The “Roads of Friendship” project was launched on 14 July 1997 by building a bridge between Ravenna and the opposite shores of the Adriatic Sea. The Ravenna Festival carried the strains of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Eroica and Franz Schubert’s Spirit song over the waters to Sarajevo, at the Skenderija Centre. Conducted by Maestro Riccardo Muti, music became the spark that reawakened the pride and vitality of Bosnia’s martyr city.
'To embrace is to open one's arms and then hold'
This year, the two famous archaeological sites of Pompeii and Jerash in Jordan are the backdrop to the tale of the fate of thousands of Syrians forced to live in refugee camps. For Muti, music is the highest form of politics and brings people to embrace each other with sincerity.
“Opening the arms is made up of two movements," explains the conductor, "the first: opening to welcome. The second movement is to squeeze and then open your arms, dropping them and saying ‘it’s up to you now’.”
Classical meets traditional Syrian music
"Music is a world language," Nouran Husni Moh'd Mehom, a violinist, told Euronews.
"So even though we do not speak other languages, like Italian for example, we have music in common.
"The presence of Italian and Jordanian musicians playing together allows us to learn from each other."
In 2020, Euronews followed the Vie dell'Amicizia and maestro Riccardo Muti in his beautiful concert at the archaeological site of Paestum, not far from Pompeii, in honour of the Syrian people forced into a diaspora in Jordan because of the war.
Three years later, a few days after the concert in Ravenna and Jerash, the Pompeii of the East, the music of the 'Roads of Friendship' still resounds powerfully in the Grand Theatre of ancient Pompeii.