The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

NEW HOME FOR HASSADNA

The conservato­ry’s state-of-the-art building in the German Colony will feature training studios, a listening room and a 150-seat concert hall

- • ALAN ROSENBAUM

On a cold and rainy Jerusalem evening in early February, the sounds of flutes, clarinets, saxophones and piano stream through the halls of the Adam School in Jerusalem, home of the Hassadna Jerusalem Music Conservato­ry.

For this writer, watching and listening to talented teens make music is a rare treat, but for the students of the conservato­ry, it’s just another evening of music practice.

Founded in 1973 by pianist and musician Amalia Reuel, the conservato­ry has educated thousands of students for close to 50 years, and currently offers a world-class musical education to more than 600 students ages three to 18 from every sector of society.

Hassadna has five department­s – piano, string, wind, jazz and voice – and its pupils participat­e in a wide variety of orchestras and chamber music ensembles and perform in regular concerts.

The conservato­ry offers instructio­n in all major instrument­s, theory, ensemble-playing and dance, providing the highest-quality training to

Jerusalem schoolchil­dren, helping to develop talented young musicians.

Many of the school’s graduates continue their education at prestigiou­s music and performing arts programs at universiti­es and academies, both in Israel and abroad.

Lena Nemirovsky-Wiskind, the vivacious and cheerful director of the conservato­ry, began working there as a piano teacher, and succeeded Reuel upon her retirement.

Nemirovsky-Wiskind says that her predecesso­r succeeded in creating “a very special, family-oriented place,” absent much of the excess competitiv­eness and tension that exists in many other conservato­ries.

She recalls what Reuel told her when she retired. “She said, ‘I establishe­d the Conservato­ry for all the children. I don’t want it to be an elitist school only for children whose parents can afford to send their children there.’”

When Nemirovsky-Wiskind became director, she expanded the scholarshi­p fund that Reuel had created, with assistance from the Jerusalem Foundation.

“Because of the fund,” she says, “we have succeeded in opening the doors of

the conservato­ry.”

Today, the school hosts a wide variety of students from many different background­s.

“What is special to me about the conservato­ry,” says Nemirovsky-Wiskind, “is that we have children who come from all types of background­s – at-risk children, children with special needs, children from Ethiopian families – and everyone here is mixed together, it is a ‘salad.’

“We do everything so that the children will feel that they are part of a musical community. All our fundraisin­g is done behind the scenes so that everyone will feel that they are among equals. When our students go on stage, they wear the finest clothes and use the best musical instrument­s.”

Nemirovsky-Wiskind adds that some students are on full scholarshi­p, others receive partial grants, and some pay full tuition – but everyone is treated equally.

Hassadna is the musical home to Jewish, Christian and Muslim students from all background­s who share one thing in common – a love and appreciati­on for music.

The conservato­ry attracts students from throughout Jerusalem and outside the city, including Modi’in, Gush Etzion, Beit Shemesh and even Tel Aviv.

“Why do they come here?” asks Nemirovsky-Wiskind rhetorical­ly, “because we have the best teaching staff. It is important to have teaching profession­als who are at the highest level. The Jerusalem Foundation can help with scholarshi­ps, but if we don’t have the proper teachers, the students will not succeed.”

DESPITE THE conservato­ry’s level of artistic success, it is operating in inadequate, makeshift facilities. Music classes meet at the Adam School, beginning at 2 p.m., after regular classes have concluded.

“In all the years of its existence, the conservato­ry has always met within an existing school building,” says Nemirovsky-Wiskind.

When school ends for the day, the conservato­ry staff arrives, positions the instrument­s into place, and arranges the rooms for music instructio­n. The acoustics of a standard classroom, she notes, are far from ideal for music instructio­n. At 11 p.m. each night, the staff must remove all of the musical instrument­s and rearrange the classrooms for the next day’s classes.

It is for all these reasons that the Jerusalem Foundation has recently embarked on a $15 million project to build a new home for the conservato­ry.

The new facility will be located at the corner of Hamagid and Samuel Mohilever streets, close to the Museum of Natural History in the German Quarter, not far from Hassadna’s current location. The groundbrea­king ceremony for the new building will take place at the end of March.

The building will feature practice and training studios, a music library and listening room with computer and workstatio­ns, a student area with lounge, computer stations, study corners, a furnished garden and outdoor play area for children coming from school, a family waiting area, a faculty lounge, management and administra­tion offices, and a 150-seat concert hall.

In a design competitio­n conducted by the Jerusalem Foundation among leading architectu­re firms, the Jerusalem firm of Sitton Plus Tannous was selected to design the conservato­ry’s new home.

The firm, founded by two talented architects – an Israeli-Arab from Nazareth and an Israeli Jew from Jerusalem – has designed numerous well-known buildings, including the Train Theater complex in Liberty Park.

The $10m. of funds that have been raised for the project thus far have come from the Jerusalem Foundation

UK, headed by its chairman, Lord Howard Leigh. The name of the new building will be the Gerald and Gail Ronson Music Center, in honor of the well-known British philanthro­pists from London who support many causes in Britain and Israel.

Shai Doron, president of the Jerusalem Foundation, explains that its support for a new conservato­ry building dovetails with “Jerusalem 2030,” the foundation’s strategic plan for the city’s future, which involves three primary components – creative culture, communal strength, and future leadership.

Doron says that the Hassadna Conservato­ry epitomizes the foundation’s three attributes. “Hassadna is a great example of what we are trying to accomplish with our 2030 Master Plan. We would like to promote giving opportunit­ies to all, and Hassadna represents everything we stand for. First, creative culture – Hassadna has the most gifted kids playing music. Hassadna has been in existence for more than four decades, and many of its graduates became involved in music and found positions in the music world in Israel and overseas.”

The conservato­ry, he continues, is a great source of communal strength due to the special programs that it conducts both for new immigrants and for Ethiopian children, as well as the fact that it is the musical home for students from all parts of Jerusalem.

“It has become a meeting place for Jews and Arabs, secular and Orthodox,” says Doron. “All of them are getting together, building a sense of community in a city that would like to promote shared living between communitie­s.”

Finally, he says, the program promotes the foundation’s goal of future leadership, which connects to the idea of creative culture. According to Doron, future leadership is not only associated with leadership in a civil society but also extends on a profession­al level through the leading musicians developed by the conservato­ry.

“The profession­al level of the musicians and creative young people – this is the idea of Hassadna. Some children attend Hassadna because they want to play music, and it is a great after-school program and community, but the most gifted kids can make the balance between being a gifted musician and at the same time preserving the values of community and shared leadership. For the most gifted students, this is real leadership at the high end, with profession­al musicians for the future.

“We would like to believe that a great facility and great organizati­on like Hassadna will encourage people to stay in Jerusalem and live in Jerusalem as the city of culture.

“Hassadna is a combinatio­n of everything that we want to achieve,” says Doron, adding that one of the key features of the building, both in its design and its intended use, will be its community-friendly design. The building will be used for special music programs for seniors in the mornings, with other community events on evenings when music practices are not being held.

The new building of Hassadna Jerusalem Music Conservato­ry is scheduled to be completed in the summer of 2025, making beautiful music for the city and the neighborho­od where it will dwell.

 ?? (Sitton Plus Tannous Architects) ?? ARCHITECTU­RAL RENDERING of the new Hassadna Jerusalem Music Conservato­ry building.
(Sitton Plus Tannous Architects) ARCHITECTU­RAL RENDERING of the new Hassadna Jerusalem Music Conservato­ry building.
 ?? ?? CONSERVATO­RY DIRECTOR Lena Nemirovsky-Wiskind.
CONSERVATO­RY DIRECTOR Lena Nemirovsky-Wiskind.
 ?? ??
 ?? HASSADNA ensemble. (Photos: Yael Ilan) ?? VIOLIN-PIANO duet at the Conservato­ry.
HASSADNA ensemble. (Photos: Yael Ilan) VIOLIN-PIANO duet at the Conservato­ry.

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