Photo by Dwight Cendrowski
Washington Jewish Week
By
Ask Aaron Dworkin about his background and he’ll tell you that he’s a “black, white, Jewish, Jehovah’s Witness, Irish Catholic.”
Born in Chicago, Dworkin was adopted by a white Jewish couple as a
2-week-old infant in 1970. They already had an older birth son, so
Dworkin’s brother is white. When his mother returned to her musical
love, the violin, Dworkin, too, picked up the instrument. He was 5 years
old. And he hasn’t put it down since.
On May 8, Dworkin and his wife, Afa Dworkin, will receive the 2017
Kennedy Center Award for the Human Spirit at a gala evening that
celebrates the music and spirit of John Lennon. The Dworkins have been
lauded as “citizen artists” for their work in founding the Sphinx
Organization, which is dedicated to transforming lives through advancing
diversity in the arts, particularly classical music.
A 2005 MacArthur genius fellow, Dworkin was President Barack Obama’s
first appointment to the National Council on the Arts. He now is dean of
the University of Michigan’s School of Music, Theater and Dance and
continues to host a weekly arts video mentoring show about creativity,
while continuing to write, compose and advocate for arts training for
all.
He stepped away from Sphinx two years ago, leaving the reins to Afa.
An author and social entrepreneur, Dworkin’s memoir, “Uncommon Rhythm: A
Black, White, Jewish, Jehovah’s Witness, Irish Catholic Adoptee’s
Journey to Leadership,” details his engrossing and inspiring life story.
“First and foremost, I am Aaron, but I operate in an environment
that views me as African American and I was raised in a Jewish household
culturally, if not necessarily religiously.”
Until he was 10, he grew up in New York City. “I went to P.S. 183. I
saw skin color like hair color or eye color. I’d go to school and see
students who were different colors and then come home, and my brother
and parents are white.”
A move to Hershey, Pa., changed all of that.
“The world, and certainly the community there in Hershey, taught me
that skin color does matter and that I absolutely stood out. Basically, I
never really fit in. That’s kind of the story of my life. When I was a
kid all I desperately wanted to do was be able to fit in.”
Fit in and play music.
As a youth, he trained with famed Russian violin teacher Vladimir
Graffman and then traveled every Saturday to Baltimore for lessons at
Peabody Preparatory, the renowned conservatory. He spent his last two
years of high school at the Interlochen Arts Academy.
After some time away from music, he ended up as an undergraduate at the University of Michigan.
“While I was at Michigan, I started to intentionally think about
diversity and inclusion and what that meant,” he said. “That let to
founding Sphinx.”
Comment by email:
Thanks so much Bill and hope you are well! Aaron [Aaron P. Dworkin]
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