Record

CodeDS/UK/11288
NameKarp; Natalia (1911-2007); Polish pianist, Holocaust survivor
Dates1911-2007
GenderFemale
BiographyNatalia Karp (née Weissman) (27 February 1911 – 9 July 2007 aged 96) was a London based concert pianist and Holocaust survivor.

Karp was born Natalia Weissman in Kraków, Poland, and began learning piano at the age of four. At the age of thirteen she moved to Berlin, and by eighteen she made her debut with the Berlin Philharmonic; however, she returned to Poland almost immediately due to the death of her mother, and married lawyer Julius Hubler, who disapproved of her performing.

In 1943, after the death of her husband in a bomb raid, Karp was sent to the Kraków-Plaszów concentration camp where she came into contact with Amon Göth. On his birthday, Göth ordered her to play for him and was impressed enough with her performance to spare not only her life but that of her sister as well. She chose to play Chopin's Nocturne in C-sharp minor, and would in later years be known for her interpretations of his pieces. Eventually, she and her sister were sent to Auschwitz, but both survived the war. Her grandson, Mark Lowen, a BBC journalist (and current BBC Athens Correspondent), wrote her story in 2011. He talks of Natalia and ties the story to Jamila Kolonomos of Republic of Macedonia, which lost 98% of its Jewish population. Jamila also survived the war by hiding and then joining Tito's partisan resistance. 18 of her relatives were murdered.

Following the war, Natalia resumed her musical studies, and married a Polish diplomat named Josef Karpf. After claiming political asylum in London, she went on to give birth to two daughters. Upon dropping the "f" from her professional name, Karp went on to perform with the Krakow Philharmonic, performed for Oskar Schindler who saved many of the Jews in the Kraków-Plaszów concentration camp, made nine tours of Germany, and continued to perform into her nineties. She would often play with a pink handkerchief on the piano, a handkerchief that she had bought shortly after the war as a symbol of the femininity she felt she had lost during her time in the concentration camps. One of her two daughters, journalist Anne Karpf, wrote a book detailing her parents' experiences in The War After: Living with the Holocaust, which was published in 1996.

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