Music from the Iraqi Symphony Orchestra's 2003 appearance at the Kennedy Center in Washington Daniel Pipes' Weblog "Iraqi Symphony Performs for Bush"December 9, 2003 So reads an Associated Press headline and, I have to say, it leaves me queasy. The Iraqi National Symphony – as woebegone an institution as its name suggests – was flown over to Washington, sponsored by the Department of State, and given an all-star treatment. Not only did the president attend, but the National Symphony Orchestra and cello virtuoso Yo-Yo Ma joined forces with the Iraqis. One of the six compositions played was by an Iraqi flutist in attendance. Secretary of State Colin Powell called the performance the "historic re-entry of the Iraqi culture on the world stage." For someone familiar with the European imperialism in the Middle East, this sort of showpiece feels awfully familiar and awfully doomed. (December 9, 2003) Dec. 20, 2003 update: I was perhaps too terse in the above entry, not explaining what it is about the Iraqi National Symphony's appearance at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts that makes me queasy. It is certainly not that Iraqis are cultivating European classical music; in fact, I have written an article, "You Need Beethoven to Modernize," which argues that becoming proficient in the art of European classical music is actually a necessity if one is to become truly modern. Here is my conclusion to that article: Thus does the response to Western music exemplify the whole of a civilization's experience with modernity. Its lack of utility makes it all the more useful as an indicator of achievement. Why this connection? Because, as Lewis observes, "Music, like science, is part of the inner citadel of Western culture, one of the final secrets to which the newcomer must penetrate." Music represents the challenge of modernity: competence in this arena implies an ability to deal with whatever else the West might serve up. Muslim resistance to accepting music from the West represents its larger unwillingness, whereas the Japanese have truly entered the inner citadel. In short, whoever would flourish must play Beethoven as well as Westerners do. Rather, what makes me uneasy about the Iraqi National Symphony's appearance in Washington is the pretend nature of the effort (note again Secretary Powell's comment); the evident U.S. sponsorship of a glaringly weak aspect of Iraqi life; and the turning the orchestra into a kept institution in Iraqi eyes. A rehearsal of the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra in September 2006; because of frequent blackouts the orchestra often rehearses without electricity. None of these aspects can be wholesome for the long-term development of classical music in Iraq. More urgently, I sense in this action a wrong approach to U.S.-Iraqi relations, a too great involvement in the internal matters. As I put it in a column recently, "Let Iraqis make internal decisions (security, finances, justice, education, religion, etc.), keeping only foreign and defense policy in coalition hands." To which I would now add, cultural decisions as well. Sep. 28, 2006 update: Almost three years later, the artificiality of the Kennedy Center spectacular is evident for all to see. Edward Wong reports from Baghdad in "And the Orchestra Plays on, Echoing Iraq's Struggles" that "the shining hopes" of 2003 have vanished:
Those fears are palpable among the musicians:
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Friday, October 20, 2006
Iraqi Symphony Performs for Bush"
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