Syrian violinist helps Canadian community hear his song
Syrian violinist helps Canadian community hear his song
Unlike most of the 31,000 Syrian refugees arriving to Canada over the last year, Sari Alesh, 31, did not bring a trade. Instead, among his few possessions, he brought his music.
“I just followed my heart,” he says. “It always told me: ‘You are a musician and you can't do anything else'.”
The young violinist arrived alone on the rainy archipelago of Canada’s west coast in February, 2016 – on his birthday – as one of the 400 Syrian refugees resettled to Victoria.
Before his arrival, Sari’s life had overflowed with music. Classically trained in Damascus, Syria, he toured Europe and the Middle East with the Syrian National Symphony Orchestra, once playing for the acclaimed Lebanese singer Fairuz. But war in Syria quickly put the brakes on his success, displacing him along with more than 11 million other Syrians. In 2014, he fled the Syrian capital and sought safety in Istanbul, Turkey, leaving behind family and his once-promising musical career.
Once in Victoria, Sari quickly discovered that the musical landscape of his new home was as bewildering as the towering red cedar trees of Vancouver Island. Expecting sonatas and arias of classical European pedigree, he instead found that fiddle music was most popular.
Early on, he found artistic refuge with Faraidoun Akhavan and Paulina Eguiguren, two of his sponsors. With Sari on his violin and Faraidoun on his barbat, a Persian lute, the pair played Middle Eastern music late into the evenings.
“We came here and we were both helped,” says Paulina, who arrived in Canada with her husband as a refugee more than 20 years ago. “For us, at least particularly for me, I feel a connection spiritually to others when I am able to help in some way.”
Like many people in Victoria, Faraidoun and Paulina had wanted to sponsor a Syrian family or individual, but were unsure of the process. Separately, they had each approached a multicultural organization in the city that acted as a sponsorship agreement holder – the umbrella group that handles private sponsorship in Canada. But as the prospective sponsors talked, having agreed to pool resources for a Syrian refugee, they found a common thread linking them together – they all had strong connections to the arts. “It was just too perfect,” says Sabine Lehr, the coordinator of the organization that matches refugees with sponsors.
"I feel a connection spiritually to others when I am able to help in some way.”
Paulina, an artist, quickly bonded with Sari. “There was something about him that was a bit different,” she says. “I think I identified the art in him – the compassion that people can only get when you have gone through suffering.”
By chance, her daughter Julia also played an instrument. Paulina was not looking for an instructor at the time, despite Sari’s six years of teaching music students in Syria. To her surprise, an instant chemistry developed between the two of them when they first played together – a shared connection through the notes on the page. Soon, her home would fill with the sounds of Julia’s accordion complemented by Sari’s violin.
“They touched my heart quickly,” says Sari. “After we met for five minutes, they became family.”
Sari’s new, quieter, safer life in Victoria was the first sign that his life and career, slowly dismantled by conflict, might return.
He soon received a scholarship to study English at the University of Victoria. It was an opportunity to further improve his language skills and immerse himself in the community, and he dreamed of earning a degree in education that would enable him to teach music in public schools.
While at the university, he developed a program to teach music to students with Down's syndrome, eager to share his passion for music with others. “When I teach music, I help them to improve their skills,” says Sari. “When I meet them later and I find them improving, I feel proud of them – and proud of myself as well.”
As the musician became a more visible presence at the school, others took note. Maestro Ajtony Csaba was one of them, offering Sari the chance to play with the University of Victoria Orchestra. He quickly became a sought-after player for benefit concerts and community events, and was invited to perform on the lawns of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for Canada Day.
“It was a big honour for me to play on Canada Day,” recalls Sari. “I can't describe my feelings – it was wonderful.”
But war had taken its toll in more ways than one – Sari's previously quick movement of fingers had slowed through lack of rigorous training in his years on the run.
One of his sponsors, Heather Ferguson, sat on the board of the Victoria Conservatory of Music. With stepchildren the same age as Sari, she felt determined to help him. “If ever their lives were torn apart and they were in need, I would hope that someone, somewhere in the world, would give them a helping hand,” she says.
She arranged for one of Canada’s top strings teachers, Michael van der Sloot, to mentor Sari and rebuild the skills that had atrophied over the years of fleeing war. Cloistered in a small office in the conservatory, Sari dove into the music with his teacher. Notes became a thread back to his life in Syria. The melodies were different, but the actions felt comforting.
“When you play music you offer your feelings, I don't offer anything else,” says Sari. “When people love my music, that means they understand my message.”
From Far and Wide is a series of stories profiling the Canadians who have welcomed Syrian refugees with compassion and support. All across the country, strangers, friends, families and communities are creating powerful bonds of friendship that transcend language and culture, when they are needed the most.