Stolen violin reunited with owner after 12 years via Facebook

A Johannesburg musician has recovered her beloved 135-year-old violin, stolen during a 2013 break-in, thanks to an old Facebook post spotted by a local collector. The instrument, affectionately named Viv, passed through pawn shops and private hands before its return. The reunion underscores the role of social media in fostering unexpected community connections.

In late 2013, Diana Neille faced a devastating loss when burglars stole four violins from her Johannesburg home, including a prized 135-year-old French H. Clotelle violin gifted by her father. Named Viv, the instrument had been her companion through performances at Carnegie Hall, local theaters, and countless weddings, shaping her musical career and paying for university.

Neille, who learned violin under the guidance of Bernard Wozny, a renowned Polish-born musician and conductor with the National Symphony Orchestra, posted an appeal on Facebook detailing Viv's unique features, such as the bridge handcrafted and signed by Wozny. Years passed without leads; Neille adapted with a replacement violin but never fully reconciled with the loss.

On a recent Friday evening, Neille shared the story with her nieces, one of whom is learning violin. Less than 18 hours later, she received a text from Kyle Fenton, a music enthusiast and collector living nearby. Fenton had acquired Viv four years earlier from a friend who bought it for R1,200 at Hyde Park Cash Converters in January 2014, shortly after the theft. Recognizing the Wozny-marked bridge from Neille's decade-old post, Fenton contacted her.

The two met at a local Woolworths store, where Fenton returned the well-preserved violin without demanding full compensation, though they agreed on a fair amount. Fenton, a self-described hoarder of musical items including rare guitars and signed sheet music, quoted his passion: “Without music, I should surely die... I’d rather go blind than deaf, for if I cannot hear music, my soul will surely die.”

Remarkably, Fenton and Neille share indirect ties through Johannesburg's Polish music community; Wozny knew the family of singer Wanda Arletti, whose memorabilia Fenton also collects.

The recovery prompted Neille to reconnect with the now 83-year-old Wozny, who suffered a stroke and his own violin theft in 2020. Fenton has offered to help search for Wozny's stolen instruments, including a personalized viola. Despite Neille's criticisms of Big Tech, the episode illustrates how Facebook facilitated a heartfelt reunion, bridging years and strangers in a shared love of music.

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