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At just four years old, Itzhak Perlman picked up a toy violin and began mimicking melodies he heard on the radio. Born in Tel Aviv on August 31, 1945, this moment wasn’t playful imitation—it was the birth of genius. His gift was undeniable. But fate tested that gift early.
Polio struck him at age four, leaving his legs paralyzed. While others might have surrendered to limitation, Perlman focused harder. He learned to play while sitting down, his legs braced, his determination unwavering. Teachers doubted. He silenced them with sound.
Perlman’s disability didn’t limit him—it sharpened him. Where others saw the challenge, he saw clarity. True strength isn’t the absence of struggle; it’s perseverance in the face of it.
By his teens, he had outgrown Tel Aviv and headed to New York to study at Juilliard under the legendary Ivan Galamian and Dorothy DeLay. There, his talent was refined, not just in technique, but in expressive power—the ability to speak through strings in a way that audiences felt in their bones.
In 1958, America met him on The Ed Sullivan Show. Viewers saw a boy with leg braces slowly approach his seat, then play as if channeling centuries of musical mastery. That performance was not a plea for sympathy—it was an act of pure artistry. And the world listened.
Perlman never asked for pity. He asked for ears. He didn’t lead with what held him back—he led with what moved him forward: music.
Perlman became one of the most celebrated violinists of his time, breathing new life into the works of Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Brahms, and Mendelssohn. But his genius wasn’t confined to tradition. He brought Yiddish melodies to global concert halls, collaborated with John Williams on Schindler’s List, and played klezmer with pure joy.
Greatness isn’t just found in depth—it’s found in range. Perlman’s ability to cross genres wasn’t a novelty; it was a statement that music belongs to everyone.
And he didn’t keep that gift to himself. In 1995, he founded the Perlman Music Program for exceptional young string players. More than technique, Perlman taught emotional truth. Great playing, he believed, came not from perfection but from connection.
Lesson #4: Share Your Gifts and Shape the Future
Perlman didn’t just perform—he taught. He lifted others. Because a true master creates more than music, he makes a legacy.
Across stages and symphonies, from Juilliard to Shelter Island, Perlman’s presence radiated. He played a 1714 Soil Stradivarius with a soulfulness that blurred the line between musician and instrument. Audiences didn’t just hear him—they felt him.
In a world driven by speed and shortcuts, Perlman’s life is a masterclass in slow, steady brilliance. Not despite adversity, but because of how he met it.
Perlman reminds us that our challenges are not the enemy—they’re the forge. And what we build through them can echo across generations.
In every note, Itzhak Perlman continues to teach: play with heart, live with grace, and never let someone else’s expectations limit your story. He didn’t just play the violin—he played life with unmatched depth.
And we’re all better for having listened.
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I am a proud nerd (as my beautiful wife and daughter have told me) investment and finance blogger with an N.C. State, Chemical Engineering, University Rutgers, MBA and Harvard University, Advanced Management education.
I left a corporate career because I desired to make a difference as a speaker and writer. I was blessed to be coached and mentored by strong women and men in my family and professional life. It is my time to serve and give back.
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I started my first business at ~13 years of age (a small but brilliantly created plant nursery). I am a successful investor in stocks, options, and real estate and am happy to share my finance and investment lessons. I am NOT a licensed financial advisor. Please do not construe my suggestions on this blog as recommendations for your situation. As an investor, you must establish your risk/loss tolerance. Investment in any asset involves risk, including complete loss.
Please seek your licensed CPA or fiduciary financial advisors for individual financial advice.
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