Sunday, May 31, 2009

Inscription of Hope ~ I Believe In The Sun





Quoting from a Russian Folk Tune, composer Dr. Z. Randall Stroope arranged a stunning choral and instrumental piece for the Nebraska Choral Arts Society and Children's Chorus called "Inscription of Hope." Based on fragments of Jewish text found on a cellar wall in Cologne, Germany during the Holocaust in World War II, it is believed to have been scrawled by a child hiding from the Nazis. The year was 1943.


The rendition you hear at this link is performed with treble voicing, strings and woodwinds. But Inscription of Hope is pure magic when sung by children. I have conducted this piece for children's choir and can testify to that. Melodically and harmonically simplistic, there is room for the innocence of the moment to speak.. Imagine the circumstances that led to such an epitaph.


Here are the lyrics to Stroope's Inscription of Hope along with photographs from the United States Holocaust Museum and public domain during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising in April/May 1943.


This child's poem is why, once again, we must look at the past.
Notice the girl in the checkered coat and hat.

What happened to her?

I believe in the sun
even when it is not shining

And I believe in love

even when there's no one there

And I believe in God
even when He is silent

I believe through any trial

there is always a way.
But sometimes in this suffering
and hopeless despair
My heart cries for shelter
to know someone's there
But a voice rises within me saying
'hold on my child'

I'll give you hope

I'll give you strength
Just stay a little while
I believe in the sun
even when it is not shining

And I believe in love
even when there's no one there
And I believe in God
even when He is silent

I believe through any trial
There is always a way

May there someday be sunshine

May there someday be happiness

May there someday be love

May there someday be peace.



There is similar suffering all over the world today in varying forms of atrocity. Perhaps when we no longer need monies to buy bombs and fuel tanks we can feed all the hungry children. And no person will ever again have to scrawl out a message of hope on the dark walls of hell - but from a place of sunshine.
Don't be silent.



PARTICIPATE IN BLOGBLAST FOR PEACE
November 5, 2009

2 comments:

Katie Cakehole said...

I taught this piece to my children's choir and we sang it in the Cathedral today for Remembrance Day. It is a truly powerful work and message, and there were lost of very, very moved parishioners.

Katie C. said...

I believe this song has a really deep meaning behind it and embodies all the reasons we should remember the Holocaust and its victims. The writer of these lyrics obviously went through a lot and if they were alive today, they would be immensly glad that the human race remembers what her people went through. Many thanks for putting this page together. It means a lot to me as I sang this song in fourth grade with my school's extra-curricular chorus.