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Atlantans probably wouldn’t recognize composer and classical pianist Malek Jandali if they bumped into him on the street, but they would recognize his pianos. All 500 of them.

That’s how many pianos his nonprofit Pianos for Peace has placed in metro Atlanta schools, nursing homes, MARTA stations, hospitals, colleges and even Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.

“When we put a piano in an unexpected place, we change the narrative,” Jandali said recently. “We are a symphony for peace in the streets.”

Volunteer artists painted the pianos designated for the Pianos for Peace program established by Malek Jandali. (Courtesy of Dan Carmody)

Credit: Dan Carmody

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Credit: Dan Carmody

Jandali’s pianos are instantly recognizable because they are painted in a symphony of bright colors by local artists and children. Jandali says he decorated one once, by gluing cassette tapes onto it.

“I’m a pianist, not a painter,” he said, laughing.

Pianos for Peace was the first organization to place musical instruments at MARTA stations, Jandali says. Now, there are permanent pianos at seven stations, among them Hamilton E. Holmes, Five Points, Doraville, King Memorial and North Springs.

Sometimes an unhoused person will play one of the instruments.

“He becomes an artist for a few moments instead of being thought of as a homeless person,” Jandali says. When people gather around to listen, “you have to wonder who is impacting who the most.”

Every September, Pianos for Peace holds a monthlong festival in Atlanta and names two Ambassadors of Peace. This year, the main event was held at the Martin Luther King Center. Nathalie Stutzmann, music director of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, and Dr. Bernice King, CEO of The King Center, were named Ambassadors of Peace. As part of the festival, 100 decorated pianos were placed in public spaces around Atlanta. Wherever the instruments end up, Pianos for Peace pays for them to be tuned and maintained.

Jandali was born in Germany of Syrian parents. When Jandali was 5, his father, a prominent physician, returned to Syria with his family to start a private hospital. Jandali learned to love Western classical music from his father and went on to study music in Damascus and later at the Tchaikovsky Moscow Conservatory.

In 1995, he won a scholarship to the North Carolina School for the Arts, where he discovered he was more of a composer than a performer.

When civil war broke out in Syria in 2011, Jandali wanted to raise awareness about the humanitarian crisis there. He was one of the first Syrian artists abroad to speak out against Bashar al-Assad’s regime. He visited refugee camps to raise awareness and humanitarian aid for refugees and launched his world tour “The Voice of the Free Syrian Children” in 2013.

He received two prestigious awards for his humanitarian and peace activism and, in 2015, he founded Pianos for Peace in Atlanta, where he now lives. He also has a home in New York but noted that he keeps the jar of the Syrian soil that is so close to his heart here in Atlanta.

During the first year of Pianos for Peace, it was very much a DIY undertaking. Jandali and a friend procured a few pianos and rented a U-Haul truck to transport them to venues around Atlanta. They went late at night to avoid the traffic and used only one dolly.

Now, the organization has a facility on Peachtree Street in midtown where the pianos are stored with 200 dollies, 12 permanent employees, dozens of volunteers and partnerships with music therapists and other music professionals.

“Before we donate the pianos to the schools, we identify which schools we feel most need them, especially in underserved communities,” Jandali says. “There is a huge gap between the schools in Midtown and Buckhead, for instance, and those close to the airport. I am very keen as an artist and an American citizen to try and bridge this gap.”

Jandali is proud of the work Pianos for Peace has done in Atlanta. He is especially moved by the impact that his pianos have in nursing homes. When residents hear the pianos being played, “they dance in their wheelchairs,” he says. “I cried when I saw that.”

HOW TO HELP

If you have a piano that you’d like to donate, go to pianosforpeace.org/donate-a-piano/.

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