Zhanna Arshanskaya Dawson

Zhanna Arshanskaya ("Janna") Dawson (born Zhanna Arshansky in Ukraine, ca. 1927) is a Russian-American pianist and former faculty member of the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University (Bloomington). Dawson came to national prominence in 2009 after her son, journalist Greg Dawson published a book, Hiding in the Spotlight, chronicling her escape from the Holocaust.[1][2]

Early life

Zhanna and Frina are daughters of Dmitri Arshansky, a Jewish candy maker and amateur violinist from Berdyansk, a town in southeastern Ukraine. Her father bought her a German piano and enrolled her in piano lessons at age 5. At six years old she made her performance debut, playing Bach's Two-Part Invention No. 1 on the radio.[3] When Zhanna was eight her father's business failed and the family moved to the larger city of Kharkov. Both sisters received scholarships at a music conservatory, and were later offered scholarships at the Moscow State Conservatory.[4]

Holocaust

In 1941,Dawson and her family were living in Kharkov,Ukraine, when the Germans invaded the Soviet Union and began to strategically and brutally kill Jews.[5] All the Jews in Kharkov who had not left, more than 16,000, were grouped together by the Nazis and sent on a long forced march to be killed and buried in the ravine Drobitsky Yar near Kharkov.[6] A mile from the ravine, her father bribed one of the guards by giving him a gold watch, so that he would allow Zhanna to escape. Zhanna hid among the crowd that had gathered to watch.[7] She was later reunited with her sister Frina at the home of the Bogancha family in Kharkov (Frina has to date never revealed how she too escaped). The two concealed their Jewish identity by inventing a cover story on how their parents were killed, calling themselves Anna and Marina Morozova. They made their way to an orphanage in Kremenchug, Ukraine where a piano technician noticed their talent, and introduced them to a theater director who was in charge of entertaining the Nazis. Thereafter, the sisters performed piano for Germans throughout the war.[7]

After the war

The Arshanskaya sisters wound up in a United Nations refugee camp at the end of the war. There, an American camp administrator heard the girls perform in a variety act[3] He got them aboard the first ship of Holocaust survivors after the war. The girls were sent to Crozet,Virginia to live with Larry Dawson's wife, Grace. Through connections he was able to obtain an audition before Ernest Hutcheson, Rosalyn Tureck, and Muriel Kerr of Juilliard School of Music, which offered them scholarships to attend.[3] In 1947 Zhanna Arashansky and Larry Dawson's brother David, a violinist, were married.[5] They moved to Bloomington, Indiana in 1948, where she began to teach music at Indiana University[4] and he played in the Berkshire String Quartet. David Dawson died in 1975.[3]

Frina Dawson married Ken Boldt, who was also a pianist, and worked at the State University of New York at Buffalo.

Revealing her story

In 1978 Dawson's son, Greg, was writing a column about Holocaust, a television miniseries, and asked his mother what it was like living during the time of the war.[7] Dawson, who currently writes mostly consumer advocacy columns in the Orlando Sentinel paper, wrote his first book, Hiding in the Spotlight: A Musical Prodigy's Story of Survival, 1941-1946, about his mother's story.[7]

In 2006 Greg Dawson and his wife, Candy, traveled to Ukraine to see the site of the massacre. There they found the names of the entire Arshansky family, including Zhanna and Frina, etched on a memorial wall. It had been assumed that the two sisters had been killed along with the 16,000 other victims, because until then nobody was known to have survived.[7]

References

  1. Margie Dykes (2009-09-05). "Columnist, author to speak on Holocaust". West Volusia Beacon.
  2. "Hiding In Spotlight, Jewish Pianist Survived WWII". National Public Radio. 2009-09-12.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Greg Dawson (December 2007). "Defying Destiny—A Miraculous Tale of Survival". Juilliard Journal.
  4. 1 2 "Hiding In Spotlight". Publishers' Weekly.
  5. 1 2 Phil Kloer (2009-04-20). "Atlanta woman recalls Holocaust, playing piano for Nazis". Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  6. Greg Dawson (2009). "A return to Ukraine". Orlando Sentinel.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Barry Glenn (2009-08-01). "A Haunting Memory Comes Out of Hiding". Orlando Sentinel.

External links


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