Text Only
Search

Chicago Musician Travels to Mideast, Plays in Israel, West Bank


06 August 2008
Making a Difference - Damisch report / Broadband - Download (WM) video clip
Making a Difference - Damisch report / Broadband - Watch (WM) video clip
Farabaugh report - Download (MP3) audio clip
Farabaugh report - Listen (MP3) audio clip

The leader of a small suburban village near Chicago made his name as a small town politician and big city prosecutor.  Little did his constituents know that by the time he had entered college, nearly two decades earlier, Mark Damisch was an accomplished pianist.

After Damisch revived his musical career nearly a decade ago, he began playing for audiences around the world to raise awareness of worthy issues.  This week [August 4th to August 9th], the man known as the "musical mayor" is in the Middle East, playing for peace.

VOA's Kane Farabaugh has the story in the latest in our series:  Making a Difference.


Mark Damisch says passionate music is best for his Middle East mission
Mark Damisch says passionate music is best for his Middle East mission
People around the northern suburbs of Chicago might recognize Mark Damisch as the former village president, or mayor, of Northbrook -- or as the successful former prosecutor who, along with Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, aggressively pursued corrupt police officers in the 1980s.

In between cases as an attorney at a downtown Chicago law firm, Damisch ran for but lost an election for the U.S. House of Representatives in 2000.

But few people knew at the time he was also once a professional pianist.

"I was never going to be a quarterback on the football team or the starting pitcher on a baseball team," Damisch said. "But I found that I could find myself through playing the piano."
In the early 1980's, Damisch quietly put away his music and pursued a more practical career.

The Musical Mayor, performing for peace
As the new millennium approached, Damisch looked at the piano that had gathered dust for almost two decades, and began playing professionally again.

"In the year 2000, I did 12 concerts between here and western Europe, and that's grown to where last year I did eighty concerts in 120 days," he recalls.

He is known now at home as the "Musical Mayor."

Mark Damisch performs in China during a recent tour
Mark Damisch performs in China during a recent tour
He has performed as far away as China, where he has used music to raise money for causes such as the Red Cross.  Now, Damisch has taken on the role of musical ambassador in the conflict-torn Middle East.

"It's more important, I think, for artists to go over there and perform now than maybe at any time in the history of the world," Damisch said.

Damisch chose Beethoven's Appassionato Sonata for a reason. "To me, everything about the Middle East is passion," he said. "It's my land. It's your land.   It's my home.  It's your home -- my religion, your religion and the Appassionato Sonata is all about Beethoven's passion at a time when he realized he was about to lose his hearing."

Damisch admits that there is only so much a musician can do to encourage peace.  He says he hopes that by traveling to places not often visited by artists, he can in some small way draw attention to the issues at stake.

"The point is to go and play in places where they need people to reach out and to reach across the divide," Damisch said.

He encounters a region engulfed conflict for at least three quarters of a century, with a peace process that, once again, is in tatters.

Mark Damisch, a mayor, a prosecutor, a lawyer and, once again, a pianist says he hopes as an artist he can make a difference.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Librarian Uses Donkey Cart to Bring Books to Rural Ethiopian Children
 
  Top Story
Pressure Heats Up As Gaza War Grinds On Into Third Week

  More Stories
Rice Defends US Abstention on Gaza Cease-Fire Resolution  Audio Clip Available
Obama Raises US Jobs Estimate
No Russian Gas in Eastern Europe Despite EU Agreement
Biden in Afghanistan Ahead of US Troop Surge
USS George H.W. Bush Aircraft Carrier Commissioned  Audio Clip Available
S. Africa's ANC Unveils Platform for Upcoming Election Campaign  Audio Clip Available
Somali Pirates Release Iranian Chartered Cargo Ship
Desperate Africans Pay Heavy Price to Cross Gulf Of Aden  Audio Clip Available
Cubans Continue to Struggle to Get Around Island 50 Years After Castro Came to Power