Healing Melodies
Both images by Gemini AI In Steven Galloway’s haunting novel The Cellist of Sarajevo , music is a lot more than a form of art or entertainment. It is a profound act of resistance, a lifeline to humanity, and a mechanism for survival. Based on a true story during the Siege of Sarajevo, the novel centres on a cellist who vows to play Albinoni’s Adagio in G Minor for 22 consecutive days – one day for each of the 22 people killed by a mortar strike while waiting in line for bread. The cellist exposes himself to falling mortars and shooting snipers. His music is a declaration that the warmongers can conquer people but not the human spirit. It is also a reminder of what Sarajevo was before the war – a cultured, cosmopolitan city – and what it could be again. The music breaks through the isolation of the people reminding them of their capacity for empathy, beauty, and love. The Adagio is also a public mourning ritual in a city where public gatherings are fatal. It forces the citiz...



