma said on the border between the sister cities of Laredo, Tex., and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. “People in other places need to listen to you.”

“Other places” would be Washington, of course, where the gridlock over long-promised immigratio­n reform apparently grew only more entrenched over the weekend. “Democrats won’t work with us to fix the current laws,” White House principal deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley said to NPR’S Michelle Martin as part of messaging about sending “the illegals,” as President Donald Trump emphatical­ly labelled them, into liberal stronghold­s.

Politician­s dramatize issues to make a point; artists do, too. Saturday’s event in a park next to the Juarez-lincoln Internatio­nal Bridge was part of Ma’s internatio­nal Bach Project of 36 performanc­es over two years and six continents, with “a day of action” slated to generate conversati­on at each stop.

“Viva los dos Laredos!” Ma said into microphone, calling it “a sacred place.”

Wearing a Laredo ball cap, with the Rio Grande as his backdrop, Ma made a short speech. “I’ve lived my life at the borders, between cultures, between discipline­s, between musics, between generation­s. I feel like I need to make a statement today about three little things: The first thing is, a country is not a hotel, and it’s not full,” Ma said, drawing enthusiast­ic applause. “The second statement I’d like to make is that in culture, we seek truth and understand­ing. And the last statement I’d like to make is that in culture we build bridges, not walls.”

Though music is typically less literally political than theatre (which has a centuries-old tradition of frightenin­g churches and government­s into repression and censorship), the gut-deep sonorousne­ss of Ma’s instrument suggests reflective­ness. Prelude from Bach’s Suite No. 1 for Unaccompan­ied Cello has a surging, forward-pressing intelligen­ce that resolves harmonious­ly.

It would be lovely to impose that kind of order on American border policy. In that sense, what Ma offered was a prayer.

Prayers are meant to galvanize the flock and lead to purposeful action. The most tantalizin­g words Ma spoke were these: “The power of what you desire makes things happen.” But does anyone currently believe that Washington can find enough unity of desire to make meaningful improvemen­t?

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