BRUSSELS - Life is impossible without music blends music, memory and humanity through the true stories of pianist Kosta Jakić and Simon Gronowski, a Holocaust survivor.

On the cold train tracks to Auschwitz, eleven-year-old Simon Gronowski jumps into the unknown – the only path that leads to life. His mother, who gently pushed him off the train, and his sister Ita remain behind, in a silence that will be filled with music years later. Today, as a 94-year-old doctor of law, lawyer and amateur jazz pianist, Simon shares the stage with Kost Jakić, a young Belgian classical pianist of Yugoslavian descent who explores the role of music in extreme and inhuman circumstances.

Their hands on the piano tell two stories: one about survival, the other about listening. Their chords bring together eras, languages and memories, forming a film about how music, when words fail, becomes the only way to talk about life. The film is dedicated to the memory of the crimes of the Second World War, as well as to future memories of the current suffering in Gaza.

Photo: © Ivan Put

Team members

Need resources for your own investigative story?

Journalismfund Europe's flexible grants programmes enable journalists to produce relevant public interest stories with a European mind-set from international, national, and regional perspectives.

Support independent cross-border investigative journalism

We rely on your support to continue the work that we do. Make a gift of any amount today.